AC Electricity Bill Calculator

AC Electricity Bill Calculator — Free Monthly Cost Estimator Worldwide | RoomTemperatureOnline.com
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AC Electricity Bill Calculator
Free — Works Worldwide

Calculate your exact monthly air conditioner electricity cost in any currency. Supports Inverter & Non-Inverter AC, all tonnages, all countries.

🌍 All Countries
💱 Any Currency
🌿 Inverter vs Non-Inverter
⭐ All Star Ratings
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AC Electricity Cost Calculator

Select your country, enter your per-unit electricity rate, and get your exact monthly AC bill in seconds. Works for all AC types and sizes worldwide.

⚡ AC Bill Calculator — Worldwide

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🌍 Select Your Country & Currency
Find this on your monthly electricity bill
Your AC Type
Average hours AC runs per day
Higher stars = less electricity. Not sure? Select 3 stars.
Calculating your AC bill…
Your Monthly AC Bill
per month

📊 Full Cost Breakdown

How It Works

How We Calculate Your AC Electricity Bill

Our calculator uses real energy consumption formulas based on AC type, tonnage, star rating, usage hours, and temperature settings to give you an accurate monthly cost estimate.

Wattage Calculation

We use the actual running wattage of your AC based on tonnage and type. Inverter ACs run at variable wattage (typically 40–100% of rated power). Non-Inverter ACs run at full power when on.

Star Rating Adjustment

Higher star ratings mean higher energy efficiency. A 5-star AC uses up to 30% less electricity than a 3-star model of the same size. We apply the correct efficiency factor for each rating.

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Temperature Factor

The lower you set your AC temperature, the harder the compressor works. Setting AC to 20°C uses 30% more electricity than 26°C. Our calculator accounts for this real-world factor.

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Local Currency Conversion

We multiply kWh consumption by your local per-unit electricity rate to give you the exact cost in your currency — whether USD, GBP, PKR, INR, AED, or any other currency worldwide.

Comparison Guide

Inverter AC vs Non-Inverter AC — Full Comparison

Understanding the difference between Inverter and Non-Inverter ACs is the most important factor in reducing your electricity bill.

FeatureInverter ACNon-Inverter AC
How It WorksVariable speed compressor — adjusts power based on room temperatureFixed speed compressor — runs at 100% power then switches off
Electricity Usage✅ 30–50% Less❌ Higher Consumption
Monthly Bill✅ Much Lower❌ Higher Bill
Temperature Stability✅ Very Stable⚠️ Fluctuates
Purchase Price⚠️ Higher Upfront✅ Cheaper Upfront
Payback Period✅ 1–3 Years
Noise Level✅ Very Quiet⚠️ Louder
Lifespan✅ Longer (less wear)⚠️ More wear & tear
Best ForHomes, offices, daily useLow usage, tight budget

If you use your AC for more than 4 hours per day, an Inverter AC will almost always pay back its higher cost within 1–2 years through electricity savings. For regions with high electricity rates (USA, UK, Australia, Europe), the payback can be even faster.

Worldwide Rates

AC Electricity Cost by Country — 2025 Guide

Electricity rates vary significantly worldwide. Here’s what a 1.5 ton Inverter AC running 8 hours/day costs per month in different countries.

CountryAvg Rate/kWhMonthly Cost (1.5T Inverter, 8h/day)Yearly Cost
🇺🇸 USA$0.13–0.17$35–$45$420–$540
🇬🇧 United Kingdom£0.25–0.35£67–$95£800–$1,140
🇦🇺 AustraliaA$0.25–0.35A$67–$95A$800–$1,140
🇪🇺 Germany€0.30–0.40€80–$108€960–$1,296
🇦🇪 UAEAED 0.30–0.40AED 80–$108AED 960–$1,296
🇸🇦 Saudi ArabiaSAR 0.05–0.18SAR 13–$48SAR 156–$576
🇮🇳 India₹5–10₹1,350–$2,700₹16,200–$32,400
🇵🇰 PakistanPKR 40–70PKR 10,800–$18,900PKR 129,600–$226,800
🇲🇾 MalaysiaRM 0.22–0.50RM 59–$135RM 708–$1,620
🇸🇬 SingaporeS$0.25–0.32S$67–$86S$804–$1,032

*Based on 1.5 ton Inverter AC, 3-star rating, 8 hours/day, 30 days/month, ideal temperature setting. Actual rates may vary.

Save Money

10 Proven Ways to Reduce Your AC Electricity Bill

These practical tips can reduce your AC electricity cost by 30–50% without sacrificing comfort.

1

Set Temperature to 24–26°C

Every degree below 24°C increases consumption by 6–8%. At 26°C vs 20°C you save 30–40% — often without noticing much difference in comfort.

2

Use Ceiling Fan Alongside AC

A ceiling fan makes 26°C feel like 23°C. This lets you raise your AC setting by 2–3°C and save 15–20% on electricity while feeling equally comfortable.

3

Clean AC Filter Monthly

A dirty filter blocks airflow and forces the compressor to work harder — increasing electricity use by 10–15%. Clean filter = better cooling and lower bill.

4

Keep Windows & Curtains Closed

Direct sunlight and hot outdoor air entering the room adds significant heat load. Blackout curtains can reduce heat gain by 25–30%, directly cutting AC workload.

5

Use AC Timer / Sleep Mode

Most people sleep better in a slightly warmer room. Set your AC to switch off after 2 hours or raise temperature to 27°C after midnight to save hours of unnecessary electricity.

6

Upgrade to 5-Star Inverter AC

A 5-star Inverter AC uses up to 50% less electricity than an old 3-star Non-Inverter. The initial investment pays back in 1–3 years through monthly savings.

7

Seal Room Air Leaks

Gaps under doors, poorly sealed windows, and thin walls let cold air escape. Proper insulation and door seals can reduce AC workload by 10–20%.

8

Annual AC Servicing

A well-maintained AC with clean coils, correct refrigerant level, and clean filters runs 10–15% more efficiently. Service before summer every year.

9

Correct AC Size for Room

An undersized AC runs continuously and wastes electricity. An oversized AC cycles on/off too frequently. Right-sizing your AC gives maximum efficiency.

10

Consider Solar Panels

In sunny countries, solar panels can power your AC for free during the day. A 1.5 ton AC can run on just 4–5 solar panels of 550W each. Check our Solar AC Calculator.

FAQ

AC Electricity Bill — Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about calculating and reducing your air conditioner electricity costs.

A 1 ton Inverter AC uses approximately 0.7–0.9 kWh per hour during normal operation. A 1 ton Non-Inverter AC uses about 1.1–1.3 kWh per hour when running. At 8 hours per day, this is roughly 168–312 kWh per month. The exact figure depends on your star rating, set temperature, outdoor heat, and room insulation.
Running a 1.5 ton Inverter AC for 24 hours costs approximately $3–5 (USA), £6–10 (UK), ₹55–90 (India), or PKR 900–1,500 (Pakistan). Running all day is expensive and often unnecessary — a programmable timer can reduce this cost by 40–50% with no comfort loss.
24–26°C (75–79°F) is the most energy-efficient AC temperature range for most people. The WHO recommends 18°C minimum for health, but for energy efficiency and comfort balance, 24–26°C with a ceiling fan is optimal. Every degree below 24°C increases electricity use by 6–8%.
It is almost always cheaper to turn AC off when you leave and turn it back on when you return, than to leave it running all day. The exception is if your home has very good insulation and the outdoor temperature is extreme — in that case, a slightly higher set point while away can be more efficient than fighting extreme heat when you return.
Check your monthly electricity bill — it shows total units/kWh used and total amount charged. Divide the total bill amount by total kWh used to get your per-unit rate. In the USA it’s typically $0.10–0.20/kWh. UK: £0.24–0.35/kWh. Australia: A$0.25–0.35/kWh. Pakistan: PKR 40–70/unit. India: ₹5–10/unit.
Our calculator uses established HVAC engineering formulas based on real AC wattage data, energy efficiency ratings, and temperature load factors. Results are typically within 10–15% of actual consumption. For the most accurate result, enter your exact per-unit electricity rate from your bill and your actual daily usage hours.
Possible reasons: (1) Dirty AC filter — increases consumption 10–15%. (2) Low refrigerant — forces AC to run longer. (3) Poor room insulation — heat enters faster than AC can cool. (4) AC set much lower than entered. (5) Outdoor temperature much higher than average. (6) AC is older and running less efficiently than its rated specs.
Yes, significantly. AC fan-only mode uses about 50–100 watts (similar to a table fan) compared to 750–3,000 watts in cool mode. However, fan mode does not actually cool the air — it just circulates it. Use fan mode only when the room is already at a comfortable temperature or during mild weather.
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