Kilowatt-Hours to Gigajoules Converter

Convert kilowatt-hours to gigajoules instantly with our free energy conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

kWh
=
GJ
0.0036
Gigajoules (GJ)
1 kWh = 0.0036 GJ
🔄 Swap Units (Gigajoules → Kilowatt-Hours)
1 kWh
=
0.0036 GJ
1 Kilowatt-Hour = 0.0036 Gigajoules

How to Convert Kilowatt-Hours to Gigajoules

To convert an energy measurement from kilowatt-hours to gigajoules, divide the energy value by the conversion factor. Since one kilowatt-hour is equal to 0.0036 gigajoules, you can use this formula:

gigajoules = kilowatt-hours ÷ 277.7778

The energy in gigajoules is equal to the kilowatt-hours divided by 277.7778.

Example: Convert 5 kilowatt-hours to gigajoules.

Using the formula: gigajoules = kilowatt-hours ÷ 277.7778

gigajoules = 5 kWh ÷ 277.7778 = 0.018 GJ

Therefore, 5 kilowatt-hours equals 0.018 gigajoules.

How Many Gigajoules Are in a Kilowatt-Hour?

There are 0.0036 gigajoules in one kilowatt-hour.

1 kWh = 0.0036 GJ

What Is a Kilowatt-Hour?

The kilowatt-hour (symbol: kWh) is a unit of energy equal to 1,000 watt-hours or 3,600,000 joules (3.6 MJ). It is the standard unit used worldwide for measuring and billing electrical energy consumption. One kilowatt-hour is the energy consumed by a 1,000-watt appliance running for one hour, or equivalently, a 100-watt appliance running for 10 hours. Electricity bills are typically calculated by multiplying the number of kWh consumed by the price per kWh. Average electricity prices vary widely by region: approximately $0.10–$0.17/kWh in the US, €0.20–$0.40/kWh in Europe, and much higher in some island nations. An average US household consumes about 900–1,000 kWh per month. Common energy consumption examples: running an air conditioner for one hour uses about 1–3 kWh, charging an electric vehicle from empty uses about 30–100 kWh, and a typical household refrigerator uses about 1–2 kWh per day. One kWh of electricity can power about 34 hours of laptop use or about 10 hours of TV watching.

One kilowatt-hour is equal to:

  • 3,600,000 joules (J)
  • 3,600 kilojoules (kJ)
  • 3.6 megajoules (MJ)
  • 860,421 calories (cal)
  • 860.421 kilocalories (kcal)
  • 1,000 watt-hours (Wh)
  • 3,412.14 BTU

What Is a Gigajoule?

The gigajoule (symbol: GJ) is a metric unit of energy equal to one billion (109) joules. It is used for measuring large quantities of energy in industrial, commercial, and utility contexts. In the natural gas industry, energy content is often expressed in gigajoules. One cubic metre of natural gas contains approximately 0.0373 GJ of energy, and natural gas is sometimes priced per gigajoule in countries like Canada and Australia. One gigajoule is roughly equivalent to 277.8 kWh of electricity, 26.8 litres of gasoline, or 23.4 kilograms of coal. An average North American household consumes about 100–120 GJ of total energy per year (including electricity, heating, and transportation). In power generation, the gigajoule is used to express the fuel energy input to power plants and to calculate thermal efficiency. A large coal-fired power plant might consume several hundred gigajoules of fuel per hour.

One gigajoule is equal to:

  • 1,000,000,000 joules (J)
  • 1,000 megajoules (MJ)
  • 277,778 watt-hours (Wh)
  • 277.778 kilowatt-hours (kWh)
  • 0.277778 megawatt-hours (MWh)
  • 947,817 BTU
  • 0.947817 MMBTU

Understanding Energy Units

Energy is a fundamental physical quantity that represents the capacity to do work or produce heat. It is conserved in all physical processes (the first law of thermodynamics) and can be converted from one form to another — mechanical, thermal, electrical, chemical, nuclear, and radiant energy are all interconvertible.

The wide variety of energy units reflects the historical development of different branches of science and engineering, each of which developed its own preferred units before the adoption of the International System of Units (SI).

Major Unit Families

  • SI / Metric units: The joule (J) is the SI unit of energy, with standard metric prefixes (kJ, MJ, GJ). The watt-second (Ws) is identical to the joule. Watt-hours (Wh), kilowatt-hours (kWh), and megawatt-hours (MWh) combine power (watts) with time.
  • Calorie-based units: The calorie (cal), kilocalorie (kcal), and megacalorie (Mcal) originated in thermochemistry. The kilocalorie is widely used in nutrition as the “food Calorie.”
  • British / Imperial units: The British thermal unit (BTU) and its multiples (MMBTU, therm, quad) are used primarily in the US for HVAC, natural gas, and national energy statistics.
  • Atomic-scale units: The electronvolt (eV) and its multiples (keV, MeV) are used in atomic, nuclear, and particle physics for the extremely small energies of individual particles.

Energy in Everyday Life

  • Nutrition: Food energy is measured in kilocalories (kcal) or kilojoules (kJ). A typical adult needs about 2,000–2,500 kcal (8,400–10,500 kJ) per day.
  • Electricity: Household electricity consumption is measured in kilowatt-hours (kWh). An average US home uses about 900–1,000 kWh per month.
  • Heating: Natural gas consumption is measured in therms or MMBTU. A US home might use 500–1,000 therms per year for heating.
  • Transportation: Gasoline contains about 120,000 BTU or 34 MJ per litre. One gallon of gasoline contains about 33.7 kWh of energy.

Converting Between Energy Units

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

For very large or very small conversion factors, results are often expressed in scientific notation (e.g., 6.2415 × 1018 eV per joule). This is particularly common when converting between atomic-scale units (electronvolts) and everyday units (joules, BTU, calories).

Tips for Energy Conversions

  • The joule and watt-second are exactly the same unit (1 J = 1 Ws). The different names are used in different contexts.
  • For SI metric conversions (J, kJ, MJ, GJ), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. The same applies to cal/kcal/Mcal, Wh/kWh/MWh, and eV/keV/MeV.
  • The kilocalorie (kcal) used in nutrition is often written as “Calorie” with a capital C. When a food label says 200 Calories, it means 200 kcal = 200,000 cal.
  • One kilowatt-hour equals exactly 3,600,000 joules (1 kW × 3,600 seconds). This is useful for converting between electrical and metric energy units.
  • One BTU ≈ 1,055 joules ≈ 252 calories. These rough equivalences are useful for quick mental conversions.
  • One therm = 100,000 BTU exactly. One MMBTU = 1,000,000 BTU exactly. One quad = 1015 BTU exactly.
  • The electronvolt is an extremely small unit compared to everyday energy: 1 eV ≈ 1.6 × 10−19 J. It is used only for atomic-scale energies.
  • To calculate electricity cost, multiply kWh × price per kWh. To calculate gas heating cost, multiply therms × price per therm.

Kilowatt-Hours to Gigajoules Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from kilowatt-hours to gigajoules.

Kilowatt-HoursGigajoules (GJ)
1 kWh0.0036
2 kWh0.0072
3 kWh0.0108
4 kWh0.0144
5 kWh0.018
6 kWh0.0216
7 kWh0.0252
8 kWh0.0288
9 kWh0.0324
10 kWh0.036
11 kWh0.0396
12 kWh0.0432
13 kWh0.0468
14 kWh0.0504
15 kWh0.054
16 kWh0.0576
17 kWh0.0612
18 kWh0.0648
19 kWh0.0684
20 kWh0.072
21 kWh0.0756
22 kWh0.0792
23 kWh0.0828
24 kWh0.0864
25 kWh0.09
26 kWh0.0936
27 kWh0.0972
28 kWh0.1008
29 kWh0.1044
30 kWh0.108
31 kWh0.1116
32 kWh0.1152
33 kWh0.1188
34 kWh0.1224
35 kWh0.126
36 kWh0.1296
37 kWh0.1332
38 kWh0.1368
39 kWh0.1404
40 kWh0.144

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