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Water Pressure Calculator
Calculate water pressure from depth/height of a water column.
Input Values
Gauge Pressure
Pa
—
bar
—
atm
—
mH₂O
—
Abs kPa
—
Abs psi
—
Understanding Water Pressure from Height
Water pressure increases with depth (or height of water above the measurement point). This is hydrostatic pressure and is the basis for water towers, gravity-fed systems, elevated tanks, and pressure gauge readings in plumbing systems.
The Formula
P = ρ × g × h
Where:
- P = pressure in pascals (Pa) — divide by 1,000 for kPa, by 100,000 for bar
- ρ = water density (1,000 kg/m³ for fresh water)
- g = 9.81 m/s²
- h = water column height (m)
Simplified rule of thumb: 1 metre of water head ≈ 9.81 kPa ≈ 0.098 bar ≈ 1.42 psi
How to Use This Calculator
Enter the height of the water column above the measurement point. Select fresh water or salt water (1025 kg/m³). The calculator returns pressure in Pa, kPa, bar, psi, and metres of head.
Practical Examples
Example 1: Water tower tank bottom is 20m above street level. P = 1000 × 9.81 × 20 = 196,200 Pa = 196.2 kPa = 1.96 bar = 28.5 psi.
Example 2: Domestic supply requires 1.5 bar minimum at the tap. Required head = 1.5 × 100,000 / (1000 × 9.81) = 15.3m.
Example 3: Diver at 30m depth in salt water. P = 1025 × 9.81 × 30 = 301,658 Pa = 3.02 bar above atmospheric (absolute P = 4.02 bar).
