Estimate the annual cost of running a natural gas water heater. Enter daily therms usage and gas rate to see monthly and yearly hot water expenses.
Natural gas water heaters are the most common type in the United States, found in about 50% of homes. They typically cost less to operate than electric tank water heaters because natural gas is a cheaper fuel per BTU of heat produced. A gas water heater for a family of four typically consumes 0.15–0.30 therms per day.
Gas water heaters are rated by their Energy Factor (UEF) or Uniform Energy Factor, which measures how efficiently the heater converts gas to hot water. Standard gas tank heaters have UEF ratings of 0.58–0.65, while high-efficiency condensing models reach 0.80–0.95. Higher efficiency means lower gas consumption for the same amount of hot water.
This calculator takes your daily therms usage and gas rate to estimate your annual gas water heating cost. It helps you compare against electric or heat pump alternatives and evaluate whether upgrading to a condensing gas heater is worthwhile.
Quantifying this parameter enables systematic comparison across facilities, time periods, and equipment configurations, revealing optimization opportunities that reduce both costs and emissions.
Gas water heating costs are often buried within your overall gas bill. This calculator isolates the water heating component so you can compare options and evaluate efficiency upgrades. Data-driven tracking enables proactive energy management, helping organizations reduce operational costs while progressing toward environmental sustainability goals and carbon reduction targets. This quantitative approach replaces rough estimates with precise figures, enabling facility managers to identify the most cost-effective opportunities for reducing energy consumption.
Annual Cost ($) = Therms per Day × 365 × Gas Rate ($/therm)
Result: $80.30/year
A gas water heater using 0.20 therms/day consumes 0.20 × 365 = 73 therms/year. At $1.10/therm, the annual cost is 73 × $1.10 = $80.30.
At typical US rates ($1.00–$1.50/therm gas and $0.12–$0.16/kWh electricity), gas water heating costs about $70–$120/year vs $200–$350/year for standard electric. Heat pump water heaters narrow this gap to $80–$150/year, making them competitive with gas.
Your gas bill includes gas supply charges (per therm), delivery charges, and fixed monthly fees. The water heater typically accounts for 20–40% of total gas consumption, with the remainder going to furnace, stove, and dryer use.
Consider upgrading when your gas water heater is 10+ years old, shows signs of corrosion, or has a low UEF rating (below 0.60). Condensing gas heaters and heat pump models offer the best return on investment, especially with available tax credits.
A typical gas water heater costs $5–$12 per month to operate, depending on hot water usage, gas rate, and heater efficiency. Families with high hot water demand or low-efficiency heaters will be at the higher end.
In most US markets, a gas water heater costs about 30–50% less to operate than a standard electric tank heater. However, a heat pump electric water heater is competitive with or cheaper than gas due to its 200–300% effective efficiency.
A therm is a unit of natural gas equal to 100,000 BTU. It's the standard billing unit for residential gas service. One therm contains roughly the same energy as 29.3 kWh of electricity.
Standard gas tank heaters have UEF ratings of 0.58–0.65, meaning 58–65% of the gas energy reaches the water. High-efficiency condensing models reach 0.80–0.95 by capturing heat from exhaust gases that would otherwise be vented.
It depends on your gas and electricity rates. If electricity is under $0.12/kWh, a heat pump water heater may be cheaper to operate than gas. Federal tax credits of up to $2,000 make heat pump water heaters more attractive financially.
A standard gas tank water heater lasts 8‒12 years. Tankless gas heaters can last 15–20 years. Annual maintenance, including flushing sediment and checking the anode rod, helps maximize lifespan.