What size air conditioner do I need for my room?
Start from about 20 BTU per square foot in a temperate climate, then adjust: strong sun (+10%), poor insulation (+15%), a hot climate (+25%), ceilings over 8 ft, each occupant beyond two (+600 BTU), and a kitchen (+4,000 BTU) all raise the load. Enter your exact room above to get the adjusted BTU, tonnage, and recommended unit type.
How do I convert BTU to tons of cooling?
Divide the BTU by 12,000 — one ton of cooling equals 12,000 BTU. So a 12,000 BTU unit is 1 ton, 24,000 BTU is 2 tons, and 36,000 BTU is 3 tons. The calculator shows both the BTU and the tonnage for your room.
How many BTU do I need per square foot?
Roughly 20 BTU per square foot for an average-insulation room in a temperate climate. Sunny, poorly insulated, or hot-climate rooms push toward 25 BTU per square foot or more, while a well-shaded, well-insulated room in a mild climate can need a little less.
What happens if my AC is too big for the room?
An oversized AC short-cycles — it cools the air quickly but shuts off before it removes enough humidity, leaving the room cold and clammy. The frequent on/off cycling also wastes energy and wears the compressor faster. Right-sizing matters more than simply buying the largest unit.
Does ceiling height, insulation, or sun change the BTU I need?
Yes — floor area alone is only the starting point. Ceilings above the standard 8 ft add volume to cool, poor insulation adds about 15%, strong direct sun adds about 10%, each person beyond two adds ~600 BTU, and a kitchen adds ~4,000 BTU for appliance heat. The calculator folds all of these in.
Do I need a bigger unit for a hot climate?
A hot climate raises the cooling load by roughly 25% versus a temperate one, so the same room needs more BTU further south. For heating, the reverse is true: cold climates need a larger furnace (about 50–60 BTU per square foot) than a mild one.