Btu per Hour to Horsepower Converter

Convert btu per hour to horsepower instantly with our free power conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

Btu/h
=
hp
3.9301E-4
Horsepower (hp)
1 Btu/h = 3.9301E-4 hp
🔄 Swap Units (Horsepower → Btu per Hour)
1 Btu/h
=
3.9301E-4 hp
1 Btu per Hour = 3.9301 × 10-4 Horsepower

How to Convert Btu per Hour to Horsepower

To convert a power measurement from btu per hour to horsepower, divide the power value by the conversion factor. Since one btu per hour is equal to 3.9301 × 10-4 horsepower, you can use this formula:

horsepower = btu per hour ÷ 2,544.434

The power in horsepower is equal to the btu per hour divided by 2,544.434.

Example: Convert 5 btu per hour to horsepower.

Using the formula: horsepower = btu per hour ÷ 2,544.434

horsepower = 5 Btu/h ÷ 2,544.434 = 0.00196507 hp

Therefore, 5 btu per hour equals 0.00196507 horsepower.

How Many Horsepower Are in a Btu per Hour?

There are 3.9301 × 10-4 horsepower in one btu per hour.

1 Btu/h = 3.9301 × 10-4 hp

What Is a Btu per Hour?

The British thermal unit per hour (symbol: Btu/h) is a unit of power commonly used in the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) industry, particularly in the United States. One Btu per hour is the rate of energy transfer equal to one British thermal unit every hour. One BTU is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit at a constant pressure of one atmosphere. The International Table BTU equals exactly 1,055.05585262 joules. Btu per hour is the standard rating unit for heating and cooling equipment in the United States. Furnaces, air conditioners, heat pumps, and water heaters are all rated in Btu/h or thousands of Btu/h (MBtu/h or kBtu/h). A typical residential furnace is rated at 40,000–120,000 Btu/h, and a central air conditioner at 18,000–60,000 Btu/h. In the HVAC industry, the “ton of refrigeration” (12,000 Btu/h) is a common unit for air conditioning capacity. A 3-ton residential AC unit has a cooling capacity of 36,000 Btu/h. Natural gas consumption is also measured in Btu. A gas water heater might use 30,000–50,000 Btu/h, while a gas furnace might consume 60,000–100,000 Btu/h when running.

One btu per hour is equal to:

  • 0.293071 watts (W)
  • 293.071 milliwatts (mW)
  • 2.93071 × 10−4 kilowatts (kW)
  • 3.93015 × 10−4 horsepower (hp)
  • 0.252164 kilocalories per hour (kcal/h)

What Is a Horsepower?

Horsepower (symbol: hp) is a unit of power that originated in the late 18th century when James Watt sought to compare the output of steam engines with the power of draft horses. One mechanical horsepower is defined as 550 foot-pounds-force per second (550 ft·lbf/s), which equals approximately 745.7 watts. There are several types of horsepower in use, but the most common is the mechanical (or imperial) horsepower. It is used extensively in the automotive, marine, and aerospace industries to rate the power output of engines and motors. In the automotive industry, engine power is almost universally expressed in horsepower in the United States and many other countries. A small economy car might produce 100–150 hp, a mid-size sedan 200–300 hp, and a high-performance sports car 400–700 hp. Top Fuel dragsters produce over 11,000 hp. In marine engineering, the power of outboard motors, inboard engines, and ship propulsion systems is rated in horsepower. A typical pleasure boat might have a 150–300 hp outboard, while a large container ship may have an engine producing 80,000–100,000 hp. The term “horsepower” was originally estimated by Watt based on the sustained power output of a mill horse: approximately 33,000 foot-pounds of work per minute. This definition (33,000 ft·lbf/min = 550 ft·lbf/s) remains the exact definition of mechanical horsepower today.

One horsepower is equal to:

  • 745.7 watts (W)
  • 0.7457 kilowatts (kW)
  • 7.457 × 10−4 megawatts (MW)
  • 745,700 milliwatts (mW)
  • 2,544.43 Btu per hour (Btu/h)
  • 641.186 kilocalories per hour (kcal/h)

Understanding Power Units

Power is the rate at which energy is transferred, converted, or used per unit of time. In physics, power equals work done divided by the time taken (P = W/t), or equivalently, force times velocity (P = Fv). Power is a scalar quantity measured in watts in the SI system.

Different power units reflect the diverse fields in which power is measured. The watt (and its multiples) dominate science and electrical engineering, while horsepower remains entrenched in the automotive and mechanical industries. Btu per hour is the standard in the American HVAC industry, and kilocalories per hour bridges the gap between physics and nutrition science.

Major Power Unit Families

  • SI / Metric units: The watt (W) is the SI unit of power, with standard metric prefixes (μW, mW, kW, MW). One watt equals one joule per second (1 W = 1 J/s = 1 kg·m²/s³).
  • Mechanical horsepower: Defined as 550 ft·lbf/s ≈ 745.7 W. Used primarily for rating engines and motors, especially in the US automotive industry.
  • British thermal units per hour: Based on the BTU, a traditional unit of heat energy. 1 Btu/h ≈ 0.2931 W. Standard in the US HVAC industry for heating and cooling equipment ratings.
  • Kilocalories per hour: Based on the thermochemical kilocalorie. 1 kcal/h ≈ 1.162 W. Used in nutrition, exercise science, and some HVAC applications outside the US.

Power in Everyday Life

  • Lighting: LED bulbs use 5–15 W, CFL bulbs 13–25 W, and incandescent bulbs 40–100 W for comparable brightness.
  • Computing: A smartphone charger delivers 5–25 W, a laptop uses 30–100 W, and a desktop gaming PC can draw 300–800 W.
  • Transportation: A typical car engine produces 100–300 hp (75–225 kW), while a locomotive produces 3,000–6,000 hp (2.2–4.5 MW).
  • Human body: At rest, the human body generates about 80–100 W of heat. During vigorous exercise, this can rise to 1,000–2,000 W.

Converting Between Power Units

All power units measure the same physical quantity — the rate of energy transfer — so converting between them is a matter of multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. The factor is the ratio of how many watts one unit of the source contains divided by how many watts one unit of the target contains.

Key conversion constants: 1 hp = 745.7 W, 1 Btu/h ≈ 0.2931 W, 1 kcal/h ≈ 1.162 W. For SI prefixes, each step is a factor of 1,000 (1 kW = 1,000 W, 1 MW = 1,000 kW).

Tips for Power Conversions

  • For SI metric conversions (μW, mW, W, kW, MW), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 MW = 1,000 kW = 1,000,000 W.
  • To convert horsepower to kilowatts, multiply by 0.7457. To go the other way, divide by 0.7457 (or multiply by 1.341).
  • Quick mental estimate: 1 hp ≈ ¾ kW, or 4 hp ≈ 3 kW. This is handy for quick comparisons.
  • In HVAC, 1 ton of refrigeration = 12,000 Btu/h ≈ 3.517 kW. A “3-ton” air conditioner = 36,000 Btu/h ≈ 10.55 kW.
  • For Btu/h to watts: divide by 3.412. For watts to Btu/h: multiply by 3.412.
  • The “Calories” on food labels are actually kilocalories (kcal). A food with 100 Calories provides 100 kcal of energy.
  • Don’t confuse power (watts) with energy (watt-hours). A 100 W light bulb running for 10 hours uses 1,000 Wh = 1 kWh of energy.
  • When comparing engine power ratings, ensure you’re using the same type of horsepower. Mechanical hp (≈ 745.7 W) is slightly different from metric hp (≈ 735.5 W).

Btu per Hour to Horsepower Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from btu per hour to horsepower.

Btu per HourHorsepower (hp)
1 Btu/h3.9301E-4
2 Btu/h7.8603E-4
3 Btu/h0.00117904
4 Btu/h0.00157206
5 Btu/h0.00196507
6 Btu/h0.00235809
7 Btu/h0.0027511
8 Btu/h0.00314412
9 Btu/h0.00353713
10 Btu/h0.00393015
11 Btu/h0.00432316
12 Btu/h0.00471618
13 Btu/h0.00510919
14 Btu/h0.00550221
15 Btu/h0.00589522
16 Btu/h0.00628824
17 Btu/h0.00668125
18 Btu/h0.00707427
19 Btu/h0.00746728
20 Btu/h0.0078603
21 Btu/h0.00825331
22 Btu/h0.00864633
23 Btu/h0.00903934
24 Btu/h0.00943235
25 Btu/h0.00982537
26 Btu/h0.0102184
27 Btu/h0.0106114
28 Btu/h0.0110044
29 Btu/h0.0113974
30 Btu/h0.0117904
31 Btu/h0.0121835
32 Btu/h0.0125765
33 Btu/h0.0129695
34 Btu/h0.0133625
35 Btu/h0.0137555
36 Btu/h0.0141485
37 Btu/h0.0145415
38 Btu/h0.0149346
39 Btu/h0.0153276
40 Btu/h0.0157206

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