Calculate natural gas usage and cost by appliance. Estimate monthly bills, compare therms vs CCF, and track seasonal usage patterns.
Natural gas powers furnaces, water heaters, stoves, dryers, and fireplaces in millions of homes. But understanding your gas bill — with its therms, CCF, MCF, and tiered rates — can be confusing. This calculator breaks down natural gas usage and costs by appliance, helping you understand exactly where your gas dollars go each month.
Enter your appliance details (BTU rating and daily usage hours) and your local gas rate to see a complete cost breakdown. The tool converts between common billing units (therms, CCF, cubic feet, MCF) and shows daily, monthly, and annual costs for each appliance. A seasonal adjustment factor accounts for heating-dominated winter bills versus lower summer usage.
Understanding your gas consumption by appliance helps you identify savings opportunities. A pilot light on an old furnace can waste $5–$10/month. An inefficient water heater might cost twice what a modern tankless unit would. This calculator gives you the data to make smart upgrade decisions and negotiate better rates.
Gas bills are confusing, especially when therms, CCF, delivery charges, and appliance usage are all mixed together. This calculator breaks the bill down by appliance so you can see where the money is going.
It is useful because appliance-by-appliance usage makes seasonal spikes and efficiency upgrades easier to evaluate. That is more actionable than a single total bill number.
Therms = BTU/h × Hours × Efficiency factor ÷ 100,000. Monthly cost = Therms/day × 30.4 × Rate. 1 Therm = 100,000 BTU = ~1.037 CCF. Annual usage = Sum of monthly estimates across 12 months with seasonal weighting.
Result: $198/month in winter, $42/month in summer
Furnace: 80,000 × 8 ÷ 100,000 = 6.4 therms/day. Water heater: 1.2 therms/day. Range: 0.12 therms/day. Total: 7.72 therms/day × $1.10 = $8.49/day × 30.4 = $258/month. With 0.77 efficiency: $198/month. Summer with 0.3× seasonal: ~$42.
Gas bills typically include a fixed customer charge ($10–$20/month regardless of usage), a commodity charge (per-therm cost for the gas itself), a delivery charge, and taxes/fees. The commodity charge varies monthly based on wholesale natural gas prices. Some utilities offer fixed-rate plans that lock in the per-therm cost for a year.
In northern US climates, winter gas usage can be 4–8× higher than summer. A typical home might use 20–30 therms in July (water heater + cooking) but 100–150 therms in January (adding furnace heating). Budget billing programs spread the annual cost evenly across 12 months, making winter bills more manageable.
Modern condensing furnaces reach 95–98% AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency). Older furnaces may be only 60–80% efficient, meaning 20–40% of the gas you pay for goes up the chimney as waste heat. Replacing an 80% efficient furnace with a 96% model saves 20% on heating costs — often $200–$500/year.
A therm is 100,000 BTU of natural gas energy. It's the standard billing unit in many US states. One therm is approximately equal to 1.037 CCF (hundred cubic feet). You can think of it as the billing-friendly unit for a fixed amount of heat.
One CCF = 100 cubic feet of gas ≈ 103,700 BTU ≈ 1.037 therms. Some utilities bill in CCF, others in therms. The cost difference is about 3.7%. You still need the utility thermal factor to match the bill exactly. That factor adjusts for gas quality and local conditions.
US average is $0.80–$1.50 per therm, varying widely by state and season. California and Northeast states tend to be highest; Gulf states lowest.
Space heating dominates (50–70% of annual gas usage), followed by water heating (20–30%), cooking (5–10%), and clothes drying (5–8%). In most homes, the furnace is the biggest driver of seasonal bill swings.
Lower the thermostat 2°F, seal air leaks, add insulation, use a programmable thermostat, maintain the furnace annually, and insulate the water heater. The biggest savings usually come from heating and water-heating changes.
Your gas meter typically reads in CCF (hundreds of cubic feet). Multiply the reading difference by ~1.037 to get therms, or by your utility's thermal factor which accounts for gas pressure and temperature. That thermal factor is why two homes with the same CCF usage can have slightly different billed therm totals. It is the number to check if the meter and bill do not line up exactly.