How Many Amps Is 125 kW at 460V?

125 kW at 460V draws about 184.57 amps on an AC three-phase circuit at PF 0.85, typical for commercial HVAC, industrial motors, rooftop units, and three-phase panel loads. Actual current varies with equipment power factor and duty cycle.

125 kW at 460V, AC three-phase (PF 0.85)
184.57 Amps
125 kilowatts at 460V on AC three-phase ≈ 184.57 amps
AC Single Phase (PF 0.85)319.69 A
DC (ideal baseline)271.74 A
184.57

Formulas

DC: kW to Amps

I(A) = 1000 × P(kW) ÷ V(V)

1000 × 125 ÷ 460 = 125,000 ÷ 460 = 271.74 A

AC Single Phase (PF = 0.85)

I(A) = 1000 × P(kW) ÷ (PF × V(V))

125,000 ÷ (0.85 × 460) = 125,000 ÷ 391 = 319.69 A

AC Three Phase (PF = 0.85)

I(A) = 1000 × P(kW) ÷ (√3 × PF × VL-L), where VL-L is the line-to-line voltage

125,000 ÷ (1.732 × 0.85 × 460) = 125,000 ÷ 677.21 = 184.57 A

Equipment & Circuit Sizing

Breaker Sizing

Breaker ratings are in amps, not watts, so the real install answer depends on the equipment nameplate FLA, whether the load is continuous (NEC 210.19(A) sizes the conductor and OCP at 125% of a continuous load, equivalently 80% of breaker rating), conductor ampacity and temperature rating, ambient and bundling derates, and any motor or HVAC provisions (NEC 430 / 440). At roughly 184.57A on AC three-phase at 460V, the load sits in the bracket between a 200A standard size (non-continuous) and the next size up that covers a continuous load under 210.19(A) (around 250A). The actual install pick depends on whether the load is continuous and the factors above; a conversion page can't pick a single "right" breaker from the amp draw alone.

Energy Cost

125 kW costs $21.25/hour at $0.17/kWh (rates last reviewed April 2026). See breakdown.

Power Factor Reference (AC three-phase)

How the line current for 125 kW at 460V changes with load power factor, on the same AC three-phase circuit basis the rest of the page uses. DC has no power factor; PF 1.0 represents resistive AC loads.

Load TypePF125 kW at 460V (AC three-phase)
Resistive (heaters, incandescent)1156.89 A
Fluorescent lamps0.95165.15 A
LED lighting0.9174.32 A
Synchronous motors0.9174.32 A
Typical mixed loads0.85184.57 A
Induction motors (full load)0.8196.11 A
Computers (without PFC)0.65241.37 A
Induction motors (no load)0.35448.25 A

AC Conversion Comparison

On DC, 125kW at 460V draws 271.74A. AC single-phase at PF 0.85 pulls 319.69A because reactive current is added on top of the real power. Three-phase at the same voltage needs only 184.57A per line since the same 125kW is shared across three conductors instead of one.

Circuit TypeFormulaResult
DC125,000 ÷ 460271.74 A
AC Single Phase (PF 0.85)125,000 ÷ (0.85 × 460)319.69 A
AC Three Phase (PF 0.85)125,000 ÷ (1.732 × 0.85 × 460)184.57 A

Other kW Values at 460V

kWAC 3-Phase per line, PF 0.85AC 1-Phase PF 0.85
15 kW22.15 A38.36 A
18 kW26.58 A46.04 A
20 kW29.53 A51.15 A
22 kW32.49 A56.27 A
25 kW36.91 A63.94 A
30 kW44.3 A76.73 A
35 kW51.68 A89.51 A
40 kW59.06 A102.3 A
50 kW73.83 A127.88 A
60 kW88.6 A153.45 A
75 kW110.74 A191.82 A
100 kW147.66 A255.75 A
125 kW184.57 A319.69 A
150 kW221.49 A383.63 A
200 kW295.32 A511.51 A

Same kW, Other Voltages

Each destination page leads with the interpretation most common for that voltage, so the amps shown below use the same basis as the page you'd land on: single-phase for residential voltages, three-phase for commercial/industrial panel voltages, DC for low-voltage.

Frequently Asked Questions

125 kW at 460V draws about 184.57 amps on an AC three-phase circuit at PF 0.85. Alternate cases at the same voltage: 271.74A on DC, 319.69A on AC single-phase.
This is a sizing question, not a conversion question, and there is no single correct answer from a page like this. Breaker selection depends on the equipment nameplate FLA, whether the load is continuous (NEC 210.19(A) applies the 125% continuous-load rule), the conductor ampacity and temperature rating, any NEC 430/440 motor or HVAC provisions, and local code interpretation. Use the nameplate and a licensed electrician for the real install value; use this page only for the current-draw estimate that feeds into that process.
Three-phase at 460V draws 184.57A per line versus 319.69A single-phase. Less current per conductor means smaller wire and lower I²R losses.
460V is commercial/industrial panel voltage, not a typical AC EVSE feed to a vehicle. On three-phase 460V, 125 kW works out to about 184.57A per line (three-phase at PF 0.85). In practice, 400-480V three-phase is usually the AC input to a DC fast charger (50-350 kW CCS/NACS stations like Tesla Superchargers), which rectifies to DC and delivers that directly to the vehicle, rather than an AC EVSE connector. A 125 kW figure at 460V is most likely the AC feed to a smaller commercial cabinet or the control-side input of a larger DC fast charger, not an at-the-car AC current.
Industrial equipment operates at higher power levels. 125 kW is easier to express than 125,000W. The math is identical, just scaled by 1000.
This calculator provides estimates for reference purposes only. Always consult a licensed electrician and verify compliance with the National Electrical Code (NEC) and local electrical codes before performing any electrical work.