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dBm to Watts Converter – Free dBm to W Calculator

Convert dBm to watts instantly with our free calculator. Includes formula derivation, step-by-step examples, conversion table, reverse W to dBm, signal reference chart, and FAQs.
⚡ Free RF Power Calculator

dBm to Watts Converter (dBm → W)

Convert dBm (decibel-milliwatts) to watts (W) and milliwatts (mW) instantly. Whether you're reading a WiFi signal strength, analyzing RF transmitter power, or studying electronics — this free calculator gives you precise results alongside the full formula and real-world context.

📶 dBm to Watts Calculator
Watts (W)
Milliwatts (mW)
Scientific (W)
Enter dBm above to convert
W = 10 ^ ((dBm − 30) / 10)

0 dBm
= 1 mW = 0.001 W (reference level)
10 dBm
= 10 mW = 0.01 W
20 dBm
= 100 mW = 0.1 W (typical phone Tx)
30 dBm
= 1000 mW = 1 W
+3 dB
≈ double the power (×2)
+10 dB
= exactly 10× the power

The dBm to Watts Formula — Full Derivation

The decibel (dB) is a logarithmic ratio. dBm specifically measures power relative to 1 milliwatt. Because the decibel is base-10 logarithmic, converting dBm back to an absolute power in watts requires an exponential (antilogarithm) operation.

Primary Formula

W = 10 ^ ((dBm − 30) / 10)
Where W = watts  |  dBm = power in decibel-milliwatts

Equivalent Form Using Milliwatts

Since dBm is defined relative to 1 mW, it's often easier to first convert to milliwatts, then divide by 1000:

mW = 10 ^ (dBm / 10)
W = mW ÷ 1000
Both forms are mathematically identical

Where Does the −30 Come From?

dBm is defined as: dBm = 10 × log₁₀(P / 1 mW), where P is power in milliwatts. To invert this:

  1. dBm = 10 × log₁₀(P_mW) → P_mW = 10^(dBm/10) milliwatts
  2. Convert mW to W: P_W = P_mW / 1000 = 10^(dBm/10) / 1000
  3. Since 1/1000 = 10^(−3) = 10^(−30/10): P_W = 10^(dBm/10) × 10^(−30/10) = 10^((dBm−30)/10)

The subtraction of 30 in the exponent is simply the mathematical consequence of converting from milliwatts to watts — a factor of 10^3 = 1000 on the linear scale becomes a subtraction of 30 on the logarithmic dBm scale.

Key Logarithmic Relationships

⚡ The ±3 dB Rule

Every +3 dB increase approximately doubles power (×2). Every −3 dB halves power (÷2). More precisely: +3.0103 dB = exactly ×2.

⚡ The ±10 dB Rule

Every +10 dB increase multiplies power by exactly 10. Every −10 dB divides power by exactly 10. This is exact because 10^(10/10) = 10^1 = 10.

Reverse Formula: Watts to dBm

dBm = 10 × log₁₀(W) + 30
Equivalently: dBm = 10 × log₁₀(W × 1000) = 10 × log₁₀(mW)

Use the reverse calculator below, or apply this formula manually. For example: 0.5 W → dBm = 10 × log₁₀(0.5) + 30 = 10 × (−0.301) + 30 = −3.01 + 30 = 26.99 dBm.

Step-by-Step Conversion Examples

Work through these fully solved examples to master the dBm-to-watts conversion in any context — from WiFi signal reading to transmitter power output.

Example 1: Convert 0 dBm to watts (the reference point)
  1. dBm value: 0
  2. Apply formula: W = 10^((0 − 30) / 10) = 10^(−3)
  3. Calculate: 10^(−3) = 0.001 W
  4. Result: 0.001 W = 1 milliwatt (1 mW)
W = 10^((0 − 30) / 10) = 10^(−30/10) = 10^(−3) = 0.001 W = 1 mW
Example 2: Convert 20 dBm to watts (typical mobile phone transmit power)
  1. dBm value: 20
  2. Apply formula: W = 10^((20 − 30) / 10) = 10^(−10/10) = 10^(−1)
  3. Calculate: 10^(−1) = 0.1 W
  4. In milliwatts: 0.1 W × 1000 = 100 mW
W = 10^((20 − 30) / 10) = 10^(−1) = 0.1 W = 100 mW
Example 3: Convert 30 dBm to watts (1 watt transmitter)
  1. dBm value: 30
  2. Apply formula: W = 10^((30 − 30) / 10) = 10^(0/10) = 10^0
  3. Calculate: 10^0 = 1
  4. Result: 1 W = 1000 mW
W = 10^((30 − 30) / 10) = 10^0 = 1 W = 1000 mW
Example 4: Convert −67 dBm to watts (minimum viable WiFi signal)
  1. dBm value: −67
  2. Exponent: (−67 − 30) / 10 = −97 / 10 = −9.7
  3. Calculate: W = 10^(−9.7) ≈ 1.995 × 10^(−10) W
  4. Convert: ≈ 0.0000002 mW ≈ 0.2 nanowatts (nW)
W = 10^((−67 − 30) / 10) = 10^(−9.7) ≈ 2 × 10⁻¹⁰ W ≈ 0.0002 µW

Note: This tiny number illustrates exactly why dBm is used — expressing 2 × 10⁻¹⁰ W in everyday language is cumbersome, but "−67 dBm" is immediately meaningful to any RF engineer.

Example 5: Convert 43 dBm to watts (20 W amplifier)
  1. dBm value: 43
  2. Exponent: (43 − 30) / 10 = 13 / 10 = 1.3
  3. Calculate: W = 10^1.3 ≈ 19.95 W
  4. Result:20 W (19,953 mW)
W = 10^((43 − 30) / 10) = 10^1.3 ≈ 19.95 W ≈ 20 W

dBm to Watts Conversion Table

This comprehensive reference table covers the most commonly encountered dBm values in wireless communications, RF engineering, and electronics. Highlighted rows mark key reference points.

dBmWatts (W)Milliwatts (mW)Scientific (W)Typical Use
−100 dBm0.0000000001 W0.0001 µW1.00 × 10⁻¹⁰ WReceiver noise floor
−90 dBm0.000000001 W0.001 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁹ WVery weak signal
−80 dBm0.00000001 W0.01 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁸ WPoor WiFi signal
−70 dBm0.0000001 W0.1 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁷ WMarginal WiFi signal
−67 dBm≈ 0.0000002 W≈ 0.2 µW≈ 2.00 × 10⁻⁷ WMin reliable WiFi
−60 dBm0.000001 W1 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁶ WWeak cellular signal
−50 dBm0.00001 W10 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁵ WGood cellular receive
−40 dBm0.0001 W100 µW1.00 × 10⁻⁴ WStrong cellular signal
−30 dBm0.001 W0.001 mW → 1 µW (= 1000 µW)1.00 × 10⁻³ WExcellent WiFi (near AP)
−20 dBm0.00001 W0.01 mW1.00 × 10⁻⁵ WNear-field RFID
−10 dBm0.0001 W0.1 mW1.00 × 10⁻⁴ WBluetooth Low Energy Tx
0 dBm0.001 W1 mW1.00 × 10⁻³ WReference level (1 mW)
1 dBm0.001259 W1.259 mW1.259 × 10⁻³ W
2 dBm0.001585 W1.585 mW1.585 × 10⁻³ W
3 dBm0.001995 W≈ 2 mW1.995 × 10⁻³ W+3 dB ≈ double power
5 dBm0.003162 W3.162 mW3.162 × 10⁻³ WBluetooth Classic Tx
6 dBm0.003981 W3.981 mW3.981 × 10⁻³ W
10 dBm0.01 W10 mW1.00 × 10⁻² WLow-power WiFi Tx
13 dBm0.01995 W≈ 20 mW1.995 × 10⁻² W13 ≈ 10 + 3 → 10×2 = 20 mW
15 dBm0.03162 W31.62 mW3.162 × 10⁻² W
20 dBm0.1 W100 mW1.00 × 10⁻¹ WMobile phone max Tx, WiFi AP
23 dBm0.1995 W≈ 200 mW1.995 × 10⁻¹ W20 + 3 dB → 100 × 2 = 200 mW
24 dBm0.2512 W251.2 mW2.512 × 10⁻¹ W
25 dBm0.3162 W316.2 mW3.162 × 10⁻¹ W
27 dBm0.5012 W501.2 mW5.012 × 10⁻¹ W≈ 0.5 W
30 dBm1 W1000 mW1.00 × 10⁰ W1 W transmitter (key milestone)
33 dBm1.995 W1995 mW1.995 × 10⁰ W≈ 2 W (30 + 3 dB)
36 dBm3.981 W3981 mW3.981 × 10⁰ W≈ 4 W
37 dBm5.012 W5012 mW5.012 × 10⁰ WLTE base station Tx limit
40 dBm10 W10000 mW1.00 × 10¹ WAmateur radio HF Tx
43 dBm19.95 W19953 mW≈ 2.00 × 10¹ W≈ 20 W (40 + 3 dB)
46 dBm39.81 W39811 mW≈ 4.00 × 10¹ W≈ 40 W
50 dBm100 W100,000 mW1.00 × 10² WHigh-power radio station
53 dBm199.5 W199,526 mW≈ 2.00 × 10² W≈ 200 W (50 + 3 dB)
60 dBm1000 W1,000,000 mW1.00 × 10³ W1 kW broadcast transmitter
70 dBm10,000 W10,000,000 mW1.00 × 10⁴ W10 kW AM broadcast
80 dBm100,000 W1.00 × 10⁵ W100 kW shortwave transmitter

✓ Highlighted rows = key milestone values. Use the calculator above for any specific dBm value.

Popular dBm Values — Quick Convert

Click any value below to instantly populate the calculator and see the watts equivalent. These are the most commonly searched dBm conversions in WiFi engineering, telecommunications, and RF design.

−100 dBm −90 dBm −80 dBm −70 dBm −67 dBm −60 dBm −50 dBm −30 dBm 0 dBm 10 dBm 20 dBm 23 dBm 27 dBm 30 dBm 33 dBm 37 dBm 40 dBm 43 dBm 50 dBm 60 dBm

Signal Strength Reference Chart

In wireless communications, the received signal power is almost always expressed in dBm rather than watts — because the numbers are far more manageable. Here's a full reference chart from excellent signal to noise floor, with device context and watt equivalents.

WiFi / 802.11 Signal Quality Scale

−30 dBm
🟢 Excellent — 1 µW
Router in same room
−50 dBm
🟢 Very Good — 10 nW
Same floor, clear line
−60 dBm
🟡 Good — 1 nW
Different room, same floor
−67 dBm
🟡 Minimum reliable
VoIP / video streaming threshold
−70 dBm
🟠 Marginal — 0.1 nW
Packet loss may occur
−80 dBm
🔴 Poor — 10 pW
Unreliable connection
−90 dBm
🔴 Very Poor — 1 pW
Barely connected
−100 dBm
⛔ Noise floor
No usable signal

Transmit Power Reference by Device Type

Device / TechnologyTypical Tx Power (dBm)Watts
Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE)−20 to +10 dBm0.01 mW – 10 mW
Bluetooth Classic0 to +20 dBm1 mW – 100 mW
Zigbee / Z-Wave0 to +10 dBm1 mW – 10 mW
WiFi (2.4 GHz, indoor AP)17 to +23 dBm50 mW – 200 mW
WiFi (5 GHz, consumer AP)15 to +30 dBm30 mW – 1 W
4G LTE smartphone−10 to +23 dBm0.1 mW – 200 mW
5G NR handset−10 to +26 dBm0.1 mW – 400 mW
4G/5G small cell30 to +37 dBm1 W – 5 W
4G macro base station43 to +49 dBm20 W – 80 W
Amateur radio HF (100 W)50 dBm100 W
FM broadcast transmitter60 to +80 dBm1 kW – 100 kW
Satellite uplink40 to +60 dBm10 W – 1 kW

↺ Reverse Calculator — Watts to dBm

Enter power in watts to get the dBm value. Accepts decimal values like 0.001, 0.5, 1, 100.

Enter watts above
dBm = 10 × log₁₀(W) + 30

Where Is dBm Used? Real-World Applications

The dBm unit appears across virtually every field of wireless technology and RF engineering. Here are the key domains where you'll encounter dBm-to-watts conversions in practice:

📶 WiFi Network Engineering

Site survey tools report received signal strength in dBm. Understanding the dBm-to-watts relationship helps engineers design coverage zones, set transmit power levels, and diagnose poor connectivity. Typical AP Tx: 20–23 dBm (100–200 mW).

📱 Mobile / Cellular Networks

LTE and 5G handsets dynamically adjust transmit power based on link conditions. The UE max Tx power is defined in dBm (23 dBm for LTE = 200 mW). Link budget calculations require converting these to watts for path-loss math.

📡 RF & Microwave Engineering

Amplifier gain, cable loss, and antenna gain are all measured in dB. The signal power at each stage is tracked in dBm. Engineers convert to watts when calculating interference limits, safety thresholds (SAR), and PA efficiency.

🛰️ Satellite Communications

Uplink and downlink budgets use EIRP (Effective Isotropic Radiated Power) in dBm or dBW. Ground station amplifiers are specified in watts (e.g., 400 W = 56 dBm), and the conversion is essential for ITU regulatory compliance.

🔬 Radar & Electronic Warfare

Radar systems use the radar equation with power in both watts and dBm depending on context. Peak transmit powers can range from milliwatts (radar sensors) to megawatts (long-range military radar), making the dBm scale essential.

🎙️ Audio & Broadcast

In broadcast RF, transmitter power is rated in watts (e.g., 50 kW = 77 dBm), but studio signal chains use dBm for audio line levels. The 0 dBm reference (1 mW into 600 Ω) is a legacy standard from telephone engineering.

💡 IoT & Low-Power Sensors

Zigbee, Z-Wave, LoRaWAN, and NB-IoT devices transmit at very low power (0 to +14 dBm = 1–25 mW) to maximize battery life. Sensitivity of receivers reaches down to −137 dBm for LoRa spread spectrum.

🏠 Consumer Electronics

Your phone, tablet, or laptop reports WiFi signal strength in dBm in developer settings. Knowing the watt equivalent helps contextualize what that number means — −70 dBm is just 100 picowatts, yet it can still stream HD video.

Frequently Asked Questions — dBm to Watts

What does dBm stand for? +

dBm stands for decibel-milliwatts. It is an absolute unit of power using a logarithmic scale where 0 dBm is defined as exactly 1 milliwatt (1 mW = 0.001 W). The "d" is for decibel, "B" for Bell (after Alexander Graham Bell), and "m" for the milliwatt reference. Unlike pure dB (which is a ratio), dBm represents an absolute power level.

What is the formula to convert dBm to watts? +

The formula is: W = 10^((dBm − 30) / 10). Alternatively: W = 10^(dBm/10) / 1000. Both are equivalent. The key steps are: (1) subtract 30, (2) divide by 10, (3) raise 10 to that power. Example: 20 dBm → 10^((20−30)/10) = 10^(−1) = 0.1 W = 100 mW.

What is 0 dBm in watts? +

0 dBm = 1 milliwatt = 0.001 watts. This is the fundamental reference level of the dBm scale. By definition, 0 dBm is the power of 1 mW into any impedance. Every other dBm value is expressed relative to this level.

What is 30 dBm in watts? +

30 dBm = 1 watt (1 W = 1000 mW). This is one of the most important reference points. Since every +10 dB multiplies power by 10, starting from 0 dBm = 1 mW: 10 dBm = 10 mW, 20 dBm = 100 mW, 30 dBm = 1000 mW = 1 W.

What is 20 dBm in watts? +

20 dBm = 0.1 W = 100 mW. This is a very common transmit power level — it equals the maximum power output of most WiFi access points (under FCC Part 15 rules) and the peak power of a smartphone's LTE/4G radio in typical operating conditions.

What is 37 dBm in watts? +

37 dBm = 10^((37−30)/10) = 10^0.7 = 5.012 watts. This is the maximum Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) allowed for some LTE small cells and 5 GHz WiFi access points under various regional regulations.

Can dBm be negative? What does it mean? +

Yes — negative dBm values are extremely common, especially for received signals. A negative dBm simply means the power is less than 1 mW. For example: −70 dBm = 10^(−10) W = 0.1 nanowatt. Your phone's WiFi receives signals in the range of −30 to −90 dBm regularly. Negative dBm does not mean negative power — all power is positive; the negative sign is a log-scale artifact.

What is the difference between dBm and dBW? +

Both are absolute logarithmic power units, but with different reference levels: dBm references 1 milliwatt; dBW references 1 watt. The relationship is: dBW = dBm − 30. So 30 dBm = 0 dBW = 1 W. dBm is more common in RF/wireless; dBW is used in satellite engineering and ITU standards where watts-scale powers are normal.

Why do engineers use dBm instead of watts? +

Three main reasons: (1) Huge dynamic range — RF power spans from 10^−15 W (femtowatts at a receiver) to 10^5 W (100 kW transmitter). dBm compresses this to roughly −150 to +80 dBm. (2) Cascade arithmetic — adding stages in dB (dBm + dB gain − dB loss) is simpler than multiplying/dividing power ratios. (3) Standardization — industry specifications, test equipment, and regulatory limits all use dBm.

How do I convert watts to dBm? +

Use: dBm = 10 × log₁₀(W) + 30 (or equivalently: dBm = 10 × log₁₀(mW)). Examples: 1 W → dBm = 10×log₁₀(1) + 30 = 0 + 30 = 30 dBm. 0.001 W = 1 mW → dBm = 10×log₁₀(0.001) + 30 = −30 + 30 = 0 dBm. 50 W → dBm = 10×log₁₀(50) + 30 = 16.99 + 30 = 46.99 dBm. Use the reverse calculator above.

What does +3 dB mean in terms of power? +

+3 dB means approximately doubling the power. More precisely, +3.0103 dB = exactly ×2. This rule is invaluable: if a 20 dBm (100 mW) transmitter gains 3 dB, it becomes 23 dBm ≈ 200 mW. Conversely, a 3 dB cable loss on a 30 dBm (1 W) signal leaves 27 dBm ≈ 500 mW. Similarly, +10 dB = exactly ×10 power.

What is a good WiFi signal in dBm? +

WiFi signal quality guide: −30 dBm: Excellent (you're next to the router). −50 dBm: Very good. −60 dBm: Good. −67 dBm: Minimum for reliable VoIP and video. −70 dBm: Marginal — web browsing OK, streaming may buffer. −80 dBm: Poor — frequent drops. −90 dBm: Very poor. Check your device's dBm reading in developer settings or a WiFi analyser app.

Comparison: dBm vs dBW vs Watts

There are several ways to express RF power, each suited to different scales and applications. Here is a direct side-by-side comparison of the three most common power units:

dBm

Reference: 1 milliwatt (1 mW)

Range used: −120 to +60 dBm

Formula: 10 × log₁₀(mW)

Common in: WiFi, cellular, Bluetooth, RF test equipment

Example: 0 dBm = 1 mW; 30 dBm = 1 W

Pro: Best for low-to-medium power RF work

dBW

Reference: 1 watt (1 W)

Range used: −30 to +60 dBW

Formula: 10 × log₁₀(W)

Common in: Satellite, broadcast, radar, ITU standards

Example: 0 dBW = 1 W; −30 dBW = 1 mW

Pro: Better for high-power systems

Watts (W)

Reference: SI base unit (absolute)

Range used: pW to MW

Formula: 10^((dBm−30)/10)

Common in: Power supply, amplifier ratings, safety standards

Example: 1 mW; 0.1 W; 1 W; 100 W

Pro: Intuitive for thermal / SAR calculations

Quick Conversion Between All Three

Watts (W)Milliwatts (mW)dBmdBW
0.000001 W0.001 mW = 1 µW−30 dBm−60 dBW
0.001 W1 mW0 dBm−30 dBW
0.01 W10 mW10 dBm−20 dBW
0.1 W100 mW20 dBm−10 dBW
1 W1000 mW30 dBm0 dBW
10 W10,000 mW40 dBm10 dBW
100 W100,000 mW50 dBm20 dBW
1000 W1,000,000 mW60 dBm30 dBW

Key insight: dBW = dBm − 30 always. The two logarithmic scales are simply offset by 30 dB.

Mental Math Shortcuts for dBm Conversions

With just a few anchor points and two rules, you can perform dBm-to-watts conversions in your head without a calculator. This is a critical skill for RF engineers working in the field.

The Three Anchor Points

  • 0 dBm = 1 mW — memorize this as the foundation of the entire scale
  • 10 dBm = 10 mW — one decade up from the reference
  • 30 dBm = 1 W — the most important cross-unit milestone

The Two Golden Rules

Rule 1: +10 dB = ×10 (and −10 dB = ÷10)

Starting from any anchor: 20 dBm = 0 dBm + 20 dB = 1 mW × 10 × 10 = 100 mW. Or: 50 dBm = 30 dBm + 20 dB = 1 W × 100 = 100 W.

Rule 2: +3 dB ≈ ×2 (and −3 dB ≈ ÷2)

Apply after the ×10 rule: 23 dBm = 20 dBm + 3 dB ≈ 100 mW × 2 = 200 mW. 27 dBm = 30 dBm − 3 dB ≈ 1000 mW ÷ 2 = 500 mW.

Combined Example

What is 43 dBm in watts?

  • Start from 30 dBm = 1 W
  • 43 = 30 + 13 = 30 + 10 + 3
  • +10 dB: 1 W × 10 = 10 W (now at 40 dBm)
  • +3 dB: 10 W × 2 = 20 W (now at 43 dBm)
  • Answer: ≈ 20 W (exact: 19.95 W)

This "divide dBm into chunks of 10 and 3" approach is used daily by RF engineers for quick link-budget sanity checks.

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