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Electricity Cost Laskuri

Käytä Electricity Cost Laskuri laskuria nopeiden ja tarkkojen tulosten saamiseksi.

Kuinka käyttää tätä laskuria

  1. Anna Wattage (W)
  2. Anna Hours per Day
  3. Anna Price per kWh ($)
  4. Napsauta Laske-painiketta
  5. Lue tulos, joka näkyy laskurin alapuolella

How Electricity Bills are Calculated

Electricity is billed in kilowatt-hours (kWh). One kWh = running a 1,000W (1 kW) device for exactly 1 hour. To calculate consumption: kWh = (Watts × Hours per day × Days) / 1,000.

A 100W light bulb running 8 hours/day for 30 days: (100 × 8 × 30) / 1,000 = 24 kWh. At $0.15/kWh, that costs $3.60/month. A 1,500W space heater running 6 hours/day all month: 270 kWh = $40.50/month.

Average US Electricity Costs

The US average residential electricity rate is approximately $0.13–0.16/kWh (2024), with significant state variation: Hawaii (~$0.39), California (~$0.26), Louisiana (~$0.11), Oklahoma (~$0.11). The average US household uses about 900 kWh/month.

Major electricity consumers in a typical home: HVAC (45%), water heater (18%), lighting (9%), washer/dryer (7%), refrigerator (5%). Targeting HVAC and water heating offers the biggest savings.

Reducing Your Electricity Bill

Most impactful changes: switch to LED bulbs (75% less energy than incandescent), upgrade to a smart thermostat (save 10–15% on HVAC), wash clothes in cold water, use power strips to eliminate standby power (phantom load), ensure proper home insulation, run dishwashers and laundry during off-peak hours. Solar panels can offset 50–100% of household electricity depending on location and system size.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to run a TV?

A modern 55-inch LED TV uses 60–150W. Running it 5 hours/day at $0.15/kWh costs $1.35–$3.38/month. Older plasma TVs used 300–500W — up to 5x more. OLED TVs vary widely based on brightness.

What uses the most electricity in a home?

Heating and cooling (HVAC) typically accounts for 40–50% of residential electricity use. Water heating, refrigerators, washer/dryers, and lighting follow. In winter climates, an electric space heater running all day can easily double your electricity bill.

What is the difference between kW and kWh?

kW (kilowatt) is a unit of power — the rate of energy use at any instant. kWh (kilowatt-hour) is a unit of energy — the total amount used over time. Your electricity bill charges for kWh, not kW. A 2 kW device running for 3 hours uses 6 kWh.

Kodinkoneiden Sähkönkulutus

Kodinkoneiden sähkönkulutuksen viitearvot.

KodinkoneTeho (Watti)Energian KulutusTyypillinen Päivittäinen Käyttö
LED Bulb (10W)10 W0.01 kWh/hour0.24 kWh/day
Incandescent Bulb (60W)60 W0.06 kWh/hour1.44 kWh/day
Laptop Computer15–60 W0.04 kWh/hour0.5 kWh/day
Desktop Computer150–300 W0.2 kWh/hour1.5 kWh/day
Refrigerator100–200 W0.1–0.2 kWh/hour1.5 kWh/day
Microwave700–1500 W0.7–1.5 kWh/hour0.3 kWh/day (use)
Washing Machine500–2000 W0.5–2.0 kWh/cycle1 kWh/cycle
Tumble Dryer2000–5000 W2–5 kWh/cycle3 kWh/cycle
Electric Kettle2000–3000 W2–3 kWh/hour0.11 kWh/boil
Air Conditioner1000–3500 W1–3.5 kWh/hour5 kWh/day
Electric Car Charger (7kW)7000 W7 kWh/hour10 kWh/charge

Viimeksi päivitetty: March 2026