United States AC sizing tool

How much cooling do you actually need?

Enter your room dimensions, room type, sunlight, and headcount to estimate the right cooling band in BTU/hr before you compare portable, window, or split ACs.

Simplified Manual J style sizing

Results default to BTU/hr with a kW toggle

Confidence band included when conditions are less certain

If you leave ceiling height blank, we assume a standard 8 ft / 2.4 m ceiling and widen the confidence band.

Recommended cooling range

Results default to BTU/hr for US, but you can switch to kW.

Display results in

3,700 BTU/hr to 4,100 BTU/hr

For a 180 sq ft bedroom with 2 occupants and normal light, this simplified load estimate lands in a realistic shopping band. Your ceiling height is being compared against a standard 8 ft room.

Recommended

3,700 BTU/hr to 4,100 BTU/hr

Confidence band

3,500 BTU/hr to 4,400 BTU/hr

United States results default to BTU/hr. Room coverage is shown in sq ft, and you can switch the result to kW at any time.

How we calculated this
Floor area
180 sq ft
Base cooling load
4,140 BTU/hr
Ceiling-height adjustment
+0 BTU/hr
Room-type adjustment
-207 BTU/hr
Sun exposure adjustment
+0 BTU/hr
Occupancy adjustment
+0 BTU/hr
Estimated cooling load
3,933 BTU/hr
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Editorial guide

What cooling capacity means, and why sizing comes before shopping

BTU is the headline number many shoppers see first, but it really stands for cooling capacity, not product quality. One BTU is the amount of heat needed to raise or lower a pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit. In air conditioning, that engineering unit becomes a practical buying shortcut: it tells you how much heat a unit can remove from a room in an hour.

The useful part is not chasing the biggest rating. The useful part is matching the capacity to the room you actually need to cool. A small bedroom, a sunny kitchen, and a wide open-plan lounge all place very different demands on the same machine.

Sizing matters because an undersized AC rarely catches up on hot afternoons, while an oversized one often cools too aggressively and then switches off before it has handled humidity properly. This calculator uses a simplified Manual J style approach to account for room area, ceiling height, heat sources, and occupancy quickly. It is not a substitute for a full professional load calculation, but it is a strong filter for portable, window, and split AC shopping when you want a realistic starting range instead of guesswork.

Next step

Use the result to shortlist the right class of AC

Once you have a realistic BTU/hr band, you can stop comparing random models and focus on ACs that are genuinely sized for your room.

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FAQ

Practical sizing questions shoppers ask before they buy

What is BTU in air conditioning?

BTU stands for British Thermal Unit. In AC shopping, it is a shorthand for cooling capacity: the higher the BTU rating, the more heat the unit can remove from a room in an hour.

How much cooling do I need for a bedroom?

Many standard bedrooms land somewhere between 5,000 and 9,000 BTU/hr, but sunlight, ceiling height, insulation, and how many people use the room can push the right answer up or down.

Is it bad to oversize an air conditioner?

Usually yes. An oversized AC can short-cycle, waste energy, cool unevenly, and leave humidity behind because it satisfies the thermostat before the room is properly conditioned.

How do you convert BTU to kW?

A quick rule of thumb is 1 kW equals roughly 3,412 BTU/hr. This calculator lets you switch the result between BTU/hr and kW so you can compare products in the units local retailers use.

Does ceiling height change AC size?

Yes. Taller ceilings mean more air volume, so the cooling load rises even if the floor area stays the same. That is why ceiling height can shift the recommended band meaningfully.