- Small data centers typically span 5,000–20,000 square feet and house 500–2,000 servers. They often consume 1–5 MW of continuous power.
- Medium-sized data centers are larger (around 10,000–50,000 square feet) and draw 5–20 MW, supporting regional needs or higher-density workloads.
These are distinct from tiny “edge” or closet-style setups (under 150 sq ft and just tens of kW) or massive hyperscale facilities (100 MW+). Small and medium facilities are common for enterprise IT, colocation providers, and organizations that don’t need (or can’t afford) giant cloud-scale operations.
Typical Power Consumption and Annual Energy UsePower usage is usually measured in megawatts (MW) of continuous draw, while total energy consumption is expressed in megawatt-hours (MWh) or gigawatt-hours (GWh) per year.
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Size Category
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Typical Power Draw
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Example Annual Energy Use (at full load, 24/7)
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Equivalent Homes Powered (approx.)
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|---|---|---|---|
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Small
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1–5 MW
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8,760–43,800 MWh (8.76–43.8 GWh)
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800–4,000 homes
|
|
Medium
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5–20 MW
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43,800–175,200 MWh (43.8–175.2 GWh)
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4,000–16,000 homes
|
How these numbers are calculated: There are 8,760 hours in a non-leap year. A 2 MW facility running continuously would use roughly 17,520 MWh annually. Real-world usage is often slightly lower due to varying utilization rates, but data centers run 24/7/365 with high reliability.
Per-rack consumption adds another layer:
- Traditional racks: 7–10 kW each
- Modern/AI-optimized racks: 30–60+ kW each
A small data center with 100–200 racks could easily hit the 1–5 MW range, especially as AI workloads creep into enterprise environments.How the Energy Is Used: The BreakdownRoughly 50% of a small data center’s electricity goes to the IT equipment itself (servers, storage, networking). The other 50% powers cooling, power distribution (UPS, transformers), lighting, and other infrastructure.
Cooling is the biggest non-IT culprit — servers generate enormous heat, and keeping them at optimal temperatures (typically 18–27°C) is energy-intensive. Older facilities or those in hot climates use even more power for air conditioning.Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE): The Key Efficiency MetricPUE measures total facility power divided by IT equipment power. A perfect PUE is 1.0 (all power goes to computing).
- Small data centers: Often 1.5–2.0+ (higher overhead due to less efficient cooling and smaller scale)
- Medium data centers: Usually 1.3–1.7
- Industry leaders (hyperscale): As low as 1.09–1.2
A PUE of 2.0 means the facility uses twice as much energy as the servers alone require. Improving PUE by even 0.2 can save millions in electricity costs annually for a medium facility.
Factors That Influence Energy ConsumptionSeveral variables affect real-world usage:
- Workload type: AI and GPU-heavy tasks dramatically increase power draw per rack.
- Utilization rates: Servers in smaller facilities often run at lower utilization (10–20%), wasting energy compared to optimized hyperscale operations.
- Location and climate: Facilities in cooler climates or using free-air cooling save significantly on HVAC.
- Age and technology: Older CRAC (computer room air conditioner) systems are less efficient than modern liquid cooling or economizers.
- Redundancy: Backup power and UPS systems add overhead for reliability.
Environmental and Cost ImpactA single medium-sized data center can consume as much electricity as several thousand homes — and the carbon footprint depends on the local grid mix. In regions reliant on coal or gas, this translates to substantial emissions. Water usage for cooling is another concern: a 100 MW facility might use hundreds of thousands of gallons per day.Electricity costs are a major operational expense. At average U.S. commercial rates (~$0.10–$0.15/kWh), a 5 MW small data center could incur $4–6 million in annual power bills.How to Improve EfficiencyOrganizations operating or planning small/medium data centers can reduce consumption through:
- Modern cooling technologies (liquid cooling, free cooling, hot-aisle containment)
- Virtualization and server consolidation to boost utilization
- Renewable energy procurement or on-site solar/microgrids
- AI-driven power management and monitoring tools
- Upgrading to energy-efficient servers and hardware
Many facilities are now targeting PUE below 1.5 as a benchmark.The Bigger Picture in 2026U.S. data centers as a whole consumed around 176–183 TWh in 2023–2024 (about 4.4% of national electricity). Projections suggest this could double or triple by 2028, driven largely by AI. Small and medium facilities still represent a huge portion of the installed base and are increasingly adopting high-density workloads.Understanding your data center’s energy profile isn’t just about cost savings — it’s essential for sustainability reporting, grid planning, and future-proofing operations.Ready to optimize your data center’s energy use? Audit your current PUE, explore liquid cooling options, or consult with efficiency experts. The digital economy depends on these facilities — making them as green and efficient as possible benefits everyone.Sources: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) 2024 U.S. Data Center Energy Usage Report, International Energy Agency, industry analyses from 2025–2026.
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