PSU Calculator
Find the right power supply for your build. Select your CPU, GPU, and peripherals below for a minimum and recommended wattage, modeled with real TDPs and transient spikes - not a generic guess.
PSU Wattage Calculator
Select your CPU, GPU, and peripherals to find out the minimum and recommended power supply wattage for your build.
Select Your Components
Peripherals & Storage
Where the numbers come from
The boring part is what every calculator does: sum the real TDPs of your CPU and GPU from our hardware database, add measured-average draw for RAM, drives, fans, and cooling, and put 25% headroom on top so the unit runs in its quiet, efficient 50-80% band instead of pinned at max.
The part most calculators skip is transients. A modern GPU does not draw its rated wattage politely - it spikes to 1.5-2x TDP for milliseconds at a time (bigger cards spike harder; that multiplier is shown in your result), and a boosting CPU overshoots on top of that. Those spikes are why a build that "should" fit a 750W unit can black-screen under load with no error and no warning. The ATX 3.0/3.1 spec exists precisely because of this: a compliant PSU must absorb excursions up to 200% of GPU rated power. We compute your worst-case momentary peak and show it, so the recommendation is built for the machine you actually have, not the one on the spec sheet.
What we do not model: exotic peripherals (capture cards, PCIe accelerators), heavy USB-PD loads, or serious overclocking. If that is your machine, treat our recommendation as the floor and step up one tier.
What real builds need in 2026
Four common builds through this exact engine, July 2026 - note how the transient peak, not the sustained draw, is what sizes the big rigs:
| Build | Sustained TDPs | Transient peak | Buy this |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ryzen 5 7500F + RTX 5060 | 65W + 150W | ~390W | 450W Gold |
| Ryzen 5 9600X + RTX 5070 | 65W + 250W | ~610W | 550W Gold, ATX 3.x |
| Ryzen 7 9800X3D + RTX 5080 | 120W + 360W | ~960W | 750W Gold, ATX 3.x |
| Ryzen 9 9950X + RTX 5090 | 170W + 575W | ~1,450W | 1200W Platinum, ATX 3.1 |
Yes, a 5090 build momentarily pulls more watts than a microwave. Click any build to load it in the calculator and adjust the peripherals to match yours.
Minimum vs recommended: which number do you buy?
Buy the recommended one. The minimum is the wattage at which everything runs - at full fan speed, with no headroom for the GPU you will inevitably drop in later, on a unit working its hardest every day of its life. The $20-40 between minimum and recommended buys you silence, longevity, and one less thing to replace at upgrade time. The one place we will talk you out of spending: Platinum and Titanium efficiency tiers. On a gaming PC that idles most of the day, the electricity savings over Gold rarely repay the premium - put that money in the GPU.
Reusing an older ATX 2.x unit? It was never rated for modern excursions, so give it more slack than the recommendation - the calculator prints the adjusted figure when it matters. And whatever the wattage, buy a unit from a maker with a reputation to lose. The PSU is the one component that can take everything else with it when it fails, which makes the no-name 850W special the most expensive thing on the shelf.
Full tier-by-tier breakdown in our PSU wattage guide. Building from scratch? Check the CPU-GPU balance first with the bottleneck calculator - a balanced pair sizes the PSU correctly on the first try.
If you came here looking for OuterVision
OuterVision was the internet's default PSU calculator for over a decade before it shut down in early 2025 (the domain no longer resolves - and no, the lookalike site now using its name is not it). We built this as a maintained, vendor-neutral replacement: no signup, no house brand of power supplies to nudge you toward, and a hardware database that gets updated daily rather than frozen in 2019. One deliberate difference: we skipped OuterVision's per-stick, per-drive granularity on purpose. Those inputs changed the answer by single watts while GPU transients swing it by hundreds, so we spent the effort where the failure actually happens.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much wattage does my PC actually need?
Your PC needs enough wattage to power all components under peak load, plus headroom for efficiency and power spikes. We recommend at least 25% more than your total estimated draw. For example, a system drawing 500W should use a 650W PSU.
What happens if my PSU is too small?
An undersized PSU can cause random shutdowns, crashes, and system instability - especially under heavy loads like gaming or rendering. In extreme cases, it can damage components. Always go with at least the minimum recommended wattage.
Is it bad to have a PSU that is too powerful?
No. A higher-wattage PSU will not force extra power into your components - it only delivers what they draw. A larger PSU gives you more upgrade headroom, runs cooler, and can be quieter. The only downside is paying more upfront.
What does 80+ Gold certification mean?
80+ certification measures power supply efficiency - how much AC power from the wall gets converted to usable DC power. 80+ Gold is about 90% efficient and is the best value for most gaming builds. Platinum and Titanium are better but cost significantly more.
Should I account for future GPU upgrades when buying a PSU?
Yes. Next-gen GPUs tend to draw more power. Buying a PSU with 200-300W of headroom over your current draw gives you room to upgrade your GPU without replacing the power supply.