Calculate annual water and cost savings from installing low-flow faucet aerators. Compare old and new GPM to quantify your conservation gains.
Faucets account for about 19% of indoor household water use, running every time you wash hands, brush teeth, rinse dishes, or clean vegetables. Standard faucets flow at 2.2 gallons per minute, but WaterSense-labeled aerators can cut that to 1.5 GPM or less while maintaining effective water pressure. The humble aerator is one of the cheapest conservation devices you can buy — most cost under $5 and install in seconds.
This calculator helps you quantify the annual savings from low-flow faucets or aerators by comparing your current flow rate to the new rate and multiplying by daily usage. The result shows total gallons saved and the dollar value of those savings, making it easy to justify the investment to skeptical family members or building managers.
Because faucets are used frequently throughout the day, small GPM reductions compound into surprising annual totals. A household that replaces four standard faucets with 1.0 GPM aerators can save over 10,000 gallons per year — and the combined cost of the aerators is typically under $20.
Faucet aerators are the lowest-cost water conservation upgrade available. This calculator gives you hard numbers on the return, helping you prioritize which faucets to upgrade first and estimate total household savings. Having accurate metrics readily available streamlines utility bill analysis, budget forecasting, and investment planning for energy efficiency projects and renewable energy installations.
Annual Savings (gal) = (Old GPM − New GPM) × min/day × 365 Cost Savings ($) = Gallons Saved × Rate per Gallon
Result: $87.60/year
Savings = (2.2 − 1.0) × 40 × 365 = 17,520 gallons/year. At $5 per 1,000 gallons, cost savings = 17.52 × $5 = $87.60/year. With aerators costing $3–$5 each, the payback is nearly instant.
At $3–$5 per aerator with annual savings of $20–$90 per faucet, aerators offer the highest ROI of any water conservation device. A household with four faucets can pay back the entire investment in a single week of use.
Kitchen faucets need higher flow rates (1.0–1.5 GPM) for practical dish rinsing. Bathroom faucets can use ultra-low-flow aerators (0.5–1.0 GPM) since hand washing and tooth brushing don't require high volume. Prioritize kitchen faucets for the biggest absolute savings since they tend to run longer.
Combining aerators with simple habits — turning off the tap while brushing teeth, using a basin for vegetable washing, and running the dishwasher instead of hand-washing — can cut faucet water use by 50% or more.
An aerator is a small screen device that screws onto the end of a faucet. It mixes air with the water stream to reduce flow while maintaining the feel of higher pressure. Most faucets come with an aerator, but older ones may be rated at 2.2+ GPM.
Bathroom faucet aerators are available as low as 0.5 GPM. Kitchen faucets typically bottom out at 1.0–1.5 GPM since lower flows make dish rinsing impractical.
Not noticeably. You're using less water, but the stream is aerated and feels full. If you have very low incoming pressure (below 40 psi), choose an aerator rated for low-pressure use.
Most standard faucets accept threaded aerators. Older or specialty faucets may need an adapter. Check whether your faucet has male or female threading and buy the matching aerator.
No, this calculator only estimates water cost savings. Since a significant portion of faucet use involves hot water, the energy savings from heating less water can be substantial — potentially doubling the total value.
Hold a measuring cup under the faucet, turn it on fully, and time how many seconds it takes to fill one cup (8 oz). Multiply 60 by 8 and divide by the number of ounces collected in one minute to get GPM.