How Many Amps Is 2.94 kW at 240V?
2.94 kilowatts at 240V works out to roughly 14.43 amps on AC single-phase at PF 0.85. That is typical for residential water heaters, dryers, ranges, EV chargers, and HVAC equipment. See the DC and alternate-phase numbers below for other circuit types.
Use this citation when referencing this page.
Formulas
DC: kW to Amps
I(A) = 1000 × P(kW) ÷ V(V)
AC Single Phase (PF = 0.85)
I(A) = 1000 × P(kW) ÷ (PF × V(V))
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 14.43A on AC single-phase at 240V, the load sits in the bracket between a 15A standard size (non-continuous) and the next size up that covers a continuous load under 210.19(A) (around 20A). 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
2.94 kW costs $0.50/hour at $0.17/kWh (rates last reviewed April 2026). See breakdown.
Power Factor Reference (AC single-phase)
How the line current for 2.94 kW at 240V changes with load power factor, on the same AC single-phase circuit basis the rest of the page uses. DC has no power factor; PF 1.0 represents resistive AC loads.
| Load Type | PF | 2.94 kW at 240V (AC single-phase) |
|---|---|---|
| Resistive (heaters, incandescent) | 1 | 12.27 A |
| Fluorescent lamps | 0.95 | 12.91 A |
| LED lighting | 0.9 | 13.63 A |
| Synchronous motors | 0.9 | 13.63 A |
| Typical mixed loads | 0.85 | 14.43 A |
| Induction motors (full load) | 0.8 | 15.33 A |
| Computers (without PFC) | 0.65 | 18.87 A |
| Induction motors (no load) | 0.35 | 35.05 A |
AC Conversion Comparison
On DC, 2.94kW at 240V draws 12.27A. AC single-phase at PF 0.85 pulls 14.43A because reactive current is added on top of the real power.
| Circuit Type | Formula | Result |
|---|---|---|
| DC | 2,944 ÷ 240 | 12.27 A |
| AC Single Phase (PF 0.85) | 2,944 ÷ (0.85 × 240) | 14.43 A |
Other kW Values at 240V
| kW | AC 1-Phase PF 0.85 | DC Amps PF 1.0 baseline |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5 kW | 2.45 A | 2.08 A |
| 0.75 kW | 3.68 A | 3.13 A |
| 1 kW | 4.9 A | 4.17 A |
| 1.5 kW | 7.35 A | 6.25 A |
| 2 kW | 9.8 A | 8.33 A |
| 2.5 kW | 12.25 A | 10.42 A |
| 3 kW | 14.71 A | 12.5 A |
| 3.5 kW | 17.16 A | 14.58 A |
| 4 kW | 19.61 A | 16.67 A |
| 5 kW | 24.51 A | 20.83 A |
| 6 kW | 29.41 A | 25 A |
| 7.5 kW | 36.76 A | 31.25 A |
| 8 kW | 39.22 A | 33.33 A |
| 10 kW | 49.02 A | 41.67 A |
| 12 kW | 58.82 A | 50 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.