Table of Contents
- Interactive PoE Budget Calculator
- PoE Standards: af vs at vs bt (The Wattage Truth)
- Real Device Power Draws (2026 Datasheet Values)
- The 5-Step Power Budget Formula
- 3 Real Scenarios: Will It Work?
- Cable Loss: The Hidden Wattage Thief
- The 5 Power Budget Mistakes That Burn Switches
- ES220 Budget Cheat Sheet
- FAQ
Interactive PoE Budget Calculator
Calculate your exact power requirements. Match them to the ES220-8P-1T (120W) or ES220-4P-1T (52W).
Scenario: 8-Camera Retail Store
| Device | Max Draw | Qty | Subtotal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2MP bullet camera | 5W | 2 | 10W |
| 4MP dome with IR | 8W | 1 | 8W |
| Doorbell camera | 7W | 1 | 7W |
| Device total | 25W | ||
| Cable loss + margin (20%) | + 5W | ||
| Required budget | 30W / 52W ✓ SAFE |
| Device | Max Draw | Qty | Subtotal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4MP dome cameras | 8W | 8 | 64W |
| Device total | 64W | ||
| Switch budget | 52W | ||
| Deficit | -12W ❌ FAILS |
What happens: Cameras 1-6 power on (48W). Camera 7 flickers or never boots. Camera 8 dead. At night when IR LEDs activate, camera #6 also reboots. You blame the switch. The real blame: math.
PoE Standards: af vs at vs bt (The Wattage Truth)
| Standard | IEEE | PSE Output (Switch) | PD Available (Device) | Per-Port Max | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PoE | 802.3af | 15.4W | 12.95W | 15.4W | Basic cameras, VoIP phones, sensors |
| PoE+ | 802.3at | 30W | 25.5W | 30W | 4K cameras, Wi-Fi 6 APs, PTZ (basic) |
| PoE++ Type 3 | 802.3bt | 60W | 51W | 60W | PTZ with heaters, Wi-Fi 6E/7 APs |
| PoE++ Type 4 | 802.3bt | 90W | 71.3W | 90W | LED lighting, digital signage, high-PTZ |
PoE Class Quick Reference
| Class | Power Range | Standard | Typical Devices |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class 0 | 0.44–12.95W | 802.3af | Basic IP camera, VoIP phone |
| Class 1 | 0.44–3.84W | 802.3af | IoT sensor, intercom |
| Class 2 | 3.84–6.49W | 802.3af | PTZ controller, basic AP |
| Class 3 | 6.49–12.95W | 802.3af | 4MP camera, Wi-Fi 5 AP |
| Class 4 | 12.95–25.5W | 802.3at | 4K camera, Wi-Fi 6 AP, basic PTZ |
| Class 5 | 25.5–40W | 802.3bt | Wi-Fi 6E AP, multi-sensor camera |
| Class 6 | 40–51W | 802.3bt | PTZ with heater, LED panel |
| Class 7 | 51–62W | 802.3bt | High-power PTZ, thin client |
| Class 8 | 62–71.3W | 802.3bt | Digital signage, laptop charging |
Real Device Power Draws (2026 Datasheet Values)
These are maximum published draws from manufacturer datasheets—not typical, not average. Use these for conservative budget planning.
IP Cameras
| Camera Type | Daytime | Night (IR On) | PoE Standard | Brand Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2MP fixed dome | 3W | 5W | 802.3af | Hikvision DS-2CD2123G2, Dahua IPC-HDW1230T |
| 4MP bullet/turret | 5W | 8W | 802.3af | Reolink RLC-510A, Amcrest IP4M-1041 |
| 4K (8MP) turret | 7W | 12W | 802.3af | Hikvision DS-2CD2387G2, Dahua IPC-HDW4831 |
| PTZ indoor (basic) | 10W | 15W | 802.3at | Dahua SD22204, Hikvision DS-2DE2204 |
| PTZ outdoor (heater) | 18W | 25W | 802.3at | Hikvision DS-2DE7A432, Axis Q6075 |
| PTZ + wiper + heater | 35W | 55W | 802.3bt | Axis Q6315, Bosch MIC-7502 |
| AI/multi-sensor | 12W | 20W | 802.3at | Avigilon H5A, Hanwha XNV-8083R |
Wireless Access Points
| AP Type | Typical Draw | Peak Draw | PoE Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) 2×2 | 6W | 9W | 802.3af |
| Wi-Fi 5 4×4 | 10W | 13W | 802.3af |
| Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) 2×2 | 9W | 13W | 802.3af |
| Wi-Fi 6 4×4 | 15W | 22W | 802.3at |
| Wi-Fi 6E tri-band | 20W | 30W | 802.3at |
| Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) | 22W | 35W | 802.3at/bt |
Other PoE Devices
| Device | Power Draw | PoE Standard |
|---|---|---|
| VoIP phone (basic) | 3–5W | 802.3af |
| VoIP phone (color screen) | 6–10W | 802.3af |
| Video intercom | 8–15W | 802.3af/at |
| Electronic door lock | 3–8W | 802.3af |
| IoT gateway | 4–8W | 802.3af |
| LED light panel (PoE) | 40–60W | 802.3bt |
The 5-Step Power Budget Formula
Step 1: List Every Device
Write down every powered device. Don't forget the doorbell camera you added last week.
Step 2: Use Maximum Draw, Not Typical
Example: 4 cameras × 8W + 2 APs × 20W + 1 phone × 5W = 77W
Step 3: Add Cable Loss
Loss Factors:
• Cat5e, <50m: 0% (negligible)
• Cat5e, 50–100m: 5%
• Cat6, 50–100m: 3%
• CCA (copper-clad aluminum) cable: 15% (avoid at all costs)
Example: 77W × 5% = 3.85W → round to 4W
Step 4: Apply 15% Safety Margin
Example: (77W + 4W) × 1.15 = 93.15W → 94W minimum switch budget
Step 5: Verify Per-Port Maximums
No single device can exceed the per-port limit of your switch:
| Switch Type | Per-Port Max | Will It Power... |
|---|---|---|
| 802.3af only | 15.4W | Basic cameras, phones, Wi-Fi 5 APs ✓ PTZ, Wi-Fi 6/7 APs ✗ |
| 802.3at (PoE+) like ES220 | 30W | Most cameras, Wi-Fi 6 APs ✓ PTZ with heater ✗ |
| 802.3bt (PoE++) | 60–90W | Everything including high-PTZ and LED lighting ✓ |
3 Real Scenarios: Will It Work?
Scenario 1: Small Retail (8 cameras + 1 AP)
| Device | Qty | Max Each | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4MP dome | 6 | 8W | 48W |
| 4K turret | 1 | 12W | 12W |
| PTZ (indoor) | 1 | 15W | 15W |
| Wi-Fi 6 AP | 1 | 20W | 20W |
| Device total | 95W | ||
| + Cable loss (5%) | + 5W | ||
| + 15% margin | + 15W | ||
| Required budget | 115W | ||
| ES220-8P-1T (120W) | ✓ FITS (96%) | ||
| Typical 60W 8-port switch | ✗ FAILS (192%) | ||
Scenario 2: Home Security (4 cameras)
| Device | Qty | Max Each | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2MP bullet | 2 | 5W | 10W |
| 4MP dome | 1 | 8W | 8W |
| Doorbell | 1 | 7W | 7W |
| Device total | 25W | ||
| + Margin | + 4W | ||
| Required / ES220-4P-1T (52W) | 29W / 52W ✓ SAFE | ||
Scenario 3: Office Wi-Fi (6 APs)
| Device | Qty | Max Each | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wi-Fi 6 AP | 4 | 22W | 88W |
| Wi-Fi 6E AP | 2 | 30W | 60W |
| Device total | 148W | ||
| + Cable loss | + 7W | ||
| + 15% margin | + 23W | ||
| Required / ES220-8P-1T (120W) | 178W / 120W ✗ FAILS | ||
| Solution | Use 2× ES220-8P-1T or upgrade to ES620-8P-2G (240W) | ||
Cable Loss: The Hidden Wattage Thief
PoE power travels as DC voltage over Ethernet pairs. Resistance in the cable converts some of that power to heat. Longer cable = more resistance = less power reaches the device.
Voltage Drop by Cable Type and Length
| Cable Type | Resistance/100m | Loss at 50m | Loss at 100m | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat5e (24AWG, pure copper) | 9.38Ω | ~2% | ~5% | Acceptable for ≤100m |
| Cat6 (23AWG, pure copper) | 7.32Ω | ~1.5% | ~3% | Best for 50–100m |
| Cat6A (23AWG) | 5.88Ω | ~1% | ~2% | Overkill for PoE+ but ideal for PoE++ |
| CCA Cat5e (avoid) | 15–18Ω | ~8% | ~15% | Do not use for PoE |
Power Loss (W) = Current² (A²) × Resistance (Ω)
Example: A 12W camera at 48V draws 0.25A.
Over 100m of Cat5e (9.38Ω):
Drop = 0.25 × 9.38 = 2.35V
Loss = 0.25² × 9.38 = 0.59W (5% of 12W)
Same camera over 100m CCA (16Ω):
Loss = 0.25² × 16 = 1W (8% of 12W)
The 5 Power Budget Mistakes That Burn Switches
Mistake #1: Using "Typical" Instead of "Maximum" Draw
Camera specs list "typical 5W" and "max 10W." You plan for 5W. At night with IR on, it pulls 10W. Two cameras do this simultaneously. Your 52W switch, planned for 40W, hits 50W. Then a third camera's IR activates. Overload. Reboot. 2 AM.
Fix: Always use maximum published draw. Add 20% if the datasheet is vague.
Mistake #2: Ignoring Per-Port Limits
You buy an 8-port switch with 120W total budget. You plug in one PTZ camera that needs 45W. The port max is 30W (802.3at). Camera boots partially, motors don't work, or it cycles on/off. You think the camera is defective.
Fix: Check both total budget AND per-port maximum. 802.3at = 30W/port max. For 45W+ devices, you need 802.3bt (PoE++) or an injector.
Mistake #3: Buying on Port Count Alone
"8-port PoE switch" doesn't mean 8 ports can all deliver full power. A $40 switch with 8 PoE ports and 60W total budget gives you 7.5W per port. That's enough for a 2MP camera in daylight. Add IR night mode and it fails.
Fix: Divide total budget by port count. ES220-8P-1T: 120W ÷ 8 = 15W/port average. That's honest. Some competitors: 60W ÷ 8 = 7.5W/port. That's a trap.
Mistake #4: No Headroom for Expansion
You deploy 6 cameras on an 8-port switch. Perfect fit. Six months later, you add a doorbell camera and a Wi-Fi AP. Budget exceeded. You need a new switch, new cables, and a Saturday of rework.
Fix: The 85% rule. Plan for 85% of budget at deployment. Leaves room for 2–3 more devices without hardware changes.
Mistake #5: Cheap Cables
That $15 box of "Cat5e" from an unknown brand? Probably CCA (copper-clad aluminum). Higher resistance. More voltage drop. Less power to the device. Cameras reboot randomly. You blame the switch. You replace the switch. Same problem.
Fix: Buy pure copper cable from known brands (Monoprice, Cable Matters, Belden). The cost difference is $10 per 100m box. Save yourself a weekend of troubleshooting.
ES220 Budget Cheat Sheet
ES220-8P-1T (120W Total Budget)
| Device Mix | Count | Total Draw | Budget % | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8× 2MP cameras | 8 | 40W | 33% | ✓ Very safe |
| 8× 4MP cameras | 8 | 64W | 53% | ✓ Safe |
| 6× 4MP + 2× Wi-Fi 6 AP | 8 | 88W | 73% | ⚠ Tight but OK |
| 4× PTZ cameras | 4 | 88W | 73% | ⚠ Tight |
| 8× Wi-Fi 6 APs | 8 | 176W | 147% | ✗ Overload |
ES220-4P-1T (52W Total Budget)
| Device Mix | Count | Total Draw | Budget % | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4× 2MP cameras | 4 | 20W | 38% | ✓ Very safe |
| 4× 4MP cameras | 4 | 32W | 62% | ✓ Safe |
| 3× 4MP + 1× Wi-Fi 5 AP | 4 | 38W | 73% | ⚠ OK with margin |
| 2× PTZ cameras | 2 | 44W | 85% | ⚠ Near limit |
| 4× Wi-Fi 6 APs | 4 | 88W | 169% | ✗ Overload |
FAQ
What happens if I exceed my PoE budget?
Quality switches (including the ES220) use intelligent power management. If you exceed the budget, the switch simply won't power the last-connected device(s). Lower-numbered ports get priority. No physical damage occurs. However, if you're running at 95-100% and devices spike (IR on, PTZ move), you may see intermittent reboots. The 85% rule prevents this.
Can I use a higher-wattage power adapter to increase PoE budget?
No. The PoE budget is determined by the switch's internal power supply and PoE controller, not just the AC adapter. Using a higher-wattage adapter won't increase PoE output and may void your warranty or damage the switch. Buy a switch with the budget you need.
Why does my camera work in the day but reboot at night?
IR LEDs. A camera rated at 6W typical may draw 10-12W when IR night vision activates. If your budget was tight at daytime levels, night mode pushes it over. The camera reboots, loses connection, reconnects, boots IR, reboots again. Death loop until dawn. Calculate with night-mode max draw.
What's the difference between total budget and per-port power?
Total budget is the sum of all ports. Per-port power is the maximum one port can deliver. Example: ES220-8P-1T has 120W total and 30W per port (802.3at). You can run 4 ports at 30W each (120W total) or 8 ports at 15W each (120W total). You cannot run one port at 45W—that exceeds the 30W per-port limit.
Should I use injectors instead of a PoE switch?
Injectors are fine for 1-2 devices. For 3+ devices, a PoE switch is cheaper, cleaner, and easier to manage. One AC outlet vs. 8 wall warts. One cable run vs. power + Ethernet for each device. Centralized UPS backup vs. individual injectors dying in a power outage. For 4+ cameras, a switch always wins.
How do I measure actual power draw?
Some managed switches show per-port power consumption in their web interface. For unmanaged switches like the ES220, use a PoE power meter inline between switch and device (about $15 on Amazon). Or check the camera/AP's web interface—many show real-time power consumption under "System" or "Status."
Can I mix 802.3af and 802.3at devices on the same switch?
Yes. All PoE standards are backward compatible. An 802.3at switch (like ES220) auto-negotiates with each device. A 802.3af camera gets 15.4W max. An 802.3at camera gets 30W max. The switch tracks each port individually and manages the total budget dynamically.
Your Action Checklist
- List your devices. Every camera, AP, phone, doorbell.
- Find max draw. Datasheet "max" or "PoE consumption." Not typical.
- Sum and add 20%. 10% for cable loss + 15% for safety margin = ~25% total headroom.
- Check per-port limits. 30W max for ES220 (PoE+). Any device need more? Get an injector.
- Buy the right switch. ES220-4P-1T (52W) for 2-4 devices. ES220-8P-1T (120W) for 5-8 devices.
- Use pure copper cable. Cat5e or Cat6. No CCA. No exceptions.
Related Resources
- Buy ES220-8P-1T — $51.99, 120W budget, 8 PoE+ ports
- ES220 Deployment Guide — Step-by-step installation from box to live cameras
- ES220 Buyer's Guide — Compare vs Cisco, TP-Link, Hikvision
- Wi-Fi 7 Deployment Guide — PoE-powered wireless networks
Last updated: May 15, 2026. Device wattages sourced from manufacturer datasheets (Hikvision, Dahua, Reolink, Axis, Ubiquiti, 2026). Cable data per NEC 2023 and IEEE 802.3 standards.




