Typical electricity cost
How much does a Ceiling Fan cost to run?
Based on typical usage
A Ceiling Fan typically uses about 42 to 70 watts, costing around $0.01 per hour at $0.15 per kWh.
At typical use (10 hours per day), that's about $3.15 per month and $38.32 per year.
Based on
- 70 watts
- 10 hours per day
- High speed setting
- $0.15 per kWh
What affects cost most
- Average hours used per day
- Electricity rate in dollars per kWh
- Speed or performance setting
- Weather, insulation, and thermostat behavior
How it works: Daily cost uses wattage, hours per day, and electricity rate. Monthly uses daily × 30; yearly uses daily × 365.
Use the calculator below to estimate cost based on your own wattage, usage time, and electricity rate.
Calculator
Continue From This Estimate
Previous estimate
Keep your last result visible while you compare this calculator.
1. Device
Effective wattage at High speed: 70 W
Keep wattage as the base rating. The selected speed changes the effective wattage used in the estimate.
2. Usage
3. Rate
Enter your values and click Calculate Cost.
Compare And Share
How these estimates stack up
Review the difference, then share the comparison or copy the current estimate link.
Difference
Run both together
Previous estimate
Previous calculator
Current estimate
Ceiling Fan
Comparison Route
Compare this next
Keep this estimate handy, then continue to the paired calculator.
Compare This Estimate
Compare this with another calculator
Open a related calculator and carry this estimate into the side-by-side comparison view.
Share This Estimate
Share this Ceiling Fan estimate
This link opens the calculator with your inputs filled in.
How Much Electricity Does a Ceiling Fan Use?
These example monthly costs show how runtime and performance settings change the bill.
Example monthly costs
-
Light Use 6 hours per day and High speed$1.89/month
-
Typical Use 10 hours per day and High speed$3.15/month
-
Heavy Use 14 hours per day and High speed$4.41/month
Get a better estimate and keep costs down
Defaults are a starting point. Real cost changes most when runtime, wattage, and your electricity rate differ from the benchmark assumptions.
What changes cost most
- Average hours used per day
- Electricity rate in dollars per kWh
- Speed or performance setting
- Weather, insulation, and thermostat behavior
How to get a better estimate and lower cost
- Replace the default electricity rate with the actual rate from your latest power bill.
- Adjust daily runtime to match how long you actually use the equipment.
- Use the matching speed or power setting so the wattage estimate tracks the way you really run it.
- Use lower speeds when full airflow is not necessary.
- Turn fans off in empty rooms.
- Use seasonal direction settings to improve comfort efficiency.
Compare with related calculators
Use these related calculators to compare a Ceiling Fan against the closest next estimates people usually check.
Browse all Heating & Cooling calculators