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Watt-Hours to Joules Converter 2026 | Free Energy Conversion Tool
Energy Conversion 2026

Watt-Hours to Joules Converter

Accurate energy conversion tool for watt-hours to joules and joules to watt-hours

Convert watt-hours to joules instantly using the exact factor of 3,600 J per Wh. Includes bidirectional conversion with full energy breakdowns in kilojoules, megajoules, kilowatt-hours, and calories for 2026.

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⚡ Watt-Hours to Joules Converter

Professional energy conversion for electrical engineering, physics, battery technology, and energy management

✓ Exact Conversion Factor

Convert watt-hours to joules using the exact factor of 3,600 joules per watt-hour. This is a purely mathematical relationship — 1 hour = 3,600 seconds, and 1 watt = 1 joule per second — making 1 Wh = 3,600 J exact by definition under the SI system. No rounding, no approximation, and no uncertainty in this conversion in 2026.

✓ Bidirectional Tool

Switch instantly between watt-hours to joules and joules to watt-hours conversion modes. Results also include kilojoules, megajoules, kilowatt-hours, megawatt-hours, and kilocalories — giving you a complete multi-unit energy picture from a single input value for use across physics, engineering, and energy management applications.

✓ Practical Applications

Essential for electrical engineers, physicists, battery designers, solar energy analysts, HVAC engineers, students, and anyone working with energy calculations. Whether converting battery capacities, solar panel output, food energy labels, or physics problem values between watt-hours and joules, this free tool gives fast, precise results in 2026.

⚡ Watt-Hours to Joules Converter

Select conversion direction and enter your value below

Enter the energy in watt-hours to convert to joules
Enter the energy in joules to convert to watt-hours
Joules (J)
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Equivalent energy

Complete Energy Breakdown

Joules (J)
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Watt-Hours (Wh)
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Kilojoules (kJ)
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Megajoules (MJ)
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Kilowatt-Hours (kWh)
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Kilocalories (kcal)
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Detailed Breakdown

Understanding Watt-Hours to Joules Conversion

Both watt-hours and joules are units of energy within the SI system, but they are used in different contexts. A joule (J) is the SI base unit of energy, equal to the work done when a force of one newton acts over one metre — or equivalently, the energy dissipated as heat when one ampere passes through one ohm for one second. A watt-hour (Wh) is the energy delivered by one watt of power sustained for one hour. Since 1 watt = 1 joule/second and 1 hour = 3,600 seconds, the conversion is exact: 1 Wh = 3,600 J.

The joule is named after English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818–1889), whose experimental work established the mechanical equivalent of heat and the conservation of energy — the first law of thermodynamics. The watt-hour is widely used in electrical and energy contexts because it scales conveniently with the way electricity is generated, stored, and consumed. Electricity meters, battery capacities, and solar panel outputs are all commonly expressed in watt-hours or kilowatt-hours in both consumer and commercial settings in 2026.

Watt-Hours to Joules — Conversion Formula

Joules (J) = Watt-Hours (Wh) × 3,600
Watt-Hours (Wh) = Joules (J) ÷ 3,600
Watt-Hours (Wh) = Joules (J) × 0.000277̄ (= 1/3600)
Example: 5 Wh × 3,600 = 18,000 J
Basis: 1 W = 1 J/s → 1 Wh = 1 J/s × 3,600 s = 3,600 J (exact)

⚡ Energy Scale — 1 Watt-Hour Expressed in Multiple Units

1 Watt-Hour (Wh)
3,600 Joules (J)
3.6 Kilojoules (kJ)
0.0036 Megajoules (MJ)

All values shown are exactly equal to 1 watt-hour expressed in different energy units. The factor 3,600 is exact.

Watt-Hours to Joules Conversion Table 2026

Use this quick-reference table for common watt-hours to joules conversions. All values use the exact factor 1 Wh = 3,600 J.

Watt-Hours (Wh) Joules (J) Kilojoules (kJ) Kilocalories (kcal)
0.001 Wh3.6 J0.0036 kJ0.000860 kcal
0.01 Wh36 J0.036 kJ0.00860 kcal
0.1 Wh360 J0.36 kJ0.0860 kcal
1 Wh3,600 J3.6 kJ0.8604 kcal
2 Wh7,200 J7.2 kJ1.7207 kcal
5 Wh18,000 J18 kJ4.3018 kcal
10 Wh36,000 J36 kJ8.6042 kcal
20 Wh72,000 J72 kJ17.208 kcal
50 Wh180,000 J180 kJ43.021 kcal
100 Wh360,000 J360 kJ86.042 kcal
500 Wh1,800,000 J1,800 kJ430.210 kcal
1,000 Wh3,600,000 J3,600 kJ860.421 kcal

Small Energy Values

0.001 Wh3.6 J
0.01 Wh36 J
0.1 Wh360 J
1 Wh3,600 J

Medium Energy Values

2 Wh7,200 J
5 Wh18,000 J
10 Wh36,000 J
20 Wh72,000 J

Large Energy Values

50 Wh180,000 J
100 Wh360,000 J
500 Wh1,800,000 J
1,000 Wh3,600,000 J

Joules to Watt-Hours Conversion Table

Need to convert in reverse? Use this reference table for quick joules to watt-hours conversions at a glance using the factor 1 J = 0.000277̄ Wh (= 1/3,600 Wh).

Joules (J) Watt-Hours (Wh) Kilowatt-Hours (kWh) Kilojoules (kJ)
1 J0.000278 Wh0.000000278 kWh0.001 kJ
100 J0.02778 Wh0.0000000278 kWh0.1 kJ
1,000 J0.27778 Wh0.000278 kWh1 kJ
3,600 J1.00000 Wh0.001000 kWh3.6 kJ
10,000 J2.77778 Wh0.002778 kWh10 kJ
36,000 J10.0000 Wh0.010000 kWh36 kJ
100,000 J27.7778 Wh0.027778 kWh100 kJ
360,000 J100.000 Wh0.100000 kWh360 kJ
1,000,000 J277.778 Wh0.277778 kWh1,000 kJ
3,600,000 J1,000.00 Wh1.000000 kWh3,600 kJ

Small Joules → Wh

1 J0.000278 Wh
100 J0.02778 Wh
1,000 J0.27778 Wh
3,600 J1.00000 Wh

Large Joules → Wh

36,000 J10.000 Wh
100,000 J27.778 Wh
360,000 J100.00 Wh
3,600,000 J1,000 Wh

How to Convert Watt-Hours to Joules

To convert watt-hours to joules, multiply the watt-hour value by 3,600. This is because 1 watt-hour equals 1 watt × 1 hour = 1 J/s × 3,600 s = 3,600 J. The conversion is exact — no rounding or approximation is involved at any step. To reverse, divide joules by 3,600 (or multiply by 1/3,600 ≈ 0.000277̄) to get watt-hours.

💡 Key Conversion Facts

  • 1 Wh = 3,600 J — exact value (3,600 seconds per hour × 1 W = 1 J/s)
  • 1 J = 1/3,600 Wh ≈ 0.000277̄ Wh — divide joules by 3,600 to get watt-hours
  • 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J = 3.6 MJ — the unit used for domestic electricity billing
  • 1 Wh = 3.6 kJ — kilojoules is a convenient intermediate scale
  • 1 Wh ≈ 0.8604 kcal — useful when comparing electrical and food energy
  • The factor 3,600 is exact: no rounding error exists in any Wh ↔ J conversion

Step-by-Step Conversion Guide

  • Step 1: Note your energy value in watt-hours (Wh)
  • Step 2: Multiply by 3,600 to get joules directly
  • Step 3: Alternatively, multiply by 3.6 to get kilojoules (kJ), or by 0.0036 to get megajoules (MJ)
  • Step 4: To reverse, divide joules by 3,600 to get watt-hours, or divide by 3,600,000 to get kilowatt-hours

✅ Worked Examples

Convert 15 Wh to joules:
15 × 3,600 = 54,000 J

Convert 100 Wh to joules:
100 × 3,600 = 360,000 J = 360 kJ

Convert 18,000 J to watt-hours:
18,000 ÷ 3,600 = 5 Wh

Where Watt-Hours to Joules Conversion Is Used

The watt-hour is the dominant unit for measuring stored and consumed electrical energy in practical applications, while the joule is the required SI unit in scientific, engineering, and academic contexts. Converting between them is routine whenever electrical energy data must be used in physics calculations, thermodynamic analysis, or scientific publications. For example, a smartphone battery rated at 10 Wh stores exactly 36,000 J — a figure needed when calculating heat dissipation, charge-discharge efficiency, or energy density in research contexts in 2026.

🔋 Battery & Energy Storage

Battery capacities for smartphones, laptops, electric vehicles, and grid storage systems are universally rated in watt-hours (Wh) or kilowatt-hours (kWh). Converting to joules is required for energy density calculations, specific energy comparisons (J/kg or J/L), electrochemical efficiency analysis, and compliance reporting to IEC battery standards in 2026.

☀️ Solar & Renewable Energy

Solar panel output and system yield are reported in Wh or kWh, while energy balance calculations in photovoltaic system design use joules or megajoules. Converting Wh to J is required when performing detailed irradiance, thermal loss, and efficiency analysis in solar engineering software and research models in 2026.

🧪 Physics & Thermodynamics

Physics problems, thermodynamic cycle analysis, and heat transfer calculations all use joules as the standard SI energy unit. Electrical energy inputs expressed in watt-hours must be converted to joules before applying equations such as Q = mcΔT (heat), ΔU = Q − W (internal energy), or η = W_out/Q_in (efficiency) in academic and engineering contexts.

🏭 Industrial Energy Auditing

Energy auditors convert electricity consumption data (in kWh from utility meters) to joules or megajoules to compare against fuel, thermal, and mechanical energy inputs in industrial energy balance studies. Standards such as ISO 50001 (Energy Management Systems) require energy data to be expressed in SI units (joules or multiples) for boundary-level reporting in 2026.

Common Mistakes When Converting Watt-Hours to Joules

The most common error is confusing watt-hours (Wh) with watts (W). Watts are units of power (energy per unit time), not energy — you cannot directly convert watts to joules without knowing the time duration. A second frequent mistake is confusing watt-hours with kilowatt-hours: a 100 Wh value is 0.1 kWh, not 100 kWh. Always check the prefix before multiplying by 3,600.

⚠️ Watch Out For These Errors

  • Confusing Wh with W: Watts (W) are power units — you need to multiply by time in seconds to get joules. Watt-hours already include the time element (1 hour = 3,600 s), so 1 Wh = 3,600 J directly
  • Forgetting the kilo prefix: 1 kWh = 1,000 Wh = 3,600,000 J (3.6 MJ). Treating kWh as Wh understates the energy by 1,000-fold — a very common mistake in household energy calculations
  • Using 3,600 for kWh → J: To convert kWh to J, use 3,600,000 (not 3,600). The factor 3,600 applies only to Wh → J. For kWh → J, multiply by 3.6 × 10⁶
  • Mixing Wh and watt-seconds: A watt-second (W·s) equals 1 joule exactly — not 3,600. Watt-seconds and watt-hours are very different despite sounding similar. Always confirm which unit is being used before applying a conversion factor

Frequently Asked Questions — Watt-Hours to Joules

How many joules is 1 watt-hour?
1 watt-hour equals exactly 3,600 joules. This is derived from the definition: 1 watt = 1 joule per second, and 1 hour = 3,600 seconds. Therefore 1 Wh = 1 W × 3,600 s = 3,600 J. This is an exact relationship with no rounding involved — it follows directly from the SI definition of the second and the watt.
How do I convert watt-hours to joules?
Multiply the watt-hour value by 3,600. For example: 25 Wh × 3,600 = 90,000 J. To convert to kilojoules instead, multiply by 3.6 (since 1 Wh = 3.6 kJ). To reverse — converting joules back to watt-hours — divide the joule value by 3,600 (or multiply by 0.000277̄).
How many joules is 1 kilowatt-hour (kWh)?
1 kilowatt-hour (kWh) = 1,000 Wh = 1,000 × 3,600 J = 3,600,000 J = 3.6 MJ (megajoules). This is the unit used on domestic electricity bills worldwide. To convert kWh to J, multiply by 3,600,000 or equivalently by 3.6 × 10⁶.
What is 10 watt-hours in joules?
10 watt-hours equals 36,000 joules (10 × 3,600 = 36,000 J = 36 kJ). This is approximately the energy in a small USB power bank delivering 10 Wh, or the energy consumed by a 10-watt LED lamp running for one hour. In kilocalories, 10 Wh ≈ 8.604 kcal.
Is 1 watt-second the same as 1 joule?
Yes — 1 watt-second (W·s) equals exactly 1 joule (J). This is different from 1 watt-hour, which equals 3,600 joules. A watt-second uses seconds as the time unit, while a watt-hour uses hours. Be careful not to confuse watt-seconds with watt-hours in energy calculations — the difference is a factor of 3,600.
What is the difference between watts and watt-hours?
Watts (W) measure power — the rate at which energy is transferred or used at any instant (energy per unit time). Watt-hours (Wh) measure energy — the total amount of energy transferred over a period of time. A 60 W light bulb running for 2 hours consumes 120 Wh = 432,000 J of energy. You cannot convert watts directly to joules without knowing the time duration.
Is this watt-hours to joules converter free?
Yes, this watt-hours to joules converter is completely free with no registration, no downloads, and no usage limits. Enter your watt-hour or joule value, select your conversion direction, and instantly receive results in joules, watt-hours, kilojoules, megajoules, kilowatt-hours, and kilocalories — all in one calculation with a full breakdown clearly displayed.

📚 Energy & Power Measurement Resources

BIPM — SI Units of Energy

The International Bureau of Weights and Measures defines the joule as the SI unit of energy, work, and heat. The watt-hour is a derived unit accepted for use with SI (not an SI base unit), with its conversion factor of 3,600 J/Wh following directly from the definition of the second and the watt in the SI system.

Visit BIPM →

IEA — Energy Statistics

The International Energy Agency publishes global energy statistics using both watt-hours (kWh, TWh) for electricity and joules (EJ, PJ) for primary energy. Understanding the conversion between these units is essential for interpreting IEA energy balance tables, electricity generation data, and renewable energy reports in 2026.

Visit IEA →

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