Metric Horsepower (PS) to Kilowatt

Free instant metric horsepower (ps) to kilowatt converter. 1 PS = 0.735499 kW.

0.735499
Formula
1 PS = 0.735499 kW

Common Metric Horsepower (PS) to Kilowatt values

Common Metric Horsepower (PS) to Kilowatt conversion values.
Metric Horsepower (PS) (PS)Kilowatt (kW)
10.735499
53.67749
107.35499
2518.3875
5036.7749
10073.5499
500367.749
1000735.499

How does Metric Horsepower (PS) to Kilowatt conversion work?

Type a value in the Metric Horsepower (PS) (PS) field and the equivalent in Kilowatt (kW) appears instantly to the right. The math uses the exact formula shown above โ€” no rounding errors, no approximations beyond standard floating-point precision. Use the swap button to flip the units and see the inverse conversion.

Metric Horsepower (PS). The European "DIN-PS" horsepower (75 mยทkgf/s = 735.5 W). Standard for car-engine specs in Europe. ~1.4% smaller than mechanical HP.

Kilowatt. One thousand watts. A typical home AC unit is 2-4 kW; an EV fast charger is 50-350 kW.

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๐ŸŽฏ Accurate conversions

Conversion factors come from the official standard (NIST, BIPM, ISO definitions where applicable). Values are precise to standard floating-point limits.

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How it works โ€” the formula

1 W = 1 J/s 1 kW = 1,000 W 1 mechanical HP = 745.6998715822702 W (exact, per IEEE/ISO definition) 1 metric HP (PS) = 735.49875 W 1 BTU/h = 0.29307107 W

Power is energy per unit time. The SI unit is the watt (1 W = 1 J/s). The "horsepower" exists in several definitions: mechanical (US imperial, 550 ftยทlbf/s = 745.6998... W) is standard for US car engines; metric (PS / DIN-PS, 735.49875 W) for European specifications; electrical (746 W exact) for motor nameplates. BTU per hour is the standard for HVAC and heating equipment, with 1 BTU/h โ‰ˆ 0.293 W. ISO 80000-5 codifies these definitions.

Worked examples

Example 1
Car engine
Inputs:
200 HP = ? kW
Output:
200 ร— 745.6998... = 149.14 kW
Example 2
HVAC unit
Inputs:
12,000 BTU/h = ? kW
Output:
12,000 ร— 0.29307107 = 3.517 kW (โ‰ˆ "1 ton" of cooling)
Example 3
Toaster
Inputs:
1.5 kW = ? BTU/h
Output:
1500 / 0.29307107 โ‰ˆ 5,118 BTU/h

Limitations

  • Three "horsepower" variants โ€” mechanical (US car), metric (PS, EU car), electrical (motor nameplate) โ€” differ by ~1.4%; pick the right one for context.
  • Boiler horsepower (used in steam-engine ratings) is yet another unit: 1 bhp โ‰ˆ 9,809.5 W โ€” about 13ร— mechanical HP. Not modeled.
  • BTU/h and tonne-of-refrigeration (1 ton โ‰ˆ 12,000 BTU/h โ‰ˆ 3.517 kW) are HVAC industry units.
  • Audio "watts RMS" and "peak watts" are marketing terms, not converter inputs โ€” use the spec's sustained continuous power.

Conversions are exact rational arithmetic between watt-defined units; horsepower variant selection affects results by up to 1.4% โ€” verify which definition matches your source.

Frequently asked

What is the formula for converting Metric Horsepower (PS) to Kilowatt?+
The formula is: 1 PS = 0.735499 kW. Type any value into the calculator above and the result appears instantly.
How do I convert Kilowatt back to Metric Horsepower (PS)?+
Click the swap button (โ‡„) above to go to the Kilowatt โ†’ Metric Horsepower (PS) converter, or use the inverse formula derived from the one shown.
How accurate is the conversion?+
Conversion factors used here are exact rational values from NIST SP 811 and the BIPM SI brochure (e.g. 1 ft = 0.3048 m exactly, 1 lb = 0.45359237 kg exactly). Trailing-digit differences vs hand calculation come only from binary floating-point representation, never from the conversion factor itself.
Where do these conversion factors come from?+
Length and mass factors come from the 1959 international yard-and-pound agreement; SI base units (metre, kilogram, second, kelvin) come from the 2019 BIPM redefinition; energy and pressure factors are NIST SP 811 reference values. Each editorial section above lists the specific source for that category.
Can I copy the conversion factor for use elsewhere?+
Yes. The factor in the formula above is the exact rational value used internally; copying it into Excel or another tool reproduces the result to floating-point precision.

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