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GUIDE · 2026

Air Conditioner BTU Chart: Room Size to BTU Guide

CWBy Casey Walsh, Home, Kitchen & Pet Products Editor· Updated Jun 2026
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BTU stands for British Thermal Unit, and on an air conditioner it tells you how much heat the unit can pull out of a room in one hour. Pick a number that is too small and the AC runs flat out, never reaching the temperature you set, while your energy bill climbs. Pick a number that is too large and the unit cools the air so quickly that it shuts off before it has wrung the humidity out, leaving the room feeling cold and clammy. The right BTU rating sits in the sweet spot where the unit cools steadily, dehumidifies properly, and cycles in a way that protects the compressor. This guide gives you a clean room-size-to-BTU chart, then explains every adjustment that real owners and energy auditors care about, so you can size with confidence rather than guessing.

Everything below is research-backed analysis. TheTestedHub does not run a physical lab, so we do not claim to have metered these units in a chamber. Instead, we cross-reference the U.S. Department of Energy and ENERGY STAR sizing recommendations, published manufacturer specification sheets from brands like Midea, LG, Frigidaire, GE, Hisense and Friedrich, and patterns we see across hundreds of verified owner reviews. That combination is what shapes the numbers and the caveats you will read here.

The core BTU chart: room size to BTU

The baseline figures come straight from the long-standing ENERGY STAR sizing table, which assumes a standard 8-foot ceiling, average sun exposure, and reasonable insulation. Find your room’s square footage in the left column and the matching base BTU rating is your starting point. The adjustments in the next section then nudge that number up or down for your specific space.

Room size (square feet) Recommended base BTU Typical room example Common AC class
100 to 150 5,000 Small bedroom, home office Small window unit
150 to 250 6,000 Standard bedroom, nursery Window or compact portable
250 to 300 7,000 Large bedroom, small den Window or portable
300 to 350 8,000 Studio, dining room Window or portable
350 to 400 9,000 Living room, small apartment Window, portable or mini split
400 to 450 10,000 Open living room Window or mini split
450 to 550 12,000 Large living room, master suite Window or 12k mini split
550 to 700 14,000 Open-plan living and kitchen High-BTU portable or mini split
700 to 1,000 18,000 Large great room Mini split or central zone
1,000 to 1,400 24,000 Whole floor of a small home Mini split or central AC

A simple rule of thumb sits behind that table: budget roughly 20 BTU per square foot of living space. A 300-square-foot room times 20 lands you near 6,000 to 7,000 BTU, which matches the chart. The chart is the more reliable reference because it bakes in the rounding that manufacturers actually use, but the per-square-foot math is handy for a quick sanity check.

Adjustments that change your real BTU need

The base chart describes an idealized room. Few rooms are ideal, so ENERGY STAR publishes a set of percentage adjustments that auditors and installers apply. Stack the ones that fit your space.

  • Heavy sun exposure: increase the rating by about 10 percent. A west-facing living room with afternoon glare needs more capacity than a shaded north room of the same size.
  • Heavily shaded room: reduce by about 10 percent. North-facing rooms and basements often need less than the chart suggests.
  • Kitchen: add 4,000 BTU. Ovens, ranges and refrigerators dump real heat, so a kitchen always sizes up.
  • Occupancy: the base assumes two people. Add 600 BTU for each additional regular occupant, which matters in home offices and family rooms.
  • High ceilings: ceilings above 8 feet add air volume. Vaulted or loft spaces can need 10 to 20 percent more capacity.
  • Climate and humidity: the Gulf Coast and the desert Southwest both stress an AC harder than a mild coastal climate, though for different reasons. Humid regions especially benefit from not oversizing, because slow steady run time is what removes moisture.

If you want a structured walkthrough that turns these adjustments into a single recommended number, our companion piece on what size air conditioner you need with a full BTU chart by room size runs the same math with worked examples for tricky layouts.

Why oversizing is the mistake people regret

Most shoppers assume that more BTU is a safety margin. In practice an oversized unit is the more common complaint we see in verified owner reviews. The unit blasts the room to temperature in a few minutes, the thermostat satisfies, and the compressor shuts off. Because the run cycle was so short, the evaporator coil never got cold enough for long enough to condense much water out of the air. The result is a room that reads the right temperature on the dial but still feels damp and stuffy, plus more wear on the compressor from frequent short cycling.

An undersized unit fails in the opposite direction. It runs continuously, never reaches the setpoint on the hottest afternoons, and uses more electricity doing it because it is always at full load. The honest target is to size as close to your calculated need as you can, erring slightly under rather than over when the math lands between two ratings. Humidity removal is part of comfort, and our explainer on how an air conditioner removes humidity covers why steady run time beats raw cooling power for that job.

How BTU connects to running cost and efficiency

BTU describes cooling capacity, not how much electricity it takes to deliver that capacity. Two 8,000 BTU units can have very different running costs depending on their efficiency rating. For window and portable units, the figure to read is CEER (Combined Energy Efficiency Ratio); for mini splits and central systems, look at SEER2 and EER2. Higher numbers mean more cooling per watt drawn.

Inverter compressors are the biggest efficiency lever. A traditional single-stage compressor is either fully on or fully off, while an inverter ramps its speed to match demand, which trims both energy use and noise. That is why a well-chosen mini split can be dramatically cheaper to run than an older window unit of the same BTU. We break the trade-off down in our comparison of inverter versus non-inverter air conditioners, and there is a wider primer on how much electricity an air conditioner actually uses if you want to estimate your own seasonal cost.

AC type Typical BTU range Efficiency metric Relative running cost Best fit
Window unit 5,000 to 14,000 CEER Low to moderate Single rooms with a suitable window
Portable unit 8,000 to 14,000 CEER (SACC) Moderate to higher Rooms where a window mount is not allowed
Ductless mini split 9,000 to 36,000 SEER2 / EER2 Lowest per BTU Long-term cooling, whole rooms or zones
Central AC 24,000 and up SEER2 Lowest whole-home Cooling an entire house at once

Installation type and how it limits your BTU choice

Your sizing math can point to a high BTU number that a given form factor cannot deliver. Window units top out around 14,000 BTU for a standard single-hung window, and the largest ones need a 230-volt circuit rather than a normal wall outlet. Portable units rarely exceed 14,000 BTU of true cooling and lose some effective capacity to the exhaust hose, which is why a dual-hose design cools a given room more efficiently than a single-hose one. If your room calls for 18,000 BTU or more, a mini split or a central zone is usually the realistic answer.

The decision between form factors is rarely about BTU alone. Renters and anyone who cannot drill through a wall often land on a portable or window unit, while owners planning to stay put tend to favor a mini split for its quiet, efficient run. Our honest breakdowns of portable AC versus window AC and window AC versus mini split walk through which form factor wins for which living situation, and our single hose versus dual hose portable AC comparison explains the capacity penalty hidden in portable specs.

Noise: a quiet byproduct of right-sizing

Noise tracks closely with sizing and compressor type. An undersized or single-stage unit running at full tilt is louder than an inverter unit loafing along at half speed. Window units typically sit in the low to mid 50-decibel range on high, portables run a touch louder because the compressor lives inside the room, and mini split indoor heads are the quietest class at roughly 19 to 35 decibels on low. For a bedroom, sizing slightly conservatively so the unit can hold temperature on a low fan setting is the single biggest comfort upgrade. If quiet sleep is the priority, our roundup of the quietest air conditioners ranks units specifically on measured sound behavior reported by owners.

Filter maintenance and how it protects your sizing

A correctly sized unit still underperforms if its filter is clogged. Restricted airflow forces the compressor to work harder for less cooling, which makes an adequately sized unit behave like an undersized one. Most window and portable filters are washable mesh that needs a rinse every two to four weeks during heavy use; mini split heads use a similar reusable filter behind the front panel. Cleaning it is a five-minute job and the most reliable way to keep your unit delivering its rated BTU. If cooling has fallen off, a dirty filter is the first suspect, which is why we wrote a step-by-step guide on cleaning your AC filter.

Pros and cons of sizing by the chart

Pros: the chart removes guesswork, prevents the comfort problems that come from oversizing, and gives you a defensible number to shop against. It also makes efficiency comparisons fair, because once you have locked your BTU you can compare CEER and SEER2 across models like for like.

Cons: the chart is a starting point, not a final answer. Unusual rooms with lots of glass, very high ceilings, poor insulation or multiple heat-producing appliances can break the assumptions, and in those cases a proper Manual J load calculation from an HVAC professional is worth the effort, especially before committing to a central or mini split install.

Who should rely on this chart, and who should go further

If you are cooling a single standard room with normal ceilings and average insulation, this chart plus the adjustment percentages will get you a unit that performs well. Match the number to a high-CEER window or portable model and you are done. If you are cooling an open-plan space, a sun-drenched room, a home with vaulted ceilings, or your whole house, treat the chart as a floor and have a load calculation done before you buy, because the cost of getting a permanent system wrong is far higher than the cost of the calculation.

Once you have your number, the next step is matching it to a specific model. Our main best air conditioners guide sorts current picks by room size and BTU so you can go straight from your calculated capacity to a shortlist worth shopping. For deeper context on every spec that matters beyond BTU, the air conditioner buying guide ties efficiency, install type and noise together into one decision framework.

Final verdict

The right BTU is the foundation every other air conditioner decision sits on. Start from the chart, apply the adjustments for sun, ceiling height, occupancy and appliances, and resist the urge to round up for safety. A unit sized close to your true load will cool steadily, dehumidify properly, run quietly and cost less to operate than an oversized one that short-cycles. Lock that number first, then choose the form factor and efficiency rating that fit your home and your budget, and you will avoid the most common and most frustrating air conditioner mistake there is.

Quick answers

How many BTU do I need for a 300 square foot room?

A 300 square foot room with standard 8-foot ceilings and average sun needs roughly 7,000 BTU as a baseline. Add about 10 percent if the room gets heavy afternoon sun, add 4,000 BTU if it is a kitchen, and add 600 BTU for each regular occupant beyond two. For most ordinary bedrooms and dens of this size, a 7,000 BTU unit is the right call.

Is it better to oversize or undersize an air conditioner?

Err slightly under rather than over when your math lands between two ratings. An oversized unit cools the room so fast that it shuts off before removing humidity, leaving the space cold and clammy while short-cycling the compressor. A right-sized or marginally smaller unit runs longer and steadier, which is exactly what removes moisture and keeps the room comfortable.

What is the rule of thumb for BTU per square foot?

Budget roughly 20 BTU per square foot of living space. A 250 square foot room times 20 lands near 5,000 to 6,000 BTU. This is a quick sanity check, but the room-size-to-BTU chart is more reliable because it reflects the actual rounded ratings manufacturers sell and bakes in standard ceiling assumptions.

Does ceiling height change how many BTU I need?

Yes. The standard chart assumes an 8-foot ceiling. Vaulted, loft or cathedral ceilings add air volume that the unit has to cool, so add roughly 10 to 20 percent to your base BTU for ceilings noticeably higher than 8 feet. Ignoring this is a common reason an otherwise correctly sized unit struggles in a tall room.

Do BTU and energy efficiency mean the same thing?

No. BTU measures cooling capacity, while efficiency is measured by CEER on window and portable units or SEER2 and EER2 on mini splits and central systems. Two units with the same BTU can have very different running costs. Lock your BTU first, then compare efficiency ratings across models to find the cheapest one to operate at that capacity.

Can a window unit deliver high BTU for a large room?

Window units top out around 14,000 BTU, and the largest models require a 230-volt circuit rather than a standard outlet. If your sizing calculation points to 18,000 BTU or more, a single window unit cannot keep up. In that case a ductless mini split or a central zone is the realistic way to deliver the capacity a large open room needs.

Why does my correctly sized AC still feel weak?

A clogged filter is the most common culprit. Restricted airflow forces the unit to work harder for less cooling, making a properly sized AC behave like an undersized one. Rinse washable mesh filters every two to four weeks during heavy use. If cleaning the filter does not restore cooling, check for blocked vents, a dirty condenser coil or low refrigerant.

CW
Casey WalshHome, Kitchen & Pet Products Editor

Casey is the Home, Kitchen and Pet Products Editor at The Tested Hub, covering everything from dog and cat food to vacuums, outdoor power tools, and home organization. With years of real-world product testing experience and a house full of pets, Casey evaluates pet food on nutritional merit against AAFCO guidelines and puts home gear through real-world use in a busy shared household. Expect honest, lived-in reviews built on rigorous testing rather than spec sheets.

10+ years of real-world consumer product testingEvaluates pet food against AAFCO nutritional guidelinesReal-world testing across home, kitchen, and outdoor categoriesMulti-pet household reviewer for pet food and accessories

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