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Electricity Cost Calculator

Calculate electricity costs from watts, hours per day, and your rate per kWh. Find out exactly what any appliance costs to run daily, monthly, and yearly.

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How to Calculate Electricity Cost

The electricity cost formula is straightforward: Cost = kWh × Rate, where kWh = (Watts × Hours) ÷ 1,000.

Example: A 1,500W electric heater running 4 hours/day at $0.15/kWh:
1,500W ÷ 1,000 = 1.5 kW; 1.5 kW × 4 hours = 6 kWh/day; 6 × $0.15 = $0.90/day; $0.90 × 30 = $27/month; $0.90 × 365 = $328.50/year.

Find your rate: Your electricity rate (price per kWh) is printed on your utility bill. In the US, rates average $0.12–$0.17/kWh. In Europe, rates are typically €0.20–€0.35/kWh. Enter your actual rate for precise results.

Electricity Cost Reference Table — Common Appliances

Typical electricity costs for common household appliances at $0.15/kWh:

ApplianceWattsHours/daykWh/monthCost/month
LED light bulb10 W5 hrs1.5 kWh$0.23
Phone charging10 W2 hrs0.6 kWh$0.09
Laptop50 W8 hrs12 kWh$1.80
Desktop PC200 W8 hrs48 kWh$7.20
Gaming PC500 W4 hrs60 kWh$9.00
55" LED TV120 W4 hrs14.4 kWh$2.16
Refrigerator150 W24 hrs108 kWh$16.20
Washing machine2,000 W1 hr60 kWh$9.00
Tumble dryer3,000 W1 hr90 kWh$13.50
Electric shower8,500 W0.17 hrs (10 min)43.35 kWh$6.50
Air conditioner1,500 W6 hrs270 kWh$40.50
Electric water heater4,000 W2 hrs240 kWh$36.00

Electricity Rates by Country

Electricity costs vary dramatically by country due to fuel sources, infrastructure, taxes, and subsidies. Using the correct rate for your country is essential for accurate calculations.

CountryAverage Rate (USD/kWh)Notes
United States$0.12–$0.17/kWhVaries widely by state; Hawaii highest (~$0.37), Louisiana lowest (~$0.09)
United Kingdom$0.25–$0.35/kWhPost-2022 energy crisis rates
Germany$0.35–$0.40/kWhAmong the highest in Europe
Spain$0.22–$0.30/kWhPVPC tariff varies by time of day
France$0.20–$0.25/kWhNuclear power keeps rates lower
Norway$0.10–$0.15/kWhHydropower; highly variable seasonally
Australia$0.22–$0.32/kWhVaries by state
Canada$0.08–$0.15/kWhQuebec (hydro) much cheaper than Ontario
Japan$0.18–$0.25/kWhIncreased post-Fukushima
India$0.07–$0.10/kWhHeavily subsidized residential rates

Time-of-use tariffs in many countries mean electricity is cheaper at night (off-peak) and more expensive during peak hours (typically 4–9pm). If your utility offers time-of-use pricing, running high-consumption appliances (dishwasher, washing machine, EV charging) overnight can cut bills by 30–50%.

Understanding Your Electricity Bill

An electricity bill typically contains several components beyond the simple kWh cost:

To find your effective all-in rate per kWh: divide your total monthly bill (including all fixed charges) by your total monthly consumption in kWh. This blended rate is what accurately represents your true cost per kWh for budgeting purposes. For a household using 500 kWh/month with a $90 bill: $90 ÷ 500 = $0.18/kWh effective rate, even if the energy unit rate is only $0.14/kWh.

Reducing Electricity Bills: High-Impact Changes

The most effective electricity savings come from targeting the highest-consumption appliances. Based on typical US household energy profiles:

Top electricity consumers and savings opportunities:

Return on investment for common upgrades:

Electric Vehicles and Home Charging Costs

Home EV charging is one of the largest discretionary electricity costs a household can add. Calculating the cost correctly helps budget for the transition from gasoline.

EV charging cost formula: Cost = Battery capacity (kWh) × electricity rate ($/kWh) × (1 ÷ charging efficiency)

Typical home charging efficiency (Level 1 and Level 2 AC): 85–92%. So to add 60 kWh to a Tesla Model 3 at $0.12/kWh: 60 ÷ 0.88 × $0.12 = $8.18 to charge from empty.

Cost comparison — EV vs gasoline:

Even at European electricity rates, EVs typically cost 2–4× less per km than gasoline cars. Charging overnight on off-peak tariffs (often $0.06–$0.09/kWh) further increases the cost advantage. A household driving 20,000 km/year switching from a 7L/100km car to an EV saves $1,500–$2,000/year in fuel costs at European prices, or $1,000–$1,600/year at US prices.

Solar Panels and Electricity Cost Reduction

Solar panels reduce electricity bills by generating free electricity during daylight hours. The economics depend on your electricity rate, solar resource, system cost, and whether you have net metering or battery storage.

Basic solar savings calculation:

In the US, a similar 4 kWp system in Arizona might generate 6,400–7,200 kWh/year, saving $768–$864/year at $0.12/kWh. With the federal 30% investment tax credit, the system cost of $9,000–$12,000 drops to $6,300–$8,400, giving a payback of 7–11 years and lifetime savings of $15,000–$20,000.

Electricity costs — whether for home appliances, EV charging, or energy-intensive business operations — are best understood through systematic calculation: watts consumed, hours of use, and rate per kWh. The formula (cost = kWh × rate) is simple, but applying it across an entire household or business reveals significant optimization opportunities. Identifying the top 3–5 energy consumers and targeting efficiency improvements in those areas delivers the greatest return on investment and reduces bills faster than trying to optimize dozens of small loads simultaneously.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate electricity cost from watts?

Use this formula: Cost = (Watts ÷ 1,000) × Hours × Rate. For example, a 1,500W heater running 4 hours at $0.15/kWh: (1,500 ÷ 1,000) × 4 × $0.15 = 1.5 × 4 × 0.15 = $0.90 per day.

What does 1 kWh cost on average?

In the US, 1 kWh costs an average of $0.12–$0.17. In Europe, typical rates are €0.20–€0.35/kWh. Hawaii has the highest US rates (~$0.37/kWh); some US states go as low as $0.09/kWh. Check your electricity bill for your exact rate.

How much does it cost to run a TV for a month?

A 55" LED TV uses about 100–150W. At 4 hours/day and $0.15/kWh: 120W × 4h × 30 days = 14.4 kWh × $0.15 = $2.16/month. A 75" TV might use 200W and cost $3.60/month under the same conditions.

How much electricity does a refrigerator use per month?

A modern refrigerator uses 100–200W and runs approximately 8–12 hours per day (cycling on and off). At 150W average for 24h/day: 150 × 24 × 30 = 108,000 Wh = 108 kWh/month × $0.15 = $16.20/month, or about $194/year.

How do I reduce my electricity bill?

Target the biggest consumers first: heating/cooling (use a programmable thermostat), water heating (lower temperature to 49°C, consider a heat pump water heater), and always-on appliances (old refrigerators and freezers can be replaced for significant savings). LED lighting, cold-water washing, and eliminating standby power also help. Consider solar panels if you own your home.

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