Understanding Pump Curves

Last updated: February 7, 2026

A pump curve is the single most important tool for selecting and operating a pump correctly. It shows how a pump will perform at different flow rates and heads, allowing engineers to match system requirements with pump capabilities. Understanding pump curves — and especially the Best Efficiency Point (BEP) — is key to reliable, efficient pump operation.

A pump curve is a graph provided by the manufacturer that plots:

Flow Rate (Q)

Horizontal axis (L/s, m³/h, or gpm)

Head (H)

Vertical axis (m or ft)

The curve shows the relationship between flow and head. As flow increases, head decreases — this is the fundamental trade-off in pump performance.

Key Elements

Head vs Flow Curve

The primary line showing pump performance

Best Efficiency Point (BEP)

Where pump operates most efficiently

Efficiency Contours

Bands showing efficiency across flow range

Power Curve

Brake horsepower (BHP) required at different flows

NPSHr Curve

Net Positive Suction Head required to avoid cavitation

Operating Range

The safe window recommended by the manufacturer

Best Efficiency Point (BEP)

BEP is the flow rate at which the pump runs at maximum efficiency. At BEP, the pump experiences:

Minimal vibration

Lowest radial thrust

Reduced wear on bearings and seals

Optimal energy consumption

Rule of Thumb

Pumps should operate within ±10% of BEP whenever possible.

Operating Away from BEP

Too Far Left (Low Flow, High Head)

  • Excessive recirculation inside pump
  • High vibration and radial load
  • Seal and bearing failure

Too Far Right (High Flow, Low Head)

  • Cavitation risk increases
  • Motor/engine overload
  • Reduced pump life

System vs Pump Curve

Every pumping system has its own system curve, which shows how much head is required for different flow rates.

Operating Point

Where the system curve intersects the pump curve

Proper Selection

Choose a pump where the operating point is close to BEP

Example

System Requirement: 60 L/s at 45 m TDH

Pump BEP

62 L/s, 44 m

Operating Point

60 L/s at 45 m

Status

Very close to BEP

Result: Efficient, reliable operation with minimal wear

Best Practices

Always review pump curve data, not just catalogue flow/head values

Select pumps to run close to BEP for efficiency and reliability

Check NPSHr vs NPSHa to ensure cavitation-free operation

For variable duty systems, use VSDs (variable speed drives) to keep operation near BEP

Avoid oversizing — bigger is not always better

Summary

Pump curves are essential for correct pump selection and operation. By understanding how head, flow, efficiency, power, and NPSH interact — and targeting operation near the Best Efficiency Point — engineers can achieve reliable, long-lasting, and energy-efficient pumping solutions.

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