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BTUs per hour to Watts (BTU/h to W)

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BTU-per-hour-to-watts conversions translate US-customary HVAC, heating-and-cooling-equipment, and thermal-engineering power figures from the BTU/h primary into the SI watt used for international engineering documentation, ISO-and-EN HVAC compliance, and physics-engineering work. A 12,000 BTU/h window-air-conditioner translates to 3517 W or 3.52 kW for international SI HVAC documentation; a 80,000 BTU/h gas-furnace translates to 23,446 W or 23.4 kW for ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation; a 36,000 BTU/h central-air-conditioner translates to 10,551 W or 10.55 kW for international HVAC compliance. The factor is exact at 1 BTU/h = 0.29307107 W, derived from the international-table BTU (1055.05585 J) divided by 3600 s per hour, giving 0.29307107 W per BTU/h.

How to convert BTUs per hour to Watts

Formula

W = BTU/h × 0.293071

To convert BTU per hour to watts, multiply the BTU/h figure by 0.29307107 — exactly. The factor is fixed by the international-table BTU (1055.05585 J) divided by 3600 s per hour, giving 0.29307107 W per BTU/h. For mental math, "BTU/h ÷ 3.412" or "BTU/h × 0.293" both give close-to-exact figures: 1 BTU/h ≈ 0.293 W, 1000 BTU/h ≈ 293 W, 12,000 BTU/h ≈ 3.52 kW, 80,000 BTU/h ≈ 23.4 kW, 1,000,000 BTU/h ≈ 293 kW. The conversion runs at every US-customary-BTU/h source to international-SI-W destination boundary across HVAC, gas-furnace, central-air-conditioner, and commercial-boiler documentation work in cross-international engineering practice across AHRI-and-AGA-and-ASME-to-ISO-and-EN equipment-export programs globally.

Worked examples

Example 11 BTU/h

One BTU per hour equals exactly 0.29307107 watts, derived from the international-table BTU (1055.05585 J) divided by 3600 s per hour, giving 0.29307107 W per BTU/h. The factor is exact under the international-table BTU definition.

Example 212000 BTU/h

Twelve thousand BTU per hour — a typical standard-window-air-conditioner cooling capacity — converts to 3517 W or 3.52 kW on the international SI HVAC documentation. The BTU/h-figure is the US-customary AHRI primary; the kW-figure is the international SI HVAC reference.

Example 380000 BTU/h

Eighty thousand BTU per hour — a typical residential-gas-furnace input rating — converts to 23,446 W or 23.4 kW on the international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation. The BTU/h-figure is the US-customary AGA primary; the kW-figure is the international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment reference.

BTU/h to W conversion table

BTU/hW
1 BTU/h0.2931 W
2 BTU/h0.5861 W
3 BTU/h0.8792 W
4 BTU/h1.1723 W
5 BTU/h1.4654 W
6 BTU/h1.7584 W
7 BTU/h2.0515 W
8 BTU/h2.3446 W
9 BTU/h2.6376 W
10 BTU/h2.9307 W
15 BTU/h4.3961 W
20 BTU/h5.8614 W
25 BTU/h7.3268 W
30 BTU/h8.7921 W
40 BTU/h11.7228 W
50 BTU/h14.6536 W
75 BTU/h21.9803 W
100 BTU/h29.3071 W
150 BTU/h43.9607 W
200 BTU/h58.6142 W
250 BTU/h73.2678 W
500 BTU/h146.5355 W
750 BTU/h219.8033 W
1000 BTU/h293.0711 W
2500 BTU/h732.6777 W
5000 BTU/h1465.3554 W

Common BTU/h to W conversions

  • 1000 BTU/h=293.0711 W
  • 5000 BTU/h=1465.3554 W
  • 12000 BTU/h=3516.8528 W
  • 18000 BTU/h=5275.2793 W
  • 24000 BTU/h=7033.7057 W
  • 36000 BTU/h=10550.5585 W
  • 48000 BTU/h=14067.4114 W
  • 60000 BTU/h=17584.2642 W
  • 80000 BTU/h=23445.6856 W
  • 100000 BTU/h=29307.107 W

What is a BTU per hour?

The BTU per hour (BTU/h) under the modern IT-BTU convention is exactly 0.29307107 W (typically rounded to 0.293 W per BTU/h). The factor follows from 1 BTU = 1055.06 J ÷ 3600 s = 0.293 W. Equivalently, 1 W = 3.412 BTU/h. The recognised symbol is "BTU/h" with the slash separator, with "BTUh" as a non-standard variant occasionally seen in casual writing. Higher-power multiples use kBTU/h (1000 BTU/h, used for residential-HVAC capacity ratings) and the "ton of refrigeration" at exactly 12,000 BTU/h (3.517 kW). The BTU/h is not part of the SI but is recognised by NIST as a US-customary power unit accepted for limited use in HVAC, fuel-rating, and BBQ-grill-output contexts; ISO 80000-6 deprecates it in favour of watts.

The BTU per hour emerged with the BTU itself as a US-customary heat-energy-rate unit for heating-and-cooling capacity specifications. The BTU was defined in nineteenth-century British and American engineering practice as the heat required to raise one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit at sea level, with the IT-BTU formalised at exactly 1055.05585262 J at the 1956 International Steam Table Conference. The BTU/h emerged as the dominant US-customary heating-and-cooling-capacity unit through twentieth-century US-HVAC industry consolidation, with every residential air conditioner, central HVAC system, gas furnace, heat pump, and tankless water heater specifying capacity in BTU/h. The "ton of refrigeration" at exactly 12,000 BTU/h is the iconic US-HVAC-trained capacity reference, derived historically from the cooling-power required to melt one ton of ice in 24 hours. ISO 80000-6 deprecates BTU/h in favour of watts for new technical writing, but the established US HVAC-and-fuel-rating ecosystem preserves it as the operational primary on every US-domestic equipment-rating spec.

US residential air conditioners and central HVAC: every US-domestic window air conditioner, central HVAC system, ductless mini-split, and heat pump specifies capacity in BTU/h on the consumer-facing Energy Guide label and AHRI-certified equipment rating. Typical residential window AC 5000-12,000 BTU/h; central residential AC 24,000-60,000 BTU/h (2-5 tons); commercial rooftop unit 60,000-300,000 BTU/h. The "ton of refrigeration" at 12,000 BTU/h is the iconic US-HVAC trained capacity reference. Gas furnaces and tankless water heaters: every US-domestic gas furnace and tankless water heater specifies input rating in BTU/h. Typical residential gas furnace 60,000-120,000 BTU/h input; tankless water heater 150,000-200,000 BTU/h input. The BTU/h figure is the consumer-facing primary on the equipment-rating label. BBQ-grill burner output: BBQ-grill manufacturers (Weber, Char-Broil, Traeger, Big Green Egg) specify burner output ratings in BTU/h on the consumer-facing grill-spec packaging. A typical 4-burner gas grill delivers 40,000-60,000 BTU/h total burner output. Industrial process heat: US industrial process-heating equipment (Lochinvar, Bock Water Heaters, Burnham, Patterson-Kelley boilers) specify rated heat output in BTU/h for the US-customary industrial-engineering primary. A typical commercial steam boiler delivers 500,000-2,000,000 BTU/h.

What is a Watt?

The watt (W) is the SI-derived unit of power, equal to one joule of energy delivered per second of time (1 W = 1 J/s = 1 N·m/s = 1 V·A in electrical engineering). The watt is anchored to the SI base units kilogram, metre and second through the relationship 1 W = 1 kg·m²·s⁻³. Since the 2019 SI redefinition the watt is fixed via the Planck constant h = 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s exactly, with the kilogram derived from this anchoring rather than the historical artifact-based definition. The recognised SI symbol is "W" (uppercase, honouring James Watt). Higher-power multiples use kilowatts (kW, 1000 W), megawatts (MW, 10⁶ W) for grid-scale power-generation, and gigawatts (GW, 10⁹ W) for nuclear-power-station and large-scale industrial-power references. The watt is the universal SI power unit and replaces older non-SI power units (horsepower, BTU/h) in modern technical and SI-canonical work.

The watt is named after James Watt (1736-1819), the Scottish engineer whose late-eighteenth-century improvements to the Newcomen steam engine transformed industrial-power generation and made the steam engine the foundational technology of the Industrial Revolution. Watt patented the separate-condenser steam-engine improvement in 1769, the rotative-motion governor in 1788, and the parallel-motion linkage in 1784, with each innovation increasing fuel-efficiency and power-output of industrial steam plants. The unit "watt" was formally adopted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1882 to name the SI-derived power unit equal to one joule per second, with the unit officially incorporated into the SI at the 11th CGPM in 1960. The 2019 SI redefinition fixed the watt via the kilogram-Planck-constant chain through the joule-per-second relationship — a watt is the rate of energy delivery, where one joule of energy is delivered per second. The watt is universally used across electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, electronics, lighting, audio, and consumer-product power-rating contexts globally.

Electrical engineering and consumer-electronics power ratings: every electrical and electronic device denominates power consumption in watts on the consumer-facing rating label and the engineering specification. Typical residential lighting at 5-15 W LED, 60-100 W incandescent (legacy); typical kitchen appliances at 800-3000 W; typical computer power supplies at 350-1500 W; typical residential solar-PV inverters at 3000-10000 W (3-10 kW). EU Ecodesign Directive 2009/125/EC mandates watt-based product power-rating labels on every EU-jurisdiction electrical product. Lighting and LED specs: every modern lighting product (incandescent, halogen, fluorescent, LED) specifies power-consumption rating in watts, with the consumer-facing comparison metric "lumens-per-watt" for energy efficiency. Typical LED bulb 8-15 W replacing 60 W incandescent at 800 lm light output. EU Lamps Directive and US ENERGY STAR criteria use watt-based ratings. Audio amplifier and home-theatre power output: home-theatre AV-receivers, hi-fi amplifiers, car-audio systems all specify power-output in watts (typical home-theatre 100-200 W per channel, hi-fi 50-300 W per channel, car-audio 50-400 W per channel). Consumer-comparison shopping uses watt-based RMS output ratings. Solar-PV and wind-turbine generation: residential solar-PV system capacity in W (3-10 kW typical residential, 100-500 kW commercial), wind-turbine rated power in W (typical residential micro-wind 1-10 kW, utility-scale 2-15 MW per turbine).

Real-world uses for BTUs per hour to Watts

US-customary BTU/h window-air-conditioner translated to W for international SI HVAC documentation

US-customary BTU/h window-and-portable-air-conditioner specifications under AHRI conventions translate to W for international SI HVAC documentation under ISO-and-EN HVAC-equipment conventions when US-market AC units are exported to international markets, or when international-AC-equipment-installation requires SI documentation. A 5000 BTU/h small-window-AC translates to 1465 W; a 12,000 BTU/h standard-window-AC translates to 3517 W or 3.52 kW; a 24,000 BTU/h large-window-AC translates to 7034 W. The conversion runs at every AHRI-BTU/h source to ISO-EN-W HVAC documentation step.

US-customary BTU/h gas-furnace translated to W for international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation

US-customary BTU/h gas-furnace input-rating specifications under AGA conventions translate to W for international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation when US-market furnaces are exported or international-heating-equipment-installation requires SI documentation. A 80,000 BTU/h residential-gas-furnace translates to 23.4 kW; a 100,000 BTU/h large-residential-furnace translates to 29.3 kW; a 200,000 BTU/h commercial-gas-furnace translates to 58.6 kW; a 60,000 BTU/h compact-residential-furnace translates to 17.6 kW. The conversion runs at every AGA-BTU/h source to ISO-EN-W heating-equipment documentation step.

US-customary BTU/h central-air-conditioner translated to W for international HVAC compliance documentation

US-customary BTU/h central-air-conditioner-and-heat-pump specifications under AHRI conventions translate to W for international HVAC compliance documentation under ISO-and-EN energy-efficiency conventions when comparing SEER-and-EER ratings to European SEER-and-COP ratings. A 36,000 BTU/h 3-ton-AC translates to 10.55 kW; a 60,000 BTU/h 5-ton-AC translates to 17.58 kW; a 24,000 BTU/h 2-ton-AC translates to 7.03 kW; a 48,000 BTU/h 4-ton-AC translates to 14.07 kW. The conversion runs at every AHRI-BTU/h source to ISO-EN-W HVAC compliance documentation step.

US-customary BTU/h commercial-boiler translated to W for international ISO-and-EN boiler-engineering documentation

US-customary BTU/h commercial-and-industrial-boiler input-rating specifications under ASME conventions translate to W for international ISO-and-EN boiler-engineering documentation under EN 12953 fire-tube boiler conventions when commercial-and-industrial boilers are exported or international-boiler-engineering programs require SI documentation. A 1,000,000 BTU/h commercial-boiler translates to 293.1 kW; a 5,000,000 BTU/h industrial-boiler translates to 1.466 MW; a 10,000,000 BTU/h large-industrial-boiler translates to 2.93 MW. The conversion runs at every ASME-BTU/h source to ISO-EN-W boiler-engineering documentation step.

When to use Watts instead of BTUs per hour

Use watts whenever the destination is international SI engineering documentation under ISO-and-EN conventions, ISO-and-EN HVAC-equipment specifications, ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation, EN 12953 boiler-engineering, or any international-engineering context where W or kW is the standard reference unit. The watt-figure is the universal SI-derived power unit, with kW used at HVAC-and-residential-furnace scale and MW at commercial-and-industrial-boiler scale. Stay in BTU per hour when the destination is US-customary engineering documentation under AHRI-and-AGA-and-ASME conventions, US-bound HVAC marketing, US-residential-and-commercial gas-furnace specifications, US-customary boiler-engineering, or any US-customary context where BTU/h-scale granularity matches everyday US-convention thermal-power intuition. The conversion is the universal US-customary-to-SI thermal-power scale-shift between BTU/h-source and W-destination documentation, applied across HVAC, heating-equipment, and boiler-engineering work in cross-international engineering practice.

Common mistakes converting BTU/h to W

  • Confusing the international-table BTU (1055.05585 J, the standard BTU for HVAC-and-thermal-engineering) with the thermochemical BTU (1054.350 J), the 39 °F BTU (1059.67 J), and the 60 °F BTU (1054.68 J). The four BTU variants differ by up to 0.5% — the international-table BTU is the universal modern HVAC-and-thermal-engineering convention. Older or specialised documentation may use other BTU variants.
  • Confusing BTU/h (a power unit, energy per hour) with BTU (an energy unit). A 12,000 BTU/h air-conditioner is a power-rating describing the rate of heat-removal; a 12,000 BTU figure would be a total-energy-quantity. The two are dimensionally different, and substituting one for the other in compliance documentation gives unit-error.

Frequently asked questions

How many watts in 1 BTU/h?

One BTU per hour equals exactly 0.29307107 watts, derived from the international-table BTU (1055.05585 J) divided by 3600 s per hour. The factor is exact under the international-table BTU definition. The "1 BTU/h ≈ 0.293 W" or "3.412 BTU/h ≈ 1 W" reference is universal in modern US-customary-to-SI thermal-power conversion across HVAC, heating-equipment, and boiler-engineering work.

How many watts in 12,000 BTU/h (window AC)?

Twelve thousand BTU per hour equals 3517 watts or 3.52 kW. That is a typical standard-window-air-conditioner cooling capacity translated to international SI HVAC documentation. The BTU/h-figure sits on the US-customary AHRI primary specification and the kW-figure sits on the international SI HVAC reference under ISO-and-EN HVAC-equipment conventions.

How many watts in 80,000 BTU/h (gas furnace)?

Eighty thousand BTU per hour equals 23,446 watts or 23.4 kW. That is a typical residential-gas-furnace input rating translated to international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation. The BTU/h-figure sits on the US-customary AGA primary specification and the kW-figure sits on the international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment reference for international-furnace-export documentation.

Quick way to convert BTU/h to watts in my head?

Divide the BTU/h figure by 3.412 (or multiply by 0.293). For 1000 BTU/h that gives 293 W, for 12,000 BTU/h that gives 3.52 kW, for 80,000 BTU/h that gives 23.4 kW, for 1,000,000 BTU/h that gives 293 kW. The exact factor is 0.29307107, with the rounded "÷ 3.412" rule giving figures within 0.005% of exact for everyday HVAC-and-thermal-power conversion work.

How many BTU/h in 1 watt?

One watt equals exactly 3.412142 BTU per hour, the multiplicative inverse of 0.29307107 W per BTU/h. The factor is exact under the international-table BTU definition. The "1 W ≈ 3.412 BTU/h" reference appears at the inverse-conversion direction when SI engineering W figures are translated back to US-customary BTU/h notation.

When does BTU/h-to-watts conversion appear in real work?

It appears in US-customary BTU/h window-air-conditioner translated to W for international SI HVAC documentation and in US-customary BTU/h gas-furnace translated to W for international ISO-and-EN heating-equipment documentation. It also appears in US-customary BTU/h central-air-conditioner translated to W for international HVAC compliance documentation and in US-customary BTU/h commercial-boiler translated to W for international ISO-and-EN boiler-engineering documentation. The conversion is one of the most-run US-customary-to-SI thermal-power conversions globally.

How precise should BTU/h-to-watts be for engineering work?

For engineering work the BTU/h-to-watts conversion is exact (factor 0.29307107 exactly under the international-table BTU definition), and the precision allowance comes from the underlying thermal-output measurement precision (typically ±5-10% for HVAC-and-furnace ratings). Most engineering documentation rounds to 4 significant figures (1 BTU/h ≈ 0.2931 W), which is far more precise than HVAC-and-furnace measurement uncertainty.