Convert Therm to Kilowatt-Hour (thm → kWh)
The therm equals 100,000 BTU and is the standard unit for natural gas billing in the US and the UK.
Therm to Kilowatt-Hour Conversion Table
10 common values| Therm | Kilowatt-Hour |
|---|---|
| 1 thm | 29.307107 kWh |
| 10 thm | 293.07107 kWh |
| 100 thm | 2,930.7107 kWh |
| 500 thm | 14,653.554 kWh |
| 1,000 thm | 29,307.107 kWh |
| 5,000 thm | 146,535.54 kWh |
| 10,000 thm | 293,071.07 kWh |
| 50,000 thm | 1,465,355.4 kWh |
| 100,000 thm | 2,930,710.7 kWh |
| 500,000 thm | 14,653,554 kWh |
How to Convert Therm to Kilowatt-Hour Manually
Step by StepConverting therms to kilowatt-hours is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in thermsStart with the number of therms (thm) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 29.307107The conversion factor from thm to kWh is 29.307107. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in kilowatt-hoursThe result is your value in kilowatt-hours (kWh).
Formula
Multiply the value in therms by 29.307107. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.034121.
kWh = thm × 29.307107thm = kWh × 0.034121Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 therm = 100,000 BTU = 105.5 MJ = 29.3 kWh.
- UK bills often quote both therms and kWh.
- In metric-dominant EU, gas is billed in kWh or m³.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Comparing therms and kWh without conversion on a mixed-unit bill.
- Assuming therms are used globally — only US and UK.
- Using BTU when bill shows therms — factor of 100,000.
About Therm and Kilowatt-Hour
What is the Therm?
The therm equals exactly 100,000 BTU (or about 105.5 megajoules) and is the standard unit for natural-gas billing in the United States and the United Kingdom. Gas utilities deliver therms (or 'CCF' — hundred cubic feet, approximately 1 therm of natural gas). A typical US home uses 50–100 therms per month for heating in winter. The therm is also used in industrial process heating and commercial gas pricing. UK natural gas was historically sold in therms before metric conversion, and the unit persists in legacy contracts. The therm relates to the BTU (100,000 BTU = 1 therm), the megajoule (1 therm ≈ 105.5 MJ), the kilowatt-hour (1 therm ≈ 29.3 kWh), and the cubic foot of natural gas (about 100 ft³ ≈ 1 therm at standard heating value). Most metric countries bill natural gas in cubic meters or kilowatt-hours instead.
- US residential gas bills
- UK commercial gas billing
- Industrial natural-gas contracts
UK home heating: 200–500 therms/year. 1 therm = about $1.50 US (2024) or £1.00 UK.
What is the Kilowatt-Hour?
The kilowatt-hour equals 1,000 watt-hours (3.6 megajoules) and is the universal billing unit for residential electricity consumption around the world. A typical US household uses about 800–1,000 kWh per month; a refrigerator consumes 1–2 kWh per day, an LED bulb at 10 W for 10 hours uses 0.1 kWh, and a Tesla Model 3 has a 75 kWh battery (about 250–350 miles of range). Electric utility rates are quoted in cents per kWh — typical US residential rates are 11–25 ¢/kWh, while industrial rates are lower. The kilowatt-hour is essential in renewable-energy planning: solar panel output, wind farm production, and grid-scale storage are all rated in kWh or MWh (megawatt-hours). It relates to the watt-hour (1,000 Wh = 1 kWh), the joule (1 kWh = 3.6 MJ), the BTU (1 kWh ≈ 3,412 BTU), and the megawatt-hour (1,000 kWh = 1 MWh).
- Electricity billing globally
- EV battery capacity specifications
- Home solar and battery storage
UK home: ~2900 kWh/year. Tesla Model 3 battery: 60–80 kWh. Typical EV efficiency: 15–20 kWh/100 km.