Lighting Glossary

What is Power Factor? LED Driver Efficiency & Grid Impact

Power Factor (PF) measures how efficiently electrical power is used (0-1 scale). PF ≥0.9 is required for commercial LED drivers per IEC 61000-3-2. Low PF wastes energy and can cause utility penalties.

Definition

Power Factor (PF) is the ratio of real power (watts, doing actual work) to apparent power (volt-amperes, the total electrical load the wiring must carry). PF ranges from 0 to 1 — PF 1.0 means all current is doing useful work; PF 0.5 means 50% of the current flowing through the wiring is wasted as reactive power. Low power factor is caused by inductive or capacitive loads (like LED driver input stages) that draw current out of phase with voltage. A PF 0.5 LED driver draws twice the current of a PF 1.0 driver for the same wattage — overheating wiring, reducing the number of fixtures per circuit, and potentially incurring utility penalties. IEC 61000-3-2 mandates PF ≥0.9 for lighting equipment >25W (Class C), and Energy Star requires PF ≥0.7 for residential and ≥0.9 for commercial luminaires.

Key Data

ParameterValue / Explanation
PF 0.95-1.0Excellent — premium LED drivers with active PFC (Power Factor Correction). Near-unity PF.
PF 0.90-0.95Good — meets IEC 61000-3-2 Class C for >25W. Standard commercial grade.
PF 0.70-0.90Acceptable — typical of budget LED drivers without active PFC. Fine for <25W residential.
PF 0.50-0.70Poor — causes excessive current draw, circuit overload risk, potential utility penalties.
PF <0.50Unacceptable — avoid for any commercial/industrial application. Indicates severe design flaw.
THD (Total Harmonic Distortion)Related metric — should be <20% per IEC 61000-3-2 Class C. High THD causes neutral conductor overheating in 3-phase systems.

Application Guide

Large office (300+ fixtures)

PF ≥0.95, THD <10%, active PFC driver

At scale, PF 0.5 vs 0.95 is the difference between 15 and 7.9 circuits — significant electrical infrastructure cost

Residential (single fixture)

PF ≥0.7 acceptable, PF >0.9 preferred

Single fixture impact is negligible; grid-level harmonics are the concern

Industrial (1,000+ high bays)

PF ≥0.95, mandatory — check utility tariff for PF penalties

At megawatt scale, PF 0.5 would cost ~$15,000/year in utility penalties plus require oversized transformers

Conclusion & Procurement Recommendation

For B2B LED procurement, always specify power factor in driver requirements — it's a hidden cost multiplier. Key specifications: (1) PF ≥0.95 at full load for projects >100 fixtures, (2) PF ≥0.9 at 50% dimming level (many drivers maintain high PF at full load but drop to 0.5 when dimmed — specify PF across the full dimming range), (3) THD <15% (IEC 61000-3-2 Class C limit) to prevent neutral conductor and transformer overheating, (4) For 3-phase installations, specify balanced phase loading and verify PF per phase. Request driver datasheets showing PF vs load curve and THD spectrum. Budget drivers typically omit active PFC, resulting in PF 0.5-0.7 — the $2-5 saved per driver costs 10× more in electrical infrastructure.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does low power factor actually cost me money?
Three ways: (1) Oversized circuits — a PF 0.5 100W driver draws 200VA from the circuit. A 20A circuit can only support 12 fixtures at PF 0.5 vs 24 at PF 1.0 — doubling your circuit count and panel board cost. (2) Energy waste — reactive current flowing back and forth in the wiring causes I²R heating losses (though the utility meter at your facility typically only bills for real power in watts). (3) Utility penalties — many commercial/industrial tariffs include a PF clause: if your facility PF drops below 0.9, you pay a surcharge of 1-5% on your total bill. For a facility with $100,000 annual lighting electricity, that's $1,000-5,000/year in penalties.
Should I care about power factor for a small project?
For projects under 50 fixtures: PF ≥0.9 is recommended but PF 0.7+ is typically acceptable. The wiring infrastructure cost impact is minimal at small scale. However, always check local electrical code — some jurisdictions require PF ≥0.9 for all permanently installed lighting regardless of quantity. For residential: PF ≥0.7 per Energy Star. The cumulative grid impact of millions of low-PF LED bulbs is significant — utilities are increasingly mandating higher PF requirements.

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