International Special Order Plug Adapters
ELECTRIC POWER AROUND THE
WORLD
The table
below summarizes information on the electrical systems in use in
most countries of the world.
The voltages listed here are
the “nominal” figures reported to be in use at most residential or
commercial sites in the country or area named. Most electrical
power systems are prone to slight variations in voltage due to
demand or other factors. Many former 220 V countries have
converted or are in the process of converting to the EU
standard of 230 V. Generally, this difference is
inconsequential, as most appliances are built to tolerate current a
certain percentage above or below the rated voltage. However,
severe variations in current can damage electrical equipment.
The electric power frequency
is shown in the number of hertz (cycles per second). Even if
voltages are similar, a 60-hertz clock or tape recorder may not
function properly on 50 hertz current. All systems described
here use alternating current (AC). The plug types listed
indicate all types known to be in use in that country. Not all
areas of a country may use all types of plugs listed for that
country, since there may be regional differences based on the power
system in a certain area.
Finally, I've only included information that
is likely to be relevant for travelers. Just about everywhere
listed here has higher voltage lines available for heavy duty
appliances (not to mention commercial or industrial applications).
While this would be relevant for those moving to another country,
I'm assuming most travelers will leave their clothes dryers, air
conditioners and arc welders at home!
If you are
interested in converting electrical units or sizing a generator try
these Power
Generator Calculators (for calculating
generator size in kW, converting kW to kVA, kVA to kW, Volts, Amps,
and more).
ALL DIGIPRO NST.LVDC SYSTEMS COMES WITH
A 3 PRONG GROUNDED CORD
as shown here
and
will need to be converted to your proper HOT (+) and NUETRAL (-) and
Earth Ground.
ALL THREE MUST BE USED TO MAKE OUR
SYSTEMS OPERATE PROPERLY AND SAFELY!
Adapters picked
must have access to all three prongs, including the important
grounding pin.
|
COUNTRY |
VOLTAGE |
FREQUENCY |
PLUG
|
COMMENTS
|
|
Afghanistan
|
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F * |
* A UN
correspondent reports C and F common in Kabul, but its
likely a variety of plugs may be used around the country.
Some sources report Type
D also in use.
Other reports indicate voltage variances from 160V to 280V. |
|
Albania |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
*Voltage
variations common |
|
Algeria |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C* &
F |
*A variation of
Type C with a ground post offset about 1/2-inch from center
may also be found. |
|
American Samoa |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A, B,
F &
I |
|
|
Andorra |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Angola |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Anguilla |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A
(maybe
B) |
|
|
Antigua |
230 V* |
60 Hz |
A & B |
*Airport area is
reportedly Antigua power is 110 V. |
|
Argentina |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
I* |
*Neutral and
line wires are reversed from that used in Australia and
elsewhere.
Click here for more. |
|
Armenia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Aruba |
127 V* |
60 Hz |
A, B &
F |
*Lago Colony
115V |
|
Australia |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
*Outlets
typically controlled by adjacent switch.
Click here for more. |
|
Austria |
230 V |
50 Hz |
F |
Type
C may be found,
but rare. |
|
Azerbaijan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
F |
|
|
Azores |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
B,
C, &
F |
*Ponta Delgada
110 V; to be converted to 220 V |
|
Bahamas |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B
|
|
Bahrain |
230 V* |
50 Hz* |
G |
*Awali 110 V, 60
Hz |
|
Balearic Islands |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F
|
|
Bangladesh |
220 V |
50 Hz |
A,
C,
D,
G &
K |
|
|
Barbados |
115V |
50 Hz |
A, B |
|
|
Belarus |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C
&
F |
|
|
Belgium |
230 V |
50 Hz |
E |
Notes from
correspondents: a 'C' style plug can be used with 'E' and
'F' receptacles. All double-insulated appliances are indeed
fitted with a 'C' plug, and can be used in any compatible
receptacle (C E F and narrow L). Type C receptacles are
prohibited in Belgium. |
|
Belize |
110/220 V |
60 Hz |
B &
G
|
|
|
Benin |
220 V |
50 Hz |
E |
|
|
Bermuda |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Bhutan |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D,
F, &
G |
Type
M plugs also
identified by some sources. |
|
Bolivia |
220/230 V* |
50 Hz |
A &
C |
*La Paz & Viacha
115V |
|
Bosnia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Botswana |
231V |
50 Hz |
M |
Type G
may be found,
but rare. |
|
Brazil |
110/220 V* |
60 Hz |
A & B,
C |
*127 V found in
states of Bahia, Paraná (including Curitiba), Rio de
Janeiro, São Paulo and Minas Gerais (though 220 V may be
found in some hotels). Other areas are 220 V only, with the
exception of Fortaleza (240 V).
Outlets
(click for more) are often a combination of type
A and
C and can accept
either type plug. |
|
Brunei |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Bulgaria |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C* &
F* |
*Outlets are
reported as type F,
though both type C
and F plugs may
be encountered. |
|
Burkina Faso |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Burundi |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Cambodia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
A &
C* |
*Some outlets
are a combination of type
A and
C and can accept
either type plug. Plug
G may be found in
some hotels. |
|
Cameroon |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
E |
|
|
Canada |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Canary Islands |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
E, &
L |
Type L
plugs/outlets may have different pin spacing. The smaller
and closer pins are for a rated current of 10 A, the bigger
and wider pins are for a rated current of 16 A. |
|
Cape Verde |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Cayman Islands |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Central African Republic |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Chad |
220 V |
50 Hz |
D,
E &
F |
|
|
Channel Islands |
230 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Chile |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
L |
|
|
China, People's
Republic of |
220 V |
50 Hz |
A,
I,
G |
The "official"
plug type is like type
A but slightly
shorter and without holes in blades. Type
A and
I outlets are
common, and Type G
might also be found.
Click here
for photos and more info. |
|
Colombia |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Comoros |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Congo, People's
Rep. of |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Congo, Dem. Rep.
of (former Zaire) |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
D |
|
|
Cook Islands |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Costa Rica |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
Côte d'Ivoire
(Ivory Coast) |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Croatia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Cuba |
110/220 V |
60 Hz |
A & B,
C,
F
& L |
Most older hotels
110 V. Some newer hotels 220 V.
Some outlets are a
combination of type
A and C and
can accept either type plug. |
|
Cyprus |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Czech Republic |
230 V |
50 Hz |
E |
|
|
Denmark |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
K |
Denmark's
connectors have slight differences from those used
elsewhere. While pin diameter and spacing is standard,
outlets may have different housing depths which could
interfere with standard adaptors -- one report says this is
due to "childproofing." Also, Plug C fits into K-type
outlets (but not vice versa). |
|
Djibouti |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Dominica |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Dominican Republic |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A |
Type
J may exist in
some hotels. |
|
East Timor |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
E,
F,
I, |
A UN
correspondent reports "power is poor in the country with
frequent brownouts and blackouts. I suspect that surges are
frequent as we go through a lot of surge-protecting power
bars." Further he reports than Type
I
is common as much construction is done by Australians; type
C is common in
building built during Indonesian occupation; type
E is less common;
type F is common
in offices but not hotels. |
|
Ecuador |
120-127 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Egypt |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
El Salvador |
115V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
England (See
United Kingdom) |
|
|
Equatorial Guinea |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
*Voltage varies
between 150 & 175V with frequent outages |
|
Eritrea |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Estonia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
F |
Type
C may be found in
older buildings. Type
E plugs may work
in either C or
F type outlets. |
|
Ethiopia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
D,
J, &
L |
|
|
Faeroe Islands |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
K |
|
|
Falkland Islands |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Fiji |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Finland
|
230 V |
50 Hz |
C & F |
|
|
France |
230 V |
50 Hz |
E |
Type
C plugs may be
found on some appliances, and will fit the Type E outlet.
Type C outlets
may be found in older buildings.
Type
A may be found
in older buildings but is illegal. |
|
French Guiana |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C, &
E |
|
|
Gaza |
230 V |
50 Hz |
H |
|
|
Gabon |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Gambia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Georgia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C
|
|
|
Germany |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Ghana |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Gibraltar |
240 V |
50 Hz |
C &
G |
|
|
Great Britain (See
United Kingdom) |
|
|
|
Greece |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D,
E &
F |
|
|
Greenland |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
K |
|
|
Grenada (Windward Is.) |
230 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Guadeloupe |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D, &
E |
|
|
Guam |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Guatemala |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A, B,
G, &
I |
|
|
Guinea |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
F &
K |
|
|
Guinea-Bissau |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Guyana |
240 V* |
60 Hz* |
A, B,
D &
G |
*Inside the
capital city of Georgetown, both 120 V and 240 V at either
50 or 60 Hz are found, depending on the part of the city (50
Hz most common). Actual voltage may vary from area to area. |
|
Haiti |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Honduras |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Hong Kong |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
G,
M |
Type M replaced
by Type G but still found. |
|
Hungary |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Iceland |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
India |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
D |
Click here for photos and more info. |
|
Indonesia |
127/230 V* |
50 Hz |
C,
F &
G |
*Conversion to
230 V in progress; complete in principal cities |
|
Iran |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Iraq |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D, &
G |
|
|
Ireland (Eire) |
230 |
50 Hz |
G |
Type
D once common and
may be occasionally found. |
|
Isle of Man |
240 V |
50 Hz |
C &
G |
|
|
Israel |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Italy |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
F &
L |
Type L
plugs/outlets may have different pin spacing. The smaller
and closer pins are for a rated current of 10 A, the bigger
and wider pins are for a rated current of 16 A. Both kinds
are currently used and comply to the relevant Italian (CEI)
regulations. Some outlets have overlapping holes to accept
either older or newer types. |
|
Ivory Coast (See
Côte d'Ivoire) |
|
|
|
|
Jamaica |
110 V |
50 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Japan |
100 V |
50/60 Hz* |
A, B |
*Eastern Japan
50 Hz (Tokyo, Kawasaki, Sapporo, Yokohoma, and Sendai);
Western Japan 60 Hz (Osaka, Kyoto, Nagoya, Hiroshima)
|
|
Jordan |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D,
F,
G &
J* |
*Type
C may be found in
some hotels. |
|
Kenya |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Kazakhstan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Kiribati |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Korea, South |
220 V |
60 Hz |
C
& F* |
*Type F likely
to be found in offices and hotels. 110 V power with plugs
A & B was
previously used but is being phased out. Older buildings
may still have this, and some hotels offer both 110 V and
220 V service. |
|
Kuwait |
240 V |
50 Hz |
D* &
G |
*Type
D primarily used for 15A service, Type G primarily for 13A
service.. |
|
Laos |
230 V |
50 Hz |
A, B,
C,
E &
F |
|
|
Latvia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C
&
F |
|
|
Lebanon |
110/220 V |
50 Hz |
A, B,
C,
D &
G |
|
|
Lesotho |
220 V |
50 Hz |
M |
|
|
Liberia |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Libya |
127 V* |
50 Hz |
D &
L |
*Barce,
Benghazi, Derna, Sebha & Tobruk 230 V |
|
Lithuania |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C
&
F |
|
|
Liechtenstein |
230 V |
50 Hz |
J
|
|
|
Luxembourg |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Macau |
220 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Macedonia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Madagascar |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Madeira |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Malawi |
230 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Malaysia |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Maldives |
230 V |
50 Hz |
A,
D,
G,
J,
K &
L |
|
|
Mali |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Malta |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Martinique |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D, &
E |
|
|
Mauritania |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Mauritius |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
G |
|
|
Mexico |
127 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Micronesia
(Federal States of) |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Monaco |
127/220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D,
E
F |
|
|
Mongolia |
220 V |
50
Hz |
C
&
E
|
|
|
Montenegro |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Montserrat (Leeward Is.) |
230 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Morocco |
127/220 V* |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
*Conversion to
220 V only underway |
|
Mozambique |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
F &
M*
|
*Type M found
especially near the border with South Africa, including the
capitol, Maputo. |
|
Myanmar (formerly
Burma) |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D,
F &
G* |
Type G* found
primarily in better hotels. Also, many of major
hotels chains are said to have multipurpose outlets, which
will take Australian 3-pin plugs and perhaps other types. |
|
Namibia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
M |
|
|
Nauru |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Nepal |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
D |
|
|
Netherlands |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Netherlands Antilles |
127/220 V* |
50 Hz |
A, B, &
F |
*St. Martin 120
V 60 Hz; Saba &(St. Eustatius 110 V 60 Hz A, maybe B
|
|
New Caledonia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
F |
|
|
New Zealand |
230 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Nicaragua |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A |
|
|
Niger |
220 V |
50 Hz |
A, B,
C,
D,
E &
F |
|
|
Nigeria |
240 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Northern Ireland (see
United Kingdom) |
|
|
|
|
Norway |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Okinawa |
100 V* |
60 Hz |
A, B &
I |
*Military
facilities 120 V |
|
Oman |
240 V* |
50 Hz |
G |
*Voltage
variations common |
|
Pakistan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
D |
|
|
Palmyra Atoll |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Panama |
110 V* |
60 Hz |
A, B
|
*Panama City 120
V |
|
Papua New Guinea |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Paraguay |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C |
|
|
Peru |
220 V* |
60 Hz* |
A, B &
C |
*Talara 110/220
V; Arequipa 50 Hz |
|
Philippines |
220 V |
60 Hz |
A, B,
C |
Type
A most commonly found. |
|
Poland |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Portugal |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Puerto Rico |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Qatar |
240 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Réunion Island |
220 V |
50 Hz |
E |
|
|
Romania |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Russia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
F &
C |
Type F used in
new construction. Type C common in older structures. |
|
Rwanda |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
J |
|
|
St. Kitts and Nevis
(Leeward Is.) |
230 V |
60 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
St. Lucia (Windward Is.) |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
St. Vincent (Windward
Is.) |
230 V |
50 Hz |
A,
C,
E,
G,
I &
K |
|
|
Samoa |
230 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Saudi Arabia |
127/220 V |
60 Hz |
A, B,
F &
G
|
|
|
Scotland (See
United Kingdom) |
|
|
|
|
|
Senegal |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D,
E &
K |
|
|
Serbia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Seychelles |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Sierra Leone |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Singapore |
230 V |
50 Hz |
G |
Type
A adaptors are
widely available from shops as an extension set of 2 to 5
sets of sockets; most commonly used for audio and video
equipment. |
|
Slovak Republic |
230 V |
50 Hz |
E |
|
|
Slovenia |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Somalia |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
C |
*Berbera 230 V;
Merca 110/220 V |
|
South Africa |
220/230 V* |
50 Hz |
M** |
*Grahamstad &
Port Elizabeth 250V; also found in King Williams
** Types C &
G can also be
found in some areas. |
|
Spain |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
A correspondent
reports that in Barcelona's Barrio Gothic, voltage is 120 V
60 Hz using Types
C
& F plugs. Step
up transformers are required to use typical European
devices. |
|
Sri Lanka |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D |
|
|
Sudan |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
D |
|
|
Suriname |
127 V |
60 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Swaziland |
230 V |
50 Hz |
M |
|
|
Sweden |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
F |
|
|
Switzerland |
230 V |
50 Hz |
J |
Type
C plugs are
common on appliances, and will fit the Type J outlet. |
|
Syria |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
E, &
L |
|
|
Tahiti |
220 V |
60 Hz |
A, B,
E |
All electrical
outlets protected by ground fault circuit interruptors
(GFCI). |
|
Tajikistan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
I |
|
|
Taiwan |
110 V |
60 Hz |
A, B |
|
|
Tanzania |
230 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|
|
Thailand |
220 V |
50 Hz |
A &
C* |
*Some outlets
are a combination of type
A and
C and can accept
either type plug. |
|
Togo |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
C |
*Lome 127 V
|
|
Tonga |
240 V |
50 Hz |
I |
|
|
Trinidad & Tobago |
115V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Tunisia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C &
E |
|
|
Turkey |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C & F |
|
|
Turkmenistan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
B
&
F |
|
|
Uganda |
240 V |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
Ukraine |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C
|
|
|
United Arab Emirates |
220 V* |
50 Hz |
G |
|
|
United Kingdom |
230 V* |
50 Hz |
G |
*Outlets
typically controlled by adjacent switch.
Though
nominal voltage has been officially changed to 230 V,
240 V is within tolerances and commonly found. |
|
United States of America |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Uruguay |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C,
F,
I* &
L |
Type
F becoming more
common as a result of computer use. *Neutral and line wires
are reversed from that used in Australia and elsewhere.
Click here for more. |
|
Uzbekistan |
220 V |
50 Hz |
C &
I
|
|
|
Vanuatu |
230 V |
50 Hz |
I
|
Some Type
G may linger from
British Colonial period, but are a rarity. |
|
Venezuela |
120 V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Vietnam |
127/220 V* |
50 Hz |
A,
C &
G |
*To be
standardized at 220 V. Type
G found in newer
hotels, primarily those built by Singaporean and Hong Kong
developers. |
|
Virgin Islands
(British and U.S.) |
115V |
60 Hz |
A & B |
|
|
Wales (See United
Kingdom) |
|
|
|
|
Yemen, Rep. of |
220/230 V |
50 Hz |
A,
D &
G |
|
|
Zambia |
230 V |
50 Hz |
C,
D &
G |
|
|
Zimbabwe |
220 V |
50 Hz |
D &
G |
|