Watts vs Horsepower
Comparing Power Units
Compare the UnitsA 100-horsepower car engine equals about 74,600 watts, yet we rarely see car specs in kilowatts (except for EVs). Meanwhile, light bulbs and appliances are always in watts. Understanding when and why each unit is used helps interpret power specifications across different industries.
Understanding Each Unit
The Watt (W)
The SI unit of power, defined as one joule of energy per second. Named after James Watt.
- Definition: 1 W = 1 J/s = 1 V × 1 A
- Origin: Named 1889, SI adoption 1960
- Used for: Electrical devices, heating, lighting
Horsepower (hp)
Traditional unit based on the work output of a draft horse. Several definitions exist.
- Definition: 550 ft-lb/s (mechanical hp)
- Origin: James Watt, ~1782
- Used for: Engines, motors, vehicles
Types of Horsepower
| Type | Abbreviation | Watts | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical hp | hp | 745.7 | US/UK engines |
| Metric hp | PS, CV, pk | 735.5 | Europe, Japan, Korea |
| Electrical hp | hp(E) | 746 | Electric motors |
| Boiler hp | hp(S) | 9,810 | Steam boilers (historical) |
| Hydraulic hp | — | 745.7 | Hydraulic systems |
The mechanical and metric horsepower differ by about 1.4%—usually not significant for everyday purposes.
Conversion Table
| Horsepower | Kilowatts | Watts | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.746 | 746 | Small motor |
| 10 | 7.46 | 7,460 | Large appliance |
| 50 | 37.3 | 37,300 | Compact car |
| 100 | 74.6 | 74,600 | Average car |
| 200 | 149.1 | 149,100 | Sports car |
| 300 | 223.7 | 223,700 | High-performance car |
| 500 | 373 | 373,000 | Supercar |
| 1,000 | 746 | 746,000 | Race car/hypercar |
Where Each Unit Is Used
Watts/Kilowatts
- Light bulbs and LED equivalents
- Household appliances (microwave, vacuum)
- Electric vehicles (Tesla Model 3: ~258 kW)
- Power plants and grids (MW, GW)
- Heating and cooling (HVAC)
- Electronics and computers
Horsepower
- Car and truck engines
- Motorcycles
- Boats and marine engines
- Lawn mowers and outdoor equipment
- Industrial motors
- Aircraft (piston engines)
EVs: The Transition
Electric vehicles are pushing watts/kilowatts into automotive:
| Vehicle | Power (kW) | Equivalent (hp) |
|---|---|---|
| Nissan Leaf | 110-147 | 147-197 |
| Tesla Model 3 LR | 258 | 346 |
| Tesla Model S Plaid | 750 | 1,006 |
| Porsche Taycan Turbo S | 560 | 751 |
| Rivian R1T | 623 | 835 |
EV specs often list both kW and hp to bridge traditional and modern audiences.
Conclusion
Watts and horsepower both measure power—the rate of energy transfer. One horsepower equals about 746 watts, or 0.746 kilowatts. Watts dominate electrical applications and scientific contexts; horsepower persists in automotive and mechanical applications due to tradition and marketing. As EVs grow, kilowatts are becoming more familiar in the automotive world.