Electrical power is voltage times current. For AC loads, multiply by the power factor to get real power in watts.
What the terms mean
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| P | Real power, in watts |
| V | Voltage, in volts |
| I | Current, in amperes |
| PF | Power factor (0 to 1) |
Worked example
A driver at 120 V drawing 0.5 A with a 0.9 power factor uses 120 × 0.5 × 0.9 = 54 W.
See the Power Factor Calculator and Energy Consumption Formula.
The electrical power formula
Electrical power is voltage times current: P = V × I (watts = volts × amps). It tells you how much energy a device draws per second and is the starting point for sizing circuits, drivers, and wiring. Rearranged, it also gives current (I = P ÷ V) or voltage (V = P ÷ I) when you know the other two. For example, a 60W lamp on a 120V circuit draws 60 ÷ 120 = 0.5 amps.
For lighting, this is how you check a circuit isn’t overloaded: add the wattage of all fixtures, divide by the circuit voltage to get amps, and keep it safely below the breaker rating (a common rule is no more than 80% of the rating continuously). For DC and LED systems, the same P = V × I applies at the driver’s output.
