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The Electricity Cost Calculator computes the cost of running any electrical appliance or device based on its wattage, daily usage hours, and your local electricity rate. The core formula is straightforward: convert watts to kilowatts, multiply by hours of use, then multiply by your rate per kilowatt-hour (kWh). The average US residential electricity rate in 2025 is approximately $0.167/kWh, though rates vary enormously from $0.10/kWh in states like Louisiana and Idaho to $0.35+/kWh in Hawaii and Connecticut. Understanding electricity costs per appliance is essential for managing your utility bill, which averages $147/month ($1,764/year) for US households. The biggest electricity consumers in a typical home are air conditioning (16-20% of the bill), water heating (13-17%), lighting (10-12%), refrigeration (6-8%), and clothes dryers (5-6%). Heating and cooling together can account for 40-50% of a home's electricity bill in extreme climates. This calculator helps identify which appliances cost the most to run, compare energy-efficient models against older ones, estimate the savings from upgrading to LED lighting or Energy Star appliances, and plan solar panel systems by understanding your consumption patterns. It is an essential tool for energy auditors, environmentally conscious homeowners, and anyone trying to reduce their electricity bill.
Cost = (Watts x Hours_per_day x Days) / 1000 x Rate_per_kWh. Daily kWh = Watts / 1000 x Hours_per_day. Monthly Cost = Daily kWh x 30 x Rate. Annual Cost = Daily kWh x 365 x Rate. Worked example: 1,500W space heater running 8 hours/day for 30 days at $0.167/kWh: (1,500 x 8 x 30) / 1,000 x $0.167 = 360 kWh x $0.167 = $60.12/month.
- 1Find the wattage of your appliance. Check the label on the device (usually on the bottom or back), the owner's manual, or search online for the model. Common wattages: LED bulb 10W, laptop 50W, refrigerator 100-400W (compressor cycles on/off), TV 50-200W, window AC unit 500-1,500W, space heater 1,500W, electric oven 2,000-5,000W, clothes dryer 3,000-5,000W, central AC 3,000-5,000W.
- 2Enter the average hours per day you use the appliance. Some devices run continuously (refrigerator, router, security cameras), while others are used intermittently. For cycling appliances like refrigerators and AC units that turn on and off, use the average power draw (refrigerator averages about 100-150W despite having a 400W compressor because the compressor only runs 30-40% of the time).
- 3Enter the number of days in the period you want to calculate: 30 for monthly, 365 for annual, or any custom period. The calculator also lets you select specific months to account for seasonal appliances (AC in summer, space heaters in winter).
- 4Input your electricity rate in dollars per kWh. Find this on your utility bill, usually listed as the supply rate plus delivery rate combined. The US average is $0.167/kWh. If your utility uses tiered pricing (higher rate after a certain usage threshold), enter the tier that applies to incremental usage for the most accurate marginal cost calculation.
- 5The calculator converts watts to kilowatts (divide by 1,000), multiplies by hours and days to get total kWh consumed, then multiplies by your rate to get the cost. It shows daily, monthly, and annual costs, as well as total kWh consumed. For comparison, it shows what the same usage would cost at national average rates and at both low and high state rates.
- 6Use the comparison feature to see how much you could save by switching to a more efficient appliance. For example, replacing five 60W incandescent bulbs (running 6 hours/day) with 10W LED equivalents saves 91.25 kWh/month, or approximately $15.24/month ($182.88/year) at average rates.
A window AC unit is one of the most expensive appliances to run. At 1,200W for 10 hours daily over a 3-month summer, it consumes 1,080 kWh, equivalent to about 37% of the average monthly household electricity usage for the entire summer. Upgrading to an Energy Star unit with an EER of 12+ (vs. 10 for standard) would reduce consumption by approximately 20%, saving $36 over the summer. A mini-split heat pump would be even more efficient.
This is one of the most impactful energy efficiency upgrades. Ten LED bulbs cost approximately $20-$30 total and pay for themselves in less than 2 months through electricity savings. Over the 25,000-hour lifespan of an LED bulb (approximately 11.4 years at 6 hours/day), each bulb saves approximately $200 in electricity versus its incandescent equivalent. The incandescent bulbs also need replacement approximately 11 times during that period, adding $10-$15 per socket in bulb replacement costs.
Cryptocurrency mining is extremely electricity-intensive. This single rig consumes more electricity than the average US household (10,500 kWh/year), costing nearly $1,900/year even at a below-average rate of $0.12/kWh. At the national average rate ($0.167/kWh), the annual cost would be $2,633. Mining profitability depends entirely on whether crypto rewards exceed this electricity cost plus hardware depreciation. At $0.10/kWh or below, mining can be profitable; at $0.20+/kWh, it rarely is.
Home office equipment is surprisingly inexpensive to run. The entire setup costs less than $4/month in electricity. Modern laptops and LED monitors are highly energy-efficient compared to older desktop computers (200-400W) and CRT monitors (100-150W). Even if you add a printer (50W intermittent), phone charger (5W), and second monitor (30W), the total is well under $60/year. The home heating/cooling impact of working from home is a much larger cost factor.
Homeowners deciding between a space heater and central heating use the calculator to compare costs. Running a 1,500W space heater in one room for 8 hours costs about $2/day, while heating the whole house with a furnace might cost $5-$10/day. If you only need to heat one room, the space heater wins.
Energy auditors use per-appliance cost calculations to identify the biggest electricity consumers in a home and prioritize efficiency upgrades. A home audit might reveal that an old refrigerator from 2005 costs $180/year to run, while a new Energy Star model would cost $60, providing $120/year in savings that pays for the new fridge in 5-7 years.
Solar panel installers use electricity cost data to size systems correctly and demonstrate ROI. If a homeowner spends $180/month on electricity, a 8 kW solar system producing 1,000 kWh/month would offset most of that cost, saving $2,000+/year.
Landlords setting flat-rate utility costs for rental units use the calculator to estimate electricity consumption for typical tenant usage patterns, ensuring they charge enough to cover costs without overcharging.
Cryptocurrency miners evaluate whether their location's electricity rate makes mining profitable. At $0.10/kWh, a mining rig earning $200/month in crypto with $130/month electricity cost is profitable. At $0.20/kWh, the same rig costs $260/month in electricity and loses money.
Time-of-use (TOU) pricing changes the calculus
Many utilities offer TOU rates where electricity costs 2-3x more during peak hours (typically 2-7 PM on weekdays) and less during off-peak hours (nights and weekends). Under TOU pricing, running your clothes dryer at 3 PM might cost $0.35/kWh, while running it at 10 PM costs $0.10/kWh. Shifting heavy electricity use to off-peak hours can reduce your bill by 10-25%. EV owners benefit enormously from TOU rates by charging overnight.
Tiered pricing penalizes high usage
Some utilities charge increasing rates as you use more electricity. For example, the first 500 kWh might cost $0.12/kWh, the next 500 kWh costs $0.18/kWh, and usage above 1,000 kWh costs $0.25/kWh. Under tiered pricing, the cost of running an additional appliance should be calculated at the highest tier rate (the marginal rate), not the average rate shown on your bill. This means the true cost of a space heater or EV charger may be 50-100% higher than a simple average-rate calculation suggests.
Solar net metering changes the value of electricity saved
For homes with solar panels and net metering, reducing electricity consumption has a different value than for non-solar homes. During peak solar production hours (10 AM - 3 PM), excess generation is sent to the grid. Reducing usage during these hours does not save money because the solar would have covered it anyway. The highest-value efficiency gains are during evening and morning hours when the home draws from the grid. Some states are reducing net metering credits, making self-consumption of solar power more valuable than grid export.
| Appliance | Typical Watts | Avg Daily Use (hrs) | Annual kWh | Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LED Bulb (60W equivalent) | 10 | 6 | 22 | $3.67 |
| Laptop Computer | 50 | 8 | 146 | $24.38 |
| 55-inch LED TV | 80 | 5 | 146 | $24.38 |
| Refrigerator (modern) | 150 avg | 24 (cycling) | 394 | $65.80 |
| Clothes Washer | 500 | 1 | 183 | $30.56 |
| Clothes Dryer (electric) | 3,000 | 1 | 1,095 | $182.87 |
| Window AC (10,000 BTU) | 1,200 | 8 (summer) | 432 | $72.14 |
| Space Heater | 1,500 | 6 | 3,285 | $548.60 |
| Central AC (3-ton) | 3,500 | 6 (summer) | 945 | $157.82 |
| Electric Water Heater | 4,500 | 3 (cycling) | 2,460 | $410.82 |
| EV Charger (Level 2) | 7,200 | 3 | 7,884 | $1,316.63 |
What is a kilowatt-hour (kWh)?
A kilowatt-hour is the standard unit of electrical energy, equal to using 1,000 watts of power for 1 hour. A 100-watt light bulb running for 10 hours uses 1 kWh. A 2,000-watt space heater running for 30 minutes uses 1 kWh. Your electricity meter measures total kWh consumed, and your utility bill charges you a rate per kWh. The average US household uses about 886 kWh per month (10,632 kWh/year).
What are the most expensive appliances to run?
The most expensive home appliances to operate annually: central air conditioning ($500-$1,000/summer), electric water heater ($400-$600/year), pool pump ($300-$500/year), clothes dryer ($80-$120/year), electric oven/range ($60-$100/year), refrigerator ($50-$120/year). Heating systems (electric furnace, baseboard heaters) can cost $1,000-$3,000/year in cold climates, making them by far the largest electricity expense.
How much does it cost to charge an electric vehicle?
At the US average rate of $0.167/kWh, charging a typical EV with a 60 kWh battery from 20% to 100% (48 kWh) costs about $8.02. For an EV driven 12,000 miles/year at 3.5 miles/kWh, annual electricity cost is approximately $572. Compared to a gas car getting 28 MPG at $3.50/gallon ($1,500/year), the EV saves about $928/year in fuel costs. Home charging at night rates can be even cheaper in areas with time-of-use pricing.
What is the average electricity rate in my state?
State average rates (2025 estimates) range widely: Louisiana $0.097, Idaho $0.099, Washington $0.102, Kentucky $0.110, Texas $0.130, Florida $0.143, Ohio $0.146, national average $0.167, California $0.230, New York $0.225, Massachusetts $0.270, Connecticut $0.300, Hawaii $0.350. Check your specific utility for the exact rate, as rates vary by provider within each state.
Do appliances use electricity when turned off?
Yes, many devices draw standby or phantom power when plugged in but turned off. Common phantom power draws: cable/satellite box (15-30W even when 'off'), game console (5-25W), TV (5-15W), microwave with clock display (3-5W), phone charger (0.5-1W), laptop charger (1-3W). A typical household wastes 5-10% of electricity ($75-$175/year) on phantom loads. Smart power strips and unplugging unused devices eliminate this waste.
How can I reduce my electricity bill?
Top 5 highest-impact actions: (1) Switch to LED lighting (saves $100-$200/year). (2) Upgrade to a smart or programmable thermostat (saves $50-$180/year). (3) Replace old appliances with Energy Star models (saves $50-$200/year per appliance). (4) Use smart power strips to eliminate phantom loads (saves $75-$150/year). (5) Seal air leaks and improve insulation (saves $100-$400/year on heating/cooling). Combined, these can reduce your bill by 20-40%.
Pro Tips
The simplest way to estimate any appliance's monthly cost: take the wattage, drop the last three digits (divide by 1,000), and multiply by your rate and daily hours. Then multiply by 30 for monthly. Example: a 1,500W space heater at $0.17/kWh running 8 hours = 1.5 x 0.17 x 8 x 30 = $61.20/month. This mental math gets you within 5% of the exact answer and takes 10 seconds.
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If every American household replaced just 5 incandescent bulbs with LED equivalents, the country would save approximately $8 billion per year in electricity costs and prevent 40 million metric tons of CO2 emissions, equivalent to taking 8 million cars off the road. LED adoption has already saved the US over $30 billion since 2015.