Air Conditioner BTU Calculator

Use this air conditioner BTU calculator to estimate a recommended cooling capacity from room size and common adjustments such as people, ceiling height, room type, and sun exposure.

BTU/h
ft
ft
ft

Result

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Quick Answer: A room's recommended BTU starts from floor area and is then adjusted for room type, sunlight, extra occupants, and ceiling height. Omni's room-size ranges are paired with 600 BTU per additional person above two and 1000 BTU per extra foot above an 8-foot ceiling.

How to Calculate

  1. Measure room length and width: Multiply length by width to get the room area in square feet.
  2. Determine the base BTU range: Use the room area against the standard BTU sizing table before any adjustments.
  3. Apply room and occupancy adjustments: Kitchen use, extra people, and high ceilings increase the cooling recommendation.
  4. Apply the sun factor: Shaded rooms reduce the requirement slightly, while sunny rooms increase it.

Formula

Recommended BTU = (base room BTU + room adjustment + people adjustment + ceiling adjustment) x sun factor
Variable Meaning Unit
Base BTU Cooling capacity from room area BTU/h
People adjustment Extra cooling for people above two 600 BTU/h per extra person
Ceiling adjustment Extra cooling for ceiling height above 8 ft 1000 BTU/h per extra foot
Sun factor Room shading or sunny multiplier 0.9, 1.0, or 1.1

Worked Examples

Sizing - Sunny kitchen
  • Room size: 18 ft x 15 ft
  • Area: 270 ft2
  • Room type: Kitchen
  • People: 4
  • Ceiling: 9 ft
  • Sun: Sunny

Result: Recommended BTU is about 13,420 BTU/h.

The kitchen adjustment, two extra people, one extra foot of height, and sunny exposure all raise the cooling requirement.

Sizing - Shaded bedroom
  • Room size: 12 ft x 12 ft
  • Area: 144 ft2
  • Room type: Bedroom
  • People: 2
  • Ceiling: 8 ft
  • Sun: Shaded

Result: Recommended BTU is about 4,500 BTU/h.

A small shaded bedroom needs less cooling than an equally sized sunny space.

Check current unit - Current 12,000 BTU unit
  • Area: 300 ft2
  • Room type: Living room
  • Ceiling: 8 ft
  • Sun: Neutral
  • Current AC: 12,000 BTU/h

Result: The unit can typically support roughly 8 people under this simplified model.

The current-unit mode estimates how much occupant load remains after the base room requirement is met.

Interpretation Table

Range Meaning Action
Small rooms Lower base BTU requirement Shading and low occupancy can reduce the final recommendation further.
Rooms with extra people Higher internal heat gain Add about 600 BTU/h for each person above two.
Ceilings above 8 ft Larger room volume Add about 1000 BTU/h for each extra foot of ceiling height.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find the room area, determine the base BTU from the sizing table, and then apply adjustments for kitchen use, people, ceiling height, and sun exposure.

BTU is a measure of cooling capacity. A higher BTU rating means the unit can remove more heat per hour.

Yes. Taller ceilings increase the room volume, so the calculator adds cooling capacity when the ceiling is above 8 feet.

People add heat to the room, so the cooling load rises as occupancy increases.
Note: This is a room-sizing estimate, not a substitute for a detailed HVAC load calculation that considers insulation, windows, climate, infiltration, and system performance.

References

Last reviewed: March 14, 2026