This is the most important distinction in all of travel electronics: the difference between a travel adapter and a voltage converter. These two devices are frequently confused โ€” and confusing them can permanently damage your electronics. This guide explains exactly what each device does, when you need which one, and how to tell the difference at a glance.

What Is a Travel Adapter?

A travel adapter (also called a plug adapter) is a simple mechanical device that changes the physical shape of your plug so it fits into a foreign socket. That is all it does. It does not change the voltage. It does not change the frequency. It does not transform the electrical current in any way. Think of it as a key that lets your plug enter a foreign socket โ€” nothing more.

If you're from the United States and traveling to the UK, your flat two-pin plug will not physically fit into the UK's three-rectangular-pin socket. A Type A to Type G adapter lets your plug connect to the UK socket. But the electricity coming through is still 230V British current โ€” the adapter changed nothing about the power itself.

โœ“ When you need ONLY an adapter: Your device's power supply is rated 100โ€“240V (dual-voltage). The label on your charger or power brick says "Input: 100โ€“240V, 50/60Hz". Almost all modern laptops, phones, cameras, and USB chargers fall into this category.

What Is a Voltage Converter?

A voltage converter (or voltage transformer) is an electrical device that actually changes the voltage of the electricity passing through it. A step-down converter takes 220โ€“240V and reduces it to 110โ€“120V. A step-up converter does the reverse. Unlike a plug adapter, a voltage converter is a substantial piece of electronics โ€” it contains a transformer and active circuitry, making it significantly heavier and more expensive than a simple adapter.

You need a voltage converter when your device is rated for one voltage range only (e.g., "120V" or "220โ€“240V") and you're traveling to a country with the opposite standard. The most common real-world scenario: a North American 120V hair dryer used in Europe's 230V system.

โœ— Never confuse the two: A plug adapter does NOT protect a 120V device from 230V power. Plugging a 120V hair dryer into a 230V socket via an adapter alone โ€” with no converter โ€” will destroy the hair dryer instantly and may cause a fire.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeaturePlug AdapterVoltage Converter
Changes physical plug shapeYes โœ“Often yes (combined)
Changes voltageNo โœ—Yes โœ“
Changes frequency (Hz)No โœ—Some models
Typical weight30โ€“100g200gโ€“2kg+
Typical cost$5โ€“$30$20โ€“$150+
Needed for phones/laptopsYesNo
Needed for hair dryersYes (plus converter)Yes

Real-World Scenarios

SCENARIO 1 American with iPhone charger โ†’ Europe

The iPhone charger says "Input: 100โ€“240V, 50/60Hz." You need only a plug adapter (Type A to Type C or E/F for continental Europe). No converter required. The charger handles European 230V perfectly.

SCENARIO 2 American with hair dryer โ†’ UK

The hair dryer says "120V only." You need both a plug adapter AND a step-down voltage converter. The converter reduces UK's 230V to US 120V, protecting the hair dryer. Just an adapter alone will destroy it.

SCENARIO 3 British traveler with MacBook โ†’ USA

The MacBook power brick says "100โ€“240V, 50/60Hz." You need only a plug adapter (Type G to Type A for the US). No converter. The MacBook charger handles 120V US power fine.

SCENARIO 4 German with electric kettle โ†’ USA

The German kettle says "220โ€“240V only." You need a step-up voltage converter to bring US 120V up to 220V. But honestly? Heavy-duty appliances like kettles are impractical to travel with โ€” buy or borrow one locally.

The "Universal Adapter" โ€” What Does That Actually Mean?

When you see "universal travel adapter" for sale, this means an adapter that has interchangeable heads to fit sockets in multiple countries. It still does not convert voltage. A "universal adapter" is not a voltage converter โ€” the word "universal" refers to plug compatibility, not voltage compatibility.

Some high-end products combine a universal adapter with a voltage converter in one unit. These are typically heavy (due to the transformer) and expensive. For most travelers with modern dual-voltage electronics, a combined unit is unnecessary โ€” a simple universal adapter suffices. See our Universal Travel Adapter Buying Guide for specific recommendations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a plug adapter damage my device? +
A plug adapter by itself cannot damage a dual-voltage device โ€” it simply changes the physical connector. However, a plug adapter can indirectly enable damage if you use it to connect a single-voltage device to an incompatible voltage outlet. The adapter is not the problem; voltage mismatch is. Always verify your device's input voltage before using any adapter.
Do I need both an adapter and a converter? +
Yes, if your device is single-voltage and the destination has a different voltage AND different plug type. For example, using a 120V US hair dryer in the UK (230V, Type G plugs) requires both a step-down converter and a Type G adapter. Many combined units integrate both in one product.
What is a "voltage regulator" โ€” is that the same thing? +
Not exactly. A voltage regulator stabilizes voltage to a fixed level regardless of input fluctuations. Some voltage converters also include regulation circuitry. For travel purposes, what matters is whether the device steps down or steps up voltage to your target level โ€” regulation is a bonus feature that protects against power surges.
Is there one product that works as both adapter and converter? +
Yes โ€” combined adapter/converter units exist, featuring both interchangeable plug heads and a built-in step-down/step-up transformer. However, they are heavy (often 1kg+) due to the transformer. Most travelers find a lightweight universal adapter sufficient for their dual-voltage electronics.