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Transformerless UPS - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2026-2031)

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    Report

  • 147 Pages
  • May 2026
  • Region: Global
  • Mordor Intelligence
  • ID: 6247114
The transformerless UPS market size was valued at USD 2.46 billion in 2025 and is estimated to grow from USD 2.77 billion in 2026 to reach USD 4.98 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 12.46% during the forecast period 2026-2031. This report is Segmented by Power Rating (Less Than 10 KVA, 10-100 KVA, and Greater Than 100 KVA), Phase (Single-Phase, and Three-Phase), End-User Industry (Data Centers, Industrial Manufacturing, Commercial Buildings, Healthcare Facilities, Telecom, and More), Form Factor (Rack-Mounted, Tower, and Modular), and Geography (North America, and More). The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).

Global Transformerless UPS Market Trends and Insights

Hyperscale Data Center Capacity Expansion

The transformerless UPS market is closely tied to the current data center build cycle, because new AI campuses are being planned around higher rack density, faster power swings, and much lower tolerance for voltage instability than earlier enterprise facilities. Amazon announced in April 2026 that it will invest USD 25 billion in Mississippi data centers, which shows that very large-scale infrastructure commitments are still flowing into new digital capacity. This matters for UPS vendors because dense AI rooms require protection systems that can respond quickly, remain efficient under heavy load, and fit into power rooms already under pressure from cooling and switchgear requirements. Vertiv’s December 2024 launch of a compact, high-power-density UPS platform for large data centers, with ratings from 250 kW to 1,250 kW, demonstrated that supplier roadmaps are already shifting toward larger protected loads in fewer cabinets. Piller also supplied more than 200 UPS units for Nebius Group’s expansion in Finland, where the site is being expanded to 75 MW with a target PUE as low as 1.1, which reflects the deployment scale now shaping procurement decisions. As more projects move toward hyperscale, colocation, and AI-focused campuses, the transformerless UPS market is increasingly aligning with fast-response, high-frequency power architectures that can support dense, highly dynamic compute environments.

Rising Energy Efficiency And Total Cost Of Ownership Focus

The transformerless UPS market is also expanding because energy loss is now a financial issue alongside resilience, rather than a secondary technical consideration left for facility teams to solve after installation. Vertiv reported up to 97.5% double-conversion efficiency for its PowerUPS 9000 platform, which reflects the performance threshold now expected in large, critical environments where power costs and thermal loads are both under review. Centiel stated that PremiumTower S2 achieves up to 97.1% efficiency in VFI mode and avoids scheduled component replacements over a design life exceeding 15 years, supporting the move toward lifecycle-based procurement rather than first-cost decisions alone. The U.S. Department of Energy’s wide-bandgap power electronics framework also highlighted how advanced power electronics can improve efficiency, power density, and system performance across industrial and grid-connected applications, which supports the technology case for newer transformerless designs. In practical terms, this means buyers in the transformerless UPS market are now weighing power loss, cooling demand, maintenance cycles, and operating profile with greater discipline than in earlier procurement cycles. In Europe, the EU Ecodesign Directive has reinforced that direction by setting a practical procurement floor for many installations above 10 kVA.

High Upfront System And Battery Capex

Upfront costs remain a real brake on the transformerless UPS market, especially when lithium-ion battery cabinets are added to projects that are still being judged mainly on acquisition price rather than long-term operating economics. Smaller enterprises, distributed telecom operators, and budget-constrained institutions often face approval processes that reward the lowest initial capital request, even when a more efficient system would perform better across the asset life. The issue becomes sharper in healthcare, where NFPA 99 and NFPA 110 set strict requirements for essential electrical systems and emergency power performance, raising the total project budget beyond UPS hardware alone and making capital approval more difficult for smaller hospital networks. That means the case for lithium-ion, lower replacement frequency, faster recharge, reduced cooling demand, and less maintenance labor, can still lose against short-budget planning and fragmented procurement authority. The barrier is most visible in South America, Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia, where battery supply depth, financing options, and long-horizon facility planning are often less developed than in mature markets. Even when operators accept the lifecycle argument, the transformerless UPS market can still lose near-term orders if the initial package exceeds the capital threshold a site can approve.

Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
  • Growing Preference For High Power Density And Reduced Footprint
  • Modular UPS Adoption For Staged Capacity Expansion
  • Load Compatibility Limits In High-Inrush And Legacy Environments
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.

Segment Analysis

The 10-100 kVA segment accounted for 44.02% of the transformerless UPS market in 2025, making it the volume center of demand across commercial buildings, edge nodes, mid-size enterprise data centers, telecom base stations, and a wide base of repeat replacement activity. This range fits projects that need meaningful resilience without the space commitment, engineering complexity, and capital burden associated with much larger installations, which is why it remains relevant across both mature and emerging deployment settings. It also aligns well with the practical operating profile of many enterprise and telecom sites, where systems spend long periods below peak load, thereby benefiting from strong partial-load efficiency and manageable installation requirements. The less than 10 kVA range still serves distributed branch offices and small facilities, but its smaller scale and lower efficiency limit its influence as procurement priorities shift toward lifecycle cost, density, and performance across the broader transformerless UPS market.

The more than 100 kVA segment is projected to grow at a 12.68% CAGR through 2031, supported by AI data center buildouts, large colocation halls, and industrial critical loads moving into megawatt-scale protection requirements. Vertiv’s PowerUPS 9000 supports 250-1,250 kW per unit and scales to 5 MW, which shows how suppliers are targeting larger protected load blocks with higher cabinet density and a stronger fit for large digital campuses. Peer-reviewed research on a 500 kW SiC-based three-phase UPS also showed that an optimized filter and heat-dissipation design can support large-capacity operation with credible commercial relevance, helping validate the technical path for larger transformerless platforms. That combination of commercial product readiness and technical validation suggests that the upper power tier will continue to gain weight as the transformerless UPS market shifts toward high-density compute, large industrial automation, and larger critical facilities.

Three-phase systems held 66.23% of the revenue share in 2025, keeping them at the center of deployment in large data centers, industrial plants, and major commercial facilities, where balanced power distribution and higher-density load support are standard design assumptions. That lead reflects the installed architecture of critical infrastructure, because large facilities already depend on electrical layouts that favor three-phase topology for efficiency, stability, and straightforward integration with upstream and downstream equipment. The segment also benefits from a regulatory and reporting environment that increasingly rewards more efficient power infrastructure in Europe and other mature markets, making older, low-efficiency equipment harder to justify in new projects and replacement cycles. In practice, this keeps three-phase platforms as the default choice whenever projects move beyond smaller room-level, branch-level, or single-cabinet backup requirements in the transformerless UPS market.

Single-phase systems are projected to grow at a 12.91% CAGR through 2031, making them the fastest-growing phase segment and signaling wider use in distributed digital infrastructure rather than a retreat from critical applications. Growth comes from 5G small cells, edge computing nodes, branch facilities, and compact enterprise sites where three-phase supply is either unavailable or oversized relative to the installation's actual demand profile. Modern single-phase designs have narrowed earlier performance gaps through better output power factor, cleaner power delivery, and higher efficiency, thereby improving their credibility in smaller yet still sensitive applications. As deployment expands across many compact or remote sites instead of a few very large ones, single-phase products are broadening the transformerless UPS market rather than displacing the installed base of three-phase systems.

Complete Report Scope:

  • By Power Rating
    • Less than 10 kVA
    • 10-100 kVA
    • Greater than 100 kVA
  • By Phase Type
    • Single-Phase
    • Three-Phase
  • By End-user Industry
    • Data Centers
    • Industrial Manufacturing
    • Commercial Buildings
    • Healthcare Facilities
    • Telecom
    • Other End-user Industries
  • By Form Factor
    • Rack-mounted
    • Tower
    • Modular
  • By Geography
    • North America
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Mexico
    • South America
      • Brazil
      • Argentina
      • Rest of South America
    • Europe
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
      • France
      • Italy
      • Rest of Europe
    • Asia-Pacific
      • China
      • Japan
      • India
      • South Korea
      • Rest of Asia-Pacific
    • Middle East
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Turkey
      • Israel
      • Rest of Middle East
    • Africa
      • South Africa
      • Egypt
      • Rest of Africa

Geography Analysis

Asia-Pacific held a 43.54% share in 2025, and the regional transformerless UPS market is forecast to grow at a 12.55% CAGR through 2031, keeping the region as both the largest and the fastest-growing geography in the current outlook. This position reflects the combined effect of China’s digital infrastructure programs, Japan’s semiconductor-fab revival, and India’s Digital Public Infrastructure agenda, all of which support new demand for efficient, compact power protection across data center, telecom, and industrial settings. The region also benefits from closer access to SiC and related power-electronics supply chains, which improves manufacturing economics and can reduce lead-time pressure as procurement cycles tighten. That supply chain advantage matters because buyers in large data center and telecom programs are placing more value on delivery reliability, flexible configuration, and cost discipline as project size continues to increase. For these reasons, the transformerless UPS market in Asia-Pacific is likely to remain the main growth engine through the forecast period.

North America forms the second major demand center in the transformerless UPS market, supported by hyperscale expansion, grid investment, and continued capital spending on large data center campuses. Amazon said in April 2026 that it would invest USD 25 billion in Mississippi data centers, signaling that significant new critical power infrastructure is still being planned in the region. Eaton reported that U.S. investor-owned utilities plan around USD 400 billion in grid upgrades over 5 years in response to rising data center power demand, underscoring the broader system impacts now surrounding digital infrastructure growth. Europe remains commercially important because efficiency regulations and replacement cycles continue to favor modern, high-efficiency systems, especially in data center and industrial settings, where operating losses and reporting obligations are taken more seriously. That keeps Europe central to premium demand, even if it does not match Asia-Pacific's scale.

South America, the Middle East, and Africa remain smaller in absolute terms, but they are strategically important because 5G rollout, colocation buildout, and grid instability are creating demand patterns that differ from mature regions and often favor compact, efficient backup architectures. Brazil and Argentina remain the main South American demand centers, while the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia are generating larger three-phase requirements through state-backed digital infrastructure programs and AI-linked facility development. In Africa, telecom applications remain central because operators need longer backup capability within constrained cabinets, and UPTECH markets transformerless UPS products that combine compact size, efficiency, and telecom-grade reliability. These frontier regions will not define current revenue leadership, but they do widen the addressable base of the transformerless UPS market and strengthen the case for broader product portfolios across the forecast period.



List of Companies Covered in this Report:

  • Socomec Group S.A.
  • ABB Ltd.
  • Riello Elettronica S.p.A.
  • Vertiv Group Corporation
  • Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
  • Kehua Data Co., Ltd.
  • Cyber Power Systems (USA), Inc.
  • Centiel AG
  • Borri S.p.A.
  • AEG Power Solutions B.V.
  • Piller Group GmbH
  • East Group Co., Ltd.
  • INVT Power System (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.
  • Salicru S.A.
  • BlueWalker GmbH
  • BPC Energy Limited
  • N1 Critical Technologies, Inc.
  • Shenzhen EverExceed Industrial Co., Ltd.
  • Kohler Uninterruptible Power Ltd.
  • Santak Electronic (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.

Additional Benefits:

  • The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
  • 3 months of analyst support

Table of Contents

1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Study Assumptions and Market Definition
1.2 Scope of the Study
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
4 MARKET LANDSCAPE
4.1 Market Overview
4.2 Market Drivers
4.2.1 Hyperscale Data Center Capacity Expansion
4.2.2 Rising Energy Efficiency and Total Cost of Ownership Focus
4.2.3 Growing Preference for High Power Density and Reduced Footprint
4.2.4 Modular UPS Adoption for Staged Capacity Expansion
4.2.5 Silicon Carbide Power Stage Efficiency Gains
4.2.6 Grid-Interactive Ups Use for Tariff Optimization
4.3 Market Restraints
4.3.1 High Upfront System and Battery Capex
4.3.2 Load Compatibility Limits in High-Inrush and Legacy Environments
4.3.3 Cybersecurity Exposure of Network-Connected Power Controls
4.3.4 Wide-Bandgap Semiconductor Supply Concentration
4.4 Industry Value-Chain Analysis
4.5 Regulatory Landscape
4.6 Technological Outlook
4.7 Impact of Macroeconomic Factors on the Market
4.8 Porter's Five Forces Analysis
4.8.1 Threat of New Entrants
4.8.2 Bargaining Power of Suppliers
4.8.3 Bargaining Power of Buyers
4.8.4 Threat of Substitutes
4.8.5 Competitive Rivalry
5 MARKET SIZE AND GROWTH FORECASTS (VALUE)
5.1 By Power Rating
5.1.1 Less than 10 kVA
5.1.2 10-100 kVA
5.1.3 Greater than 100 kVA
5.2 By Phase Type
5.2.1 Single-Phase
5.2.2 Three-Phase
5.3 By End-user Industry
5.3.1 Data Centers
5.3.2 Industrial Manufacturing
5.3.3 Commercial Buildings
5.3.4 Healthcare Facilities
5.3.5 Telecom
5.3.6 Other End-user Industries
5.4 By Form Factor
5.4.1 Rack-mounted
5.4.2 Tower
5.4.3 Modular
5.5 By Geography
5.5.1 North America
5.5.1.1 United States
5.5.1.2 Canada
5.5.1.3 Mexico
5.5.2 South America
5.5.2.1 Brazil
5.5.2.2 Argentina
5.5.2.3 Rest of South America
5.5.3 Europe
5.5.3.1 United Kingdom
5.5.3.2 Germany
5.5.3.3 France
5.5.3.4 Italy
5.5.3.5 Rest of Europe
5.5.4 Asia-Pacific
5.5.4.1 China
5.5.4.2 Japan
5.5.4.3 India
5.5.4.4 South Korea
5.5.4.5 Rest of Asia-Pacific
5.5.5 Middle East
5.5.5.1 United Arab Emirates
5.5.5.2 Saudi Arabia
5.5.5.3 Turkey
5.5.5.4 Israel
5.5.5.5 Rest of Middle East
5.5.6 Africa
5.5.6.1 South Africa
5.5.6.2 Egypt
5.5.6.3 Rest of Africa
6 COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE
6.1 Market Concentration
6.2 Strategic Moves
6.3 Market Share Analysis
6.4 Company Profiles (includes Global Level Overview, Market Level Overview, Core Segments, Financials as available, Strategic Information, Market Rank/Share, Products and Services, Recent Developments)
6.4.1 Socomec Group S.A.
6.4.2 ABB Ltd.
6.4.3 Riello Elettronica S.p.A.
6.4.4 Vertiv Group Corporation
6.4.5 Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
6.4.6 Kehua Data Co., Ltd.
6.4.7 Cyber Power Systems (USA), Inc.
6.4.8 Centiel AG
6.4.9 Borri S.p.A.
6.4.10 AEG Power Solutions B.V.
6.4.11 Piller Group GmbH
6.4.12 East Group Co., Ltd.
6.4.13 INVT Power System (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.
6.4.14 Salicru S.A.
6.4.15 BlueWalker GmbH
6.4.16 BPC Energy Limited
6.4.17 N1 Critical Technologies, Inc.
6.4.18 Shenzhen EverExceed Industrial Co., Ltd.
6.4.19 Kohler Uninterruptible Power Ltd.
6.4.20 Santak Electronic (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.
7 MARKET OPPORTUNITIES AND FUTURE OUTLOOK
7.1 White-Space and Unmet-Need Assessment

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • Socomec Group S.A.
  • ABB Ltd.
  • Riello Elettronica S.p.A.
  • Vertiv Group Corporation
  • Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
  • Kehua Data Co., Ltd.
  • Cyber Power Systems (USA), Inc.
  • Centiel AG
  • Borri S.p.A.
  • AEG Power Solutions B.V.
  • Piller Group GmbH
  • East Group Co., Ltd.
  • INVT Power System (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.
  • Salicru S.A.
  • BlueWalker GmbH
  • BPC Energy Limited
  • N1 Critical Technologies, Inc.
  • Shenzhen EverExceed Industrial Co., Ltd.
  • Kohler Uninterruptible Power Ltd.
  • Santak Electronic (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.