Calculate how much it costs to run your dryer per load. Enter kWh per cycle and electricity rate to find per-load and annual drying costs.
Clothes dryers are among the most energy-intensive appliances in any home. A standard electric dryer uses 2–5 kWh per load, making it one of the top electricity consumers alongside HVAC and water heaters. If you do 5–8 loads per week, drying costs can reach $150–$300+ per year.
Dryer efficiency varies significantly by type and age. Conventional vented electric dryers convert electricity directly to heat, while heat pump dryers recycle hot air and use 40–65% less electricity. The type of load also matters: heavy towels and bedding require longer cycles than lightweight shirts.
This calculator shows you the per-load cost and annual expense of running your dryer. Use it to evaluate whether upgrading to a heat pump dryer, line-drying some loads, or adjusting cycle settings can meaningfully reduce your electricity bill.
By calculating this metric accurately, energy analysts gain actionable insights that inform equipment selection, system design, and operational strategies for maximum efficiency and savings.
Drying clothes is a hidden energy cost that adds up fast. This calculator reveals per-load and annual costs so you can make informed decisions about dryer upgrades, usage frequency, and alternative drying methods. Precise quantification supports regulatory compliance and sustainability reporting, ensuring that energy data meets the standards required by auditors and industry certification bodies.
Cost per Load = kWh per Cycle × Rate ($/kWh) Annual Cost = Cost per Load × Loads per Week × 52
Result: $0.49/load
A dryer using 3.5 kWh per cycle at $0.14/kWh costs 3.5 × $0.14 = $0.49 per load. With 6 loads per week, the annual cost is $0.49 × 6 × 52 = $152.88.
Conventional vented electric dryers use 2–5 kWh per load and exhaust hot, moist air outside. Ventless condensing dryers recapture moisture but use similar energy. Heat pump dryers are the most efficient, using 1–2 kWh per load by recycling hot air through a heat pump cycle.
At 6 loads/week and $0.49/load, your dryer costs about $153/year. Over a 13-year dryer lifespan, that's nearly $2,000 in electricity alone. A heat pump dryer at $0.20/load costs only $62/year or about $810 over 13 years — saving $1,190.
Beyond the dryer, consider washing clothes in cold water (saves $100–$200/year), using high-spin cycles to reduce drying time, and washing full loads. Line-drying even half your loads cuts dryer costs by 50% and extends clothing life.
A standard electric dryer uses 2–5 kWh per load, depending on the cycle, load size, and dryer efficiency. Heat pump dryers use 1–2 kWh per load. Gas dryers use much less electricity (0.2–0.4 kWh) but consume natural gas.
Heat pump dryers cost $800–$1,200 more than conventional dryers but save $80–$150/year in electricity. If you do 6+ loads/week, the payback is 5–7 years. They also run at lower temperatures, which is gentler on clothes.
Gas dryers typically cost $0.15–$0.25 per load vs $0.35–$0.70 for electric dryers. Over a year, gas dryers save $50–$150 in operating costs. However, they require a gas line and proper venting.
Use the high-spin cycle on your washer to extract more water before drying. Clean the lint filter every load. Use the auto-dry/moisture sensor setting. Don't over-dry clothes. Dry full loads. Line-dry heavy items like towels when possible.
Yes. The high heat setting uses the most energy but dries fastest. Medium heat is slightly more efficient overall for most loads. The "eco" or "energy saver" setting uses less heat and more time, often using 10–20% less total energy.
The average US household does 5–8 loads of laundry per week. Families with children tend toward the higher end. Each load represents an opportunity to save by optimizing dryer settings and load sizes.