AC BTU Calculator

Estimate the cooling capacity required for your air conditioner based on room area, climate, insulation, and occupancy.

Room Details

ft
People regularly in the room

Room Size vs BTU Reference

Room AreaBTU/hrTonnage
100 sq ft2,5000.21
150 sq ft3,7500.31
200 sq ft5,0000.42
300 sq ft7,5000.63
400 sq ft10,0000.83
500 sq ft12,5001.04
700 sq ft17,5001.46
1,000 sq ft25,0002.08
1,500 sq ft37,5003.13
2,000 sq ft50,0004.17

Based on standard 8 ft ceiling, moderate climate, and average insulation. Adjust 20–35% upward for tropical climates or poor insulation.

BTU to Tonnage Conversion

BTU/hrTons
9,0000.75
12,0001
18,0001.5
24,0002
36,0003
48,0004
60,0005

What Is an AC BTU Calculator?

An AC BTU Calculator estimates the cooling capacity — measured in British Thermal Units per hour — that an air conditioner needs to keep a room comfortable in summer. It starts from the ASHRAE 25 BTU/sq ft baseline and adjusts for climate zone, ceiling height, insulation, sun exposure, room type, and occupancy. The output is a number you can carry to any HVAC catalogue or installer. Pair this with our Electricity Cost Calculator and Unit Converter to plan operating cost and panel sizing.

How It Works

Floor Area as Base

Calculation begins with floor area × 25 BTU/sq ft (or 240 BTU/m²). This baseline assumes an 8-ft ceiling, moderate climate, and average insulation — a reliable starting point for a typical bedroom or living room.

Climate Multipliers

Cold climates apply 0.85×, moderate 1.00×, warm 1.10×, hot 1.20×, and tropical climates 1.35× — reflecting outdoor design temperatures and humidity that the AC must overcome.

Envelope Adjustments

Insulation moves the load between 0.80× (excellent / passive-house grade) and 1.25× (poor / single-pane single-stud). Direct south-facing sun adds up to 25% on top.

Internal Heat Gains

Each occupant above two adds 600 BTU/hr of body heat. Room type adds 0% (bedroom), +15% (kitchen), +30% (restaurant), or +50% (server room) on top of the base load.

6 Ways to Use This Calculator

1

Size a Bedroom Mini-Split

Enter room area, leave climate at moderate, and pick a 9,000–12,000 BTU mini-split that lands within ±15% of the recommendation.

2

Plan a Living Room Window Unit

Use realistic sun exposure if the room faces west — most undersized window units fail because installers ignored afternoon solar gain.

3

Spec a Whole-Home Central AC

Run the calculator per zone, sum the BTU/hr, then divide by 12,000 to get the rough tonnage you should ask quotes for.

4

Right-Size a Replacement Unit

If your existing AC short-cycles and leaves rooms clammy, the prior owner likely oversized. Use our number to choose a smaller, longer-cycling unit.

5

Quote a Server Room Cooler

Pick server-room as the room type so the calculator applies a 1.5× multiplier, then add a 20% margin for redundancy and growth.

6

Compare Inverter vs Conventional

Inverter units can over-deliver the BTU number you pick (variable capacity), so it is safe to size a SEER 20+ inverter at the exact BTU figure rather than padding upward.

Best Practices

Pick the BTU figure first; then translate to tonnage and an AC type. Round down to the nearest commercially available size if the calculator returns an in-between value — running slightly longer cycles improves humidity control. Never round up by more than 15% of the calculated load; ASHRAE explicitly warns against this. If the room receives intense afternoon sun, switch the Sun Exposure dropdown rather than guessing — the 25% adjustment is significant.

Always re-run the calculator after any envelope upgrade (new windows, attic insulation, weather stripping). Most homeowners forget that a SEER-21 unit running on the old envelope still costs more annually than a SEER-13 unit running on a properly sealed and insulated envelope.

Why It Matters

Avoid Costly Mistakes

An oversized AC short-cycles, increasing wear and humidity. An undersized one runs continuously and never reaches setpoint. Both fail comfort and cost tests.

Match the Inverter Era

Modern inverter compressors handle a range of loads — but they still need a sensible BTU target to size the refrigerant lines and electrical service.

Account for Climate

Phoenix and Portland with the same floor plan need very different BTU. The climate multiplier is the largest single adjustment in any sizing exercise.

Lower Lifetime Cost

Correct sizing typically cuts 15–25% from a unit's lifetime electrical cost — meaningful over a 15-year service life.

BTU Sizing Quick Reference

RangeCategoryMeaningRecommendation
150 – 250 sq ftSmall RoomBedroom, home office, or small den.6,000 BTU window unit or 9,000 BTU mini-split.
250 – 400 sq ftStandard RoomMaster bedroom or compact living room.8,000–12,000 BTU window unit or single-zone mini-split.
400 – 700 sq ftOpen LivingCombined living-dining space or studio apartment.14,000–18,000 BTU mini-split (≈ 1.2 ton).
700 – 1,200 sq ftMulti-Room ZoneWhole floor of an apartment or a small home.24,000–30,000 BTU multi-zone (2–2.5 ton).
1,200 – 2,000 sq ftWhole HomeAverage single-family home or large apartment.30,000–42,000 BTU central AC (2.5–3.5 ton).

Core Formulas

Base Cooling Load

BTU = area_sqft × 25 × climate × insulation × sun × height × room_type

Each factor is independent; the multipliers stack. 25 BTU/sq ft is the ASHRAE residential baseline.

Occupant Heat Load

BTU_people = max(0, occupants − 2) × 600

Two occupants are already absorbed in the base 25 BTU/sq ft. Each additional person contributes ~600 BTU/hr of sensible heat.

BTU to Tonnage

tons = BTU ÷ 12,000

1 ton of cooling = 12,000 BTU/hr — historically derived from melting one ton of ice in 24 hours.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. 1

    Sizing on floor area alone and ignoring climate, sun exposure, or insulation quality.

  2. 2

    Choosing the next size up “just to be safe” — oversizing makes humidity worse, not better.

  3. 3

    Assuming a single AC unit can cool every room equally without zoning or extra registers.

  4. 4

    Forgetting to add server, kitchen, or laundry heat — these rooms need a multiplier, not just area.

  5. 5

    Picking a SEER rating before fixing air leaks — efficiency improvements lose their payback on a leaky envelope.

About Our Methodology

Calculations follow the ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals and ACCA Manual J / N simplified load methods. Conversion constants are NIST reference values. Results are a planning starting point — for projects above 5 tons or any commercial, healthcare, restaurant, or server-room work, engage a licensed mechanical engineer. Read our editorial policy.

Frequently Asked Questions

A 500 sq ft room in a moderate climate with average insulation typically needs ~12,500 BTU/hr (about 1 ton). In a hot or tropical climate this rises to 15,000–17,000 BTU. Use the climate dropdown to refine.

No. Oversized ACs short-cycle, leaving rooms cold and clammy. ASHRAE recommends sizing within ±15% of the calculated load — never round up further than that.

Tonnage is the same number expressed differently. 1 ton = 12,000 BTU/hr exactly. A 24,000 BTU AC is a 2-ton unit; a 36,000 BTU AC is 3-ton.

Yes. A 10 ft ceiling has 25% more air volume than the standard 8 ft baseline — meaning roughly 25% more cooling capacity is needed for the same floor area.

If south or west-facing windows receive 4+ hours of direct sun, choose “Direct Sunlight” (+25%). For north-facing rooms or rooms shaded by trees, choose “Low” (−15%).

Yes — set Room Type to Kitchen so the calculator applies the +15% appliance heat multiplier. Open-plan kitchen-living spaces are often best served by a single larger unit sized as kitchen.