Megavolts to Kilovolts Converter

Convert megavolts to kilovolts instantly with our free voltage conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

MV
=
kV
1,000
Kilovolts (kV)
1 MV = 1,000 kV
🔄 Swap Units (Kilovolts → Megavolts)
1 MV
=
1,000 kV
1 Megavolt = 1,000 Kilovolts

How to Convert Megavolts to Kilovolts

To convert a voltage measurement from megavolts to kilovolts, multiply the voltage by the conversion factor. Since one megavolt is equal to 1,000 kilovolts, you can use this formula:

kilovolts = megavolts × 1,000

The voltage in kilovolts is equal to the megavolts multiplied by 1,000.

Example: Convert 5 megavolts to kilovolts.

Using the formula: kilovolts = megavolts × 1,000

kilovolts = 5 MV × 1,000 = 5,000 kV

Therefore, 5 megavolts equals 5,000 kilovolts.

How Many Kilovolts Are in a Megavolt?

There are 1,000 kilovolts in one megavolt.

1 MV = 1,000 kV

What Is a Megavolt?

The megavolt (symbol: MV) is a unit of electric potential equal to one million (106) volts. The prefix “mega” denotes a factor of 106 in the International System of Units. Megavolts are encountered in ultra-high-voltage power transmission, particle accelerators, and atmospheric physics. The highest-voltage transmission lines in the world operate at 1,000–1,200 kV (1.0–1.2 MV), used in China and other countries for long-distance power transport. In particle physics, linear accelerators and Van de Graaff generators can produce potentials of several megavolts to accelerate charged particles. Medical linear accelerators (linacs) used in radiation therapy operate at 4–25 MV. A lightning bolt involves potential differences of approximately 100–300 MV between the cloud and the ground. The breakdown voltage of air is approximately 3 MV per metre under standard conditions, so a 100 m gap requires about 300 MV to produce a spark — consistent with the length of typical lightning channels.

One megavolt is equal to:

  • 106 volts (V)
  • 1,000 kilovolts (kV)
  • 109 millivolts (mV)
  • 0.001 gigavolts (GV)
  • 3,335.64 statvolts (stV)
  • 1014 abvolts (abV)

What Is a Kilovolt?

The kilovolt (symbol: kV) is a unit of electric potential equal to one thousand (103) volts. The prefix “kilo” denotes a factor of 1,000 in the International System of Units. Kilovolts are commonly used in power transmission, medical imaging, and high-voltage engineering. Electrical power is transmitted over long distances at high voltages to reduce energy losses: distribution lines typically operate at 4–35 kV, sub-transmission at 69–138 kV, and transmission at 110–765 kV. In medical imaging, X-ray tubes operate at voltages of 25–150 kV (the tube voltage determines X-ray energy and penetrating power). CT scanners typically operate at 80–140 kV. In dentistry, dental X-rays use 50–90 kV. In industrial applications, electric discharge machining (EDM) uses voltages of 50–380 V, while electrostatic precipitators (for air pollution control) operate at 20–100 kV. Cathode ray tubes (CRTs) in old televisions used 15–30 kV for electron acceleration.

One kilovolt is equal to:

  • 1,000 volts (V)
  • 106 millivolts (mV)
  • 109 microvolts (μV)
  • 0.001 megavolts (MV)
  • 3.33564 statvolts (stV)
  • 1011 abvolts (abV)

Understanding Voltage Units

Voltage (also called electric potential difference or electromotive force) is a measure of the work needed to move a unit electric charge from one point to another in an electric field. It is one of the most fundamental quantities in electricity and electronics, analogous to pressure in a water system.

Ohm’s law (V = I × R) relates voltage (V) to current (I) and resistance (R), and the power equation (P = V × I) connects voltage to electrical power. These relationships are the foundation of all electrical engineering.

Major Voltage Unit Systems

  • SI units (V with metric prefixes): The volt (V) is the SI derived unit of electric potential. Standard metric prefixes produce nanovolts (nV), microvolts (μV), millivolts (mV), kilovolts (kV), megavolts (MV), and gigavolts (GV). Each prefix step is a factor of 1,000.
  • CGS electrostatic unit — Statvolt (stV): The voltage unit in the Gaussian/ESU system. One statvolt equals exactly 299.792458 V, a factor derived from the speed of light. Used in some theoretical physics contexts.
  • CGS electromagnetic unit — Abvolt (abV): The voltage unit in the EMU system. One abvolt equals exactly 10−8 V (10 nanovolts). An extremely small unit, primarily of historical interest.

Voltage in Everyday Life

  • Batteries: AA/AAA cells = 1.5 V, 9 V battery, car battery = 12 V, smartphone = 3.7–4.2 V.
  • Household mains: 120 V (North America, Japan) or 230 V (Europe, Asia, Africa) at 50 or 60 Hz AC.
  • USB power: USB 2.0/3.0 = 5 V, USB-C PD = 5/9/15/20 V (up to 48 V in Extended Power Range).
  • Power transmission: 110–765 kV for long-distance lines, 4–35 kV for local distribution.
  • Lightning: 100–300 MV potential difference, 20,000–200,000 A peak current.
  • Static electricity: Walking on carpet can generate 1–25 kV.

Converting Between Voltage Units

SI voltage conversions follow simple powers of 10: each metric prefix step (nano → micro → milli → base → kilo → mega → giga) is a factor of 1,000. For CGS units, the key factors are: 1 stV = 299.792458 V (from the speed of light) and 1 abV = 10−8 V (exact).

Tips for Voltage Conversions

  • For SI prefix conversions (nV, μV, mV, V, kV, MV, GV), each step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 kV = 1,000 V = 1,000,000 mV, and 1 V = 1,000 mV = 1,000,000 μV.
  • The statvolt factor (299.792458 V) comes from the speed of light: c = 299,792,458 m/s, and 1 stV = c/(106) V. This is an exact value.
  • The abvolt is exactly 10 nanovolts (10−8 V). This is a very small voltage — it takes 100 million abvolts to make 1 volt.
  • The relationship between statvolts and abvolts involves c²: 1 stV = c² × 10−8 abV ≈ 2.998 × 1010 abV.
  • When dealing with very large or very small numbers, scientific notation is helpful: 1 GV = 109 V, and 1 nV = 10−9 V.
  • Don’t confuse voltage (electric potential, measured in volts) with current (charge flow, measured in amperes) or resistance (opposition to current, measured in ohms). Voltage “pushes” current through resistance.
  • In practice, kilovolts are the most common “large” voltage unit (power lines, X-rays), while millivolts and microvolts are common “small” units (sensors, biomedical signals).

Megavolts to Kilovolts Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from megavolts to kilovolts.

MegavoltsKilovolts (kV)
1 MV1,000
2 MV2,000
3 MV3,000
4 MV4,000
5 MV5,000
6 MV6,000
7 MV7,000
8 MV8,000
9 MV9,000
10 MV10,000
11 MV11,000
12 MV12,000
13 MV13,000
14 MV14,000
15 MV15,000
16 MV16,000
17 MV17,000
18 MV18,000
19 MV19,000
20 MV20,000
21 MV21,000
22 MV22,000
23 MV23,000
24 MV24,000
25 MV25,000
26 MV26,000
27 MV27,000
28 MV28,000
29 MV29,000
30 MV30,000
31 MV31,000
32 MV32,000
33 MV33,000
34 MV34,000
35 MV35,000
36 MV36,000
37 MV37,000
38 MV38,000
39 MV39,000
40 MV40,000

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