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Soft Starter vs VFD — Which One to Choose

Soft Starter vs VFD — Which One to Choose

Soft Starter vs VFD: Key Differences and How to Choose

When it comes to protecting an electric motor and optimising system performance, engineers face the same recurring question: soft starter or variable frequency drive (VFD)? Both devices reduce inrush current and extend motor life — but that is where the similarity ends. The differences in functionality, cost, and application are fundamental. Let's break them down.

How a Soft Starter Works

A soft starter gradually raises voltage to the motor during start-up and lowers it during stopping. It does not change the supply frequency — the motor always runs at its rated speed of 50 Hz. Once the motor reaches full speed, thyristors are bypassed by a relay and the device is effectively removed from the power circuit.

The result: inrush current drops from 6–8× to 2–4× rated current, mechanical shock on start-up is eliminated, and the unit costs significantly less than a VFD.

How a VFD Works

A variable frequency drive converts mains AC voltage to DC, then back to AC — but at a controlled frequency ranging from 0 to 400 Hz and beyond. This means complete control over motor speed at any point during operation.

That opens up fundamentally different possibilities: energy savings on fans and pumps can reach 30–50%, and precise speed regulation is simply not possible without a VFD. See our dedicated sections on VFDs for pumps and VFDs for motors for application-specific guidance.

Comparison Table: Soft Starter vs VFD

Parameter Soft Starter Variable Frequency Drive
Price Lower (30–60% cheaper) Higher
Speed control No (start/stop only) Yes (0–400+ Hz)
Energy savings Minimal (during start only) Up to 50% on pumps and fans
Starting current 2–4 × In 1–1.5 × In
Typical applications Pumps, compressors, conveyors with infrequent starts Fans, variable-load pumps, machine tools
Maintenance Minimal Regular ventilation and filter checks
Motor protection Basic (thermal, overcurrent) Extended (overload, phase asymmetry, overtemperature)

Real-World Use Cases

Water Supply Pump

If a pump starts 2–3 times per day at constant speed, a soft starter is sufficient. It eliminates water hammer on start-up and protects the pipeline. But if system pressure must be maintained automatically based on demand, you need a VFD for the pump with a pressure sensor. Energy savings in this mode reach 40%.

Belt Conveyor

A conveyor running at constant speed with a heavy start (loaded belt) is a perfect fit for a soft starter — it removes mechanical jerk and requires no speed adjustment. If the conveyor must change speed to match a production line tempo, the answer is a VFD.

HVAC Fan

This is the textbook VFD application. A variable-speed fan consumes energy proportional to the cube of its rotational frequency: reducing speed by 20% cuts energy consumption by nearly 50%. No soft starter can deliver that.

Compressor

A reciprocating compressor with a constant load is a classic soft-starter application. A screw compressor with variable output requires a VFD to maintain target pressure and eliminate unloaded running.

Decision Tree: Which to Choose

Choose a soft starter if:
  • The motor runs at constant speed and you only need a soft start/stop
  • Budget is limited and speed control is not required
  • Application: centrifugal pump at constant load, compressor, conveyor
  • Starts are infrequent (a few times per day)
  • Simplicity and minimal downtime are top priorities
Choose a VFD if:
  • Speed must be adjustable during operation
  • The goal is energy savings (fans, pumps, compressors)
  • Precise torque or position control is required
  • Application: motors with variable load, CNC machine tools, feed drives
  • The system requires smooth acceleration from zero to maximum speed

Total Cost of Ownership

A soft starter is cheaper upfront — that is a fact. But install one where a VFD is needed (for example, on a pump with variable consumption) and electricity bills will erase the price difference within 1–2 years. A VFD on a pump or fan typically pays for itself in 6–18 months through energy savings alone.

Conversely, fitting an expensive VFD where a soft starter would do is unnecessary cost and complexity with no benefit whatsoever.

Where to Buy in Ukraine

At Chastotnik.ua you will find the full range of both device types:

Free technical consultation included. Our engineers will help you select the right device for your task, calculate the payback period, and specify the correct parameters.

Need a variable frequency drive for your motor?

We'll find the right solution by power, voltage and load type

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