What is a Volt-Ampere?
The volt-ampere measures AC apparent power, used in transformer ratings, UPS sizing, and electrical engineering.
Overview
The volt-ampere (VA) is the SI unit of apparent power in alternating-current (AC) electrical systems. Equal to volts times amperes, the VA represents the magnitude of power flowing in an AC circuit before accounting for the phase relationship between voltage and current. For purely resistive loads (incandescent bulbs, heaters), 1 VA = 1 W. For reactive loads (motors, transformers, fluorescent lights), the apparent power (VA) is larger than the real power (W) because of the phase shift — the ratio is the 'power factor.' Transformers, UPS units, and generators are rated in VA or kVA (kilo-VA) because they must handle the apparent power, not just the real power. A typical home UPS for a desktop computer is 600–1,500 VA. The VA relates to the watt (1 VA = 1 W only at unity power factor), the kilovolt-ampere (1 kVA = 1,000 VA), and the megavolt-ampere (1 MVA = 10⁶ VA — used in utility-scale transformers).
Convert Volt-Ampere to all units
Live resultRelationship to Other Power Units
1 VA equalsVisual reference for how the volt-ampere relates to other power units. Each row links to the full converter for that pair.
When Is the Volt-Ampere Used?
- Transformer sizing
- Uninterruptible power supply (UPS) ratings
- Generator capacity
Home UPS: 600–1500 VA. Transformer: kVA ratings. Motor power factor typically 0.8 — 1 kW motor = 1.25 kVA.
Tips for Using the Volt-Ampere
- VA = V × A (RMS).
- For purely resistive loads, VA = W.
- For motors, computers: VA > W (power factor < 1).
Common Mistakes
- Treating VA and W as identical — only true for resistive loads.
- Buying UPS by W when VA rating is required.
- Ignoring power factor in transformer sizing.