Starting Watts Calculator

Starting Watts Calculator: Estimate Generator Surge Requirements

When sizing a generator, one of the biggest mistakes homeowners make is ignoring starting watts — also called surge watts.

Motor-driven appliances require significantly more power during startup than they do while running. If your generator can’t handle that temporary surge, it may overload, stall, or fail to start essential equipment.

Use the calculator below to estimate:

  • Total running watts
  • Highest starting watt requirement
  • Simultaneous motor startup load
  • Recommended generator size with safety margin

This tool works alongside our full Generator Planning Guide and load worksheet.


Starting Watts Calculator (Generator Surge Estimator)

👉 Use the interactive calculator below to estimate your surge requirements.

Starting Watts Calculator (Generator Surge Estimator)

Add your appliances and estimate surge (starting) watts using common multipliers. For best accuracy, use the appliance label/spec sheet if available.
Used only for overload warnings.
Adds headroom to recommended size.
Estimates surge of the top X starting loads.

Appliances

Appliance Running Watts Qty Surge Multiplier Starting Watts
Multiplier tips: most motors/compressors are ~2–3×; resistive loads (heaters/toasters/lighting) are ~1×.

Results

Total running watts
Highest starting watts
Estimated simultaneous starting
Recommended generator size

What Are Starting Watts?

Starting watts are the extra power required for a few seconds when a motor first turns on.

Appliances that require surge power include:

  • Refrigerators
  • Freezers
  • Sump pumps
  • Well pumps
  • Air conditioners
  • Furnace blowers

In most cases, starting watts are 2–3 times higher than running watts.

Example:

ApplianceRunning WattsStarting Watts
Refrigerator700W2,100W
Sump Pump800W2,400W
Window AC1,000W3,000W

Learn more here:
👉 Starting vs Running Watts Explained


Why Surge Planning Is Critical

If your generator only matches your running watts, you risk:

  • Breaker trips
  • Generator overload
  • Compressor startup failure
  • Flickering lights
  • Reduced appliance lifespan

Your generator must handle:

  1. Total running load
  2. Largest motor surge load
  3. Worst-case simultaneous startup

This calculator helps you model those scenarios.


How to Use the Starting Watts Calculator

Step 1: Add Your Appliances

Enter running watts and quantity.

Step 2: Select Surge Multiplier

  • Motors: 2–3×
  • Compressors: ~3×
  • Resistive loads (heaters, lights): 1×

Step 3: Choose Simultaneous Startup Assumption

Most homes assume 1 motor starts at a time.
For conservative planning, choose 2.

Step 4: Add Safety Margin

We recommend at least 20–25%.


Example Scenario

Appliances:

  • Refrigerator (700W × 3)
  • Sump pump (800W × 3)
  • Lights (200W × 1)

Running total = 1,700W
Largest starting = 2,400W
If two motors start at once = 4,500W surge

Recommended generator size (25% margin):
~5,600W

A 3,500W generator would fail in this scenario.


Next Step: Complete Your Full Generator Plan

After estimating surge load:

1️⃣ Use the Generator Load Worksheet to total running watts
2️⃣ Verify generator runtime using the Generator Fuel Consumption Calculator
3️⃣ Confirm proper wire size with the Extension Cord Gauge Chart

All tools are part of our main:


Frequently Asked Questions


How many starting watts does a refrigerator need?

Most refrigerators require 2–3 times their running wattage during startup.


Can I ignore starting watts when buying a generator?

No. Ignoring surge load is one of the most common generator sizing mistakes.


What if two motors start at the same time?

Your generator must handle the combined surge. The calculator allows you to model this scenario.


Are starting watts higher for inverter generators?

Inverter generators still must meet surge demand, but they regulate power more efficiently.


How much extra capacity should I add?

We recommend at least 20–25% above your highest estimated surge requirement.


Links To Related Articles


Final Thoughts

The difference between a generator that runs smoothly during an outage and one that constantly trips often comes down to surge planning.

By calculating starting watts properly, you:

  • Prevent overload
  • Protect appliances
  • Improve fuel efficiency
  • Choose the correct generator size

Use the calculator above, then continue your planning with the full generator sizing guide.