What Does Air Conditioning Usually Cost to Run?
HOW TO WORK OUT RUNNING COST
The Simple Formula
The basic way to estimate running cost is:
Electrical input in kW × electricity price per kWh = running cost per hour
Using the current Ofgem average electricity rate of 24.67p per kWh, the running cost works out like this:
- 0.3 kW draw = about 7p per hour
- 0.5 kW draw = about 12p per hour
- 0.7 kW draw = about 17p per hour
- 1.0 kW draw = about 25p per hour
- 1.5 kW draw = about 37p per hour
These examples use the electricity unit rate only, which is the part that changes when the air conditioning is running. The standing charge is separate and would normally be paid whether the system is on or not. Ofgem’s published daily electricity standing charge for the same period is 57.21p per day.
EXAMPLE RUNNING COSTS BY COMMON SYSTEM SIZE
What Different Size Systems Might Cost to Run
To give a more practical benchmark, the examples below use one current wall-mounted single-split range and show the nominal cooling input for each size. That matters because the system size in kW is the cooling output, not the exact electricity it draws from the mains. The examples below are based on the current Ofgem average electricity unit rate of 24.67p per kWh and assume 8 hours of use per day.
2.0 kW system
3.5 kW system
5.0 kW system
Important note:
These figures are useful as a like-for-like guide, but real running costs can still be lower or higher depending on the room, the temperature setting, the insulation level, the amount of sunlight, and how hard the system is working. The Panasonic examples above are model-based worked examples, not a fixed rule for every system on the market.
DAILY AND MONTHLY EXAMPLES
What That Looks Like in Real Use
If your system averages around 0.7 kW while running, that works out at about:
- £1.38 for 8 hours of use
- £41.45 for 30 days at 8 hours per day
- £1.97 for 8 hours of use
- £59.21 for 30 days at 8 hours per day
- £2.96 for 8 hours of use
- £88.81 for 30 days at 8 hours per day
WHAT CHANGES THE RUNNING COST?
Why Running Costs Vary from One Home to Another
The biggest factors are usually:
- Room size
- How hot the room gets in the first place
- Insulation levels
- Sunlight and glazing
- Thermostat setting
- How long the system runs each day
- How well the system is matched to the room
HOW TO KEEP RUNNING COSTS DOWN
Simple Ways to Reduce the Bill
- Set the temperature to a sensible comfortable level rather than overcooling the room
- Keep doors and windows closed while the system is running
- Reduce direct sunlight with blinds or curtains where possible
- Use timers so the system runs when you actually need it
- Keep filters clean
- Make sure the system is properly sized for the room
IS AIR CONDITIONING EXPENSIVE TO RUN IN THE UK?
Usually Less Than People Think
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)