Line-Interactive vs Online UPS:
How to Choose
The two most common UPS topologies are line-interactive and online double-conversion. They protect against different problems and suit different loads. This guide explains how each one works, where it fits, and how to choose with confidence.
A UPS keeps equipment running through power problems, but not every UPS works the same way. The topology – how the UPS converts and delivers power – decides how fast it reacts, how clean its output is, and which loads it can safely protect. The two you will compare most often are line-interactive and online double-conversion.
How a line-interactive UPS works
A line-interactive UPS normally passes filtered utility power straight through to the load. It adds an automatic voltage regulator (AVR) that boosts or trims voltage during sags and over-voltage without switching to battery, which saves the battery for real outages. When the mains fails, it transfers to inverter (battery) power in a few milliseconds.
This topology is efficient and cost-effective for smaller loads. ATENCO’s LT1E line-interactive UPS (600 VA to 3 kVA) is a typical example, with AVR boost and buck, fast transfer to battery and a simulated-sine output, sized for desktops, point-of-sale, networking gear and small CCTV or NAS systems.
How an online double-conversion UPS works
In normal online mode, an online UPS continuously converts incoming AC to DC and back to AC, so the load is supplied by the inverter rather than directly from utility power. The result is 0 ms AC-to-battery transfer in online operation, a clean pure sine-wave output and strong output conditioning against many input disturbances such as voltage variation, frequency drift, surges and noise. This is not the same as transformer-based galvanic isolation unless an isolation transformer is included.
This is the topology for sensitive and mission-critical loads. ATENCO online double-conversion runs from single-phase 1 to 10 kVA (for example TM11E tower and RM11E rack) up to three-phase systems and modular platforms to 1.2 MW.
Side-by-side comparison
| Characteristic | Line-Interactive | Online Double-Conversion |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer time | Typically 2 to 10 ms | 0 ms (no transfer) |
| Output waveform | Simulated sine wave | Pure sine wave |
| Input / output conditioning | AVR voltage correction; no frequency conversion | Inverter-regulated output; galvanic isolation only with transformer-based designs |
| Best capacity range | 600 VA to ~3 kVA | 1 kVA to 1.2 MW |
| Typical efficiency | Very high in normal mode | High, with optional ECO mode |
| Relative cost | Lower | Higher |
| Ideal loads | Office, POS, CCTV, NAS | Servers, telecom, industrial, three-phase |
When to choose line-interactive
- Offices, retail / point-of-sale, home and small-business IT.
- Networking gear, small NAS, access control and entry-level CCTV.
- Budget-sensitive deployments where a few milliseconds of transfer time is acceptable.
When to choose online double-conversion
- Servers, storage, virtualization and network core equipment.
- Telecom shelters and edge sites, where 0 ms transfer and clean output matter.
- Loads with active power-factor-corrected (PFC) inputs, or anything that needs a pure sine wave.
- Sites on generators, or with unstable mains and frequency variation.
- Any three-phase requirement, or capacities above a few kVA.
A simulated-sine line-interactive UPS is not recommended for medical, laboratory or other equipment that requires a true pure-sine source, or for PFC-input enterprise servers. For those loads, choose an online double-conversion UPS and confirm the requirement against the equipment specification.
How to decide quickly
Start from the load. If you are protecting general office and small IT equipment and want the best value, line-interactive is usually enough. If you are protecting servers, network core, telecom, industrial control or anything that needs a pure sine wave and zero transfer time, choose online double-conversion. When in doubt, size it as a project: tell ATENCO your load, runtime target and site conditions, or use the UPS Selector to shortlist a series.
Selection note: This guide is for general UPS topology planning. Final UPS model, battery configuration, runtime and communication options should be confirmed against the exact product series, site conditions and project requirement.
Key takeaways
- Line-interactive = lower cost, a few ms transfer, simulated sine; great for office and small IT.
- Online double-conversion = 0 ms AC-to-battery transfer in online mode and pure sine output; use transformer-based UPS when galvanic isolation is required.
- Match the topology to the load, not to the price tag – sensitive loads need online.
- Use the UPS Selector or send your load profile to ATENCO to confirm the right series.
Which ATENCO UPS Series Fits?
Use topology first, then refine by load size, phase, battery runtime and installation environment.
LT1E 600 VA to 3 kVA
Best for desktops, POS, CCTV, routers, small NAS and office loads where AVR protection and value matter.
TM11E 1 to 10 kVA
Online double-conversion tower UPS for servers, network equipment and critical single-phase loads.
RM11E / RM11E Elite / RM11E PRO
Rack or rack/tower online UPS for IT racks, edge rooms and lithium-ready single-phase projects by model.
TM31E / RM31E
For sites with three-phase input supply but single-phase critical loads requiring online protection.
TM33E / RM33E / TM33-ET
For larger 3:3 loads, parallel designs, transformer-based isolation needs and project-specific runtime.
TM66E Modular UPS
For scalable data-center, telecom and infrastructure projects requiring hot-swappable modules and redundancy.
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Need Help Choosing the Right UPS?
Tell ATENCO your load, backup-time target, phase requirement, site voltage, battery preference and application. ATENCO will help shortlist the right UPS architecture and product series, or you can start with the UPS Selector.