Generator Size Calculator

Calculate the right generator size in kW for your home or job site. Enter total wattage and motor starting requirements to get a recommended generator size.

W
Recommended Generator Size
Peak (Starting) Watts
Recommended Wattage (w/ buffer)
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
W
Recommended Size
Peak Watts
Generator Category
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
W
W
gal

Sizing

Recommended kW
Required kVA

Operation

Est. Fuel Consumption
Est. Run Time per Tank

Installation

Transfer Switch
Voltage Note

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your total running watts (sum of all appliances you want to run simultaneously).
  2. Select a starting watts multiplier — use 1.5x if you have motors (fridge, AC, sump pump).
  3. Results show recommended generator size in kW with a 20% safety buffer.

Formula

Peak watts = running watts × starting multiplier

Recommended kW = peak watts × 1.2 (20% buffer) ÷ 1000

Example

Example: 5,000 running watts × 1.5 starting multiplier = 7,500 peak watts × 1.2 buffer = 9 kW generator recommended.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Add up the running watts of all appliances you want to power. Then account for starting watts (motors need 1.5–3x running watts to start). Add a 20% buffer and that is your minimum generator size.
  • Running watts is the continuous power an appliance needs. Starting watts (also called surge watts) is the extra power needed for 1–2 seconds when a motor starts up — typically 1.5–3x the running watts.
  • A typical 2,000–3,000 sq ft home needs a 22–30 kW standby generator to power everything. For essentials only (lights, fridge, sump pump, a few outlets), a 7–10 kW generator is usually enough.
  • Inverter generators are quieter, more fuel-efficient, and produce cleaner power safe for electronics. Conventional generators are louder but cheaper for the same wattage — better for construction sites and heavy tools.

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