BTUCalc

What size AC do I need?

Enter your room size and conditions to get the cooling BTU, tonnage, and unit type you need — plus a furnace estimate for heating. Works in both imperial and metric.

Cooling needed

8,000 BTU

Recommended unit

8,000 BTU

Tonnage

0.7 ton

Furnace (heating)

17,000 BTU

Best unit type

Window unit or single-zone mini-split

Alternative: Portable AC

Recommended window & portable ac

Real, widely available units in the Up to 12,000 BTU class. Independent picks — we're not affiliated with any manufacturer or retailer and earn nothing from these links. Always match the unit's BTU to the size above.

Best overall

Midea U-Shaped

8,000–12,000 BTU

Window · inverter · U-shape · ~36 dBA · window still opens

The U-shape puts the compressor outside the glass, so it runs about as quiet as a whisper and you can still open the window. Inverter compressor sips power.

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Quietest

LG Dual Inverter

8,000–14,000 BTU

Window · dual inverter · Dual-inverter · Wi-Fi · very quiet

LG’s dual-inverter compressor ramps up and down instead of cycling on/off — quieter, steadier temps, and lower running cost than a fixed-speed unit.

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Budget pick

Frigidaire 5,000 BTU

5,000 BTU

Window · fixed-speed · Cheapest way to cool a small room

A no-frills window unit that reliably cools a small bedroom, office, or dorm up to ~150 sq ft for the lowest upfront cost.

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Best value

Midea Duo Portable

8,000–12,000 BTU (SACC)

Portable · inverter · No permanent mount · inverter

When a window mount isn’t an option, this inverter portable is one of the few that actually cools like its rating instead of falling short.

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Estimate only, from a simplified ≈20 BTU/sq-ft model with documented adjustments. Confirm with a Manual J load calculation before buying or installing equipment.

Frequently asked questions

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.