AC Size for a 1,800 Sq Ft House

Worked AC sizing for a 1,800 square foot space — recommended tonnage, equipment class, and the full BTU calculation.

Jonathan Stowe

Reviewed May 22, 2026

Recommended equipment

3.5 tons(42,000 BTU/hr)

Central AC system or mini split (the calculator falls in central-AC tonnage range)

Acceptable range: 40,28453,712 BTU/hr

Your home or room

Enter the space characteristics, then click Calculate to see the recommended AC size, the Manual S tolerance band, sensible vs latent cooling for your climate, equipment recommendations, operating cost by efficiency tier, and the math step-by-step.

+600 BTU per person above 2

Recommended AC size

3.5

tons

(42,000 BTU/hr)

3.5 tons is the cooling capacity an AC must deliver at the local design condition — about 95°F outdoor for most of the US, the temperature exceeded only 1% of typical-year hours per ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals 2021. At any milder condition the AC modulates down (variable-speed) or cycles off (single-stage); at the design hour it should hit setpoint with the airflow you sized for, not run continuously.

Equipment class

Central AC or multi-zone mini-split

Manual S range

37,80050,400

BTU/hr (−10% to +20% of Manual J load)

Estimated SHR

0.78

Sensible heat ratio for zone 4

Raw calc

44,760

BTU/hr before rounding to standard size

Manual S tolerance band

ACCA Manual S allows the installed AC's nominal cooling capacity to exceed the Manual J cooling load by up to 15% for single-stage equipment and up to 25% for two-stage or variable-speed equipment. The band below shows the range of valid equipment sizes relative to your calculated load.

Manual S tolerance bandHorizontal band showing the −10% to +20% Manual S allowed range around the calculated Manual J cooling load.Recommended 42,000 BTU/hr−10%37,800+20%50,400UndersizedOversizedManual S compliant range

Central AC or multi-zone mini-split — what fits at 3.5 tons

Whole-house or multi-room cooling territory

Best fitA whole house with existing ductwork, or a multi-room install in a ducted home
AlternativeMulti-zone ductless mini-split for homes without usable ductwork
Install costCentral AC: $4,000–$10,000 installed. Multi-zone mini-split: $3k-$8k per zone.
Efficiency tierCentral: SEER2 13.4 (federal minimum) to SEER2 22+ (premium variable-speed). Mini-split: typically SEER2 18+.
Skip this class whenYou only need cooling in one room — a single-zone mini-split costs a fraction of central AC and serves a single space better.

Sensible vs latent cooling at your climate

Cooling work splits into two categories: sensible cooling lowers temperature, latent cooling removes water vapor. In zone 4, the load SHR is typically around 0.78 — meaning roughly 78% of the cooling work is sensible and 22% is latent (dehumidification). Oversized AC in humid climates cools to setpoint quickly without removing enough moisture, leaving the house "cool but sticky" at 65%+ relative humidity.

ComponentBTU/hrSharePurpose
Sensible cooling32,76078%Drops air dry-bulb temperature
Latent cooling9,24022%Condenses water vapor out of indoor air
Total recommended42,000100%At AHRI 95°F outdoor / 80°F indoor / 67°F WB

SHR by climate is an estimate; the actual equipment SHR at your indoor design condition comes from the manufacturer's expanded performance data. Manual S equipment selection compares both the AHRI total capacity AND the SHR-adjusted sensible capacity against the load components — see /manual-s/ for the methodology.

Estimated annual operating cost

Operating cost depends on cooling-season hours (about 1200 hours of equivalent full-load operation per year in zone 4), the equipment's seasonal efficiency (SEER2), and the local electricity rate. The table below shows annual cost at five common efficiency tiers using the US average residential electricity rate of $0.163/kWh.

Efficiency tier (SEER2)Annual kWhAnnual costDescription
13.42,821$460Federal minimum (north)
14.32,643$431Federal minimum (south)
15.22,487$405ENERGY STAR
18.02,100$342Higher-tier variable-speed
22.01,718$280Premium variable-speed

Estimates assume 75% average load factor across the cooling season. Local electricity rates vary significantly: Pacific Northwest averages $0.10/kWh while California averages $0.30/kWh — multiply costs in the table by (your-rate / 0.163) for a regional estimate.

How the capacity was computed

The calculator multiplies a baseline (22 BTU per sq ft at zone 4, average insulation, 8-ft ceilings) by climate, ceiling, sun, insulation, and space-type factors, then adds occupancy and kitchen adjustments. Each step is shown below.

Baseline1800 sqft × 22= 39,600 BTU
× Climate (zone 4)× 1
× Ceiling (8 ft)× 1
× Sun (mixed)× 1
× Insulation (average)× 1
× Space type (living-room)× 1.1
Subtotal= 43,560 BTU
+ Occupancy (4 people)+ 1,200 BTU
Raw calculation, rounded to standard size44,76042,000 BTU/hr

What this calculator does NOT capture

  • Blower-door measured air leakage. The insulation input lumps insulation and infiltration. A 4 ACH50 house performs noticeably differently than a 12 ACH50 house at the same nominal R-values.
  • Window orientation and SHGC. Sun exposure is a coarse input. A wall of single-pane south-facing glass produces 3-4× more solar gain than the same area of triple-pane north glass.
  • Duct losses to unconditioned space. Central AC with leaky attic ducts loses 20-30% of supply air. The output here is room load; duct losses sit on top of that for whole-house sizing.
  • Permit-grade Manual J requirements. Permit applications, HEEHRA rebate documentation, and many state energy programs require ACCA-approved software output. This calculator is planning-grade — appropriate for evaluating a contractor's tonnage proposal, not for replacing the contractor's Manual J.

What this calculation is

An 1,800 square foot home — common for three-bedroom houses and small two-story builds — usually calls for a 3-ton (36,000 BTU) central AC. For two-story layouts, consider a zoned system: a single 3-ton condenser with two air handlers and separate thermostats per floor delivers better comfort than a single-thermostat install.

How this calculation was reached

The calculator starts with a baseline of 22 BTU per square foot, applies multiplicative adjustments for climate, ceiling, sun, insulation, and space type, then adds fixed amounts for extra occupants and kitchen heat gain. Final result rounds to the nearest standard AC equipment size.

  • Baseline: 1,800 sqft × 22 BTU/sqft = 39,600 BTU
  • × Climate factor (zone 4): 1
  • × Ceiling factor (8 ft): 1
  • × Sun factor: 1
  • × Insulation factor: 1
  • × Space-type factor: 1.1
  • = Subtotal: 43,560 BTU
  • + Occupancy adjustment (4 occupants): 1,200 BTU
  • = Final raw: 44,760 BTU
  • Rounded to nearest standard size: 42,000 BTU (≈ 3.5 tons)

Right-sizing matters

An AC unit sized at the recommended capacity runs efficiently and controls humidity. An oversized AC reaches setpoint too fast, short-cycles, and leaves the air clammy. An undersized unit runs continuously and never quite cools. For deeper discussion, see the AC short cycling article. Variable-speed (inverter) equipment tolerates moderate oversizing better than single-stage.

Adjust the inputs

The calculator above is interactive. Change any input — square footage, climate zone, ceiling, insulation, sun, occupants, space type — and the result updates live. Reset to defaults restores the values for this example.

Methodology

This calculation follows the ENERGY STAR room AC sizing guide and Manual J 8th Edition methodology, simplified for whole-room or whole-house cooling estimates. Full reference in the AC BTU chart article. For permit-grade central AC sizing on new construction, full Manual J with room-by-room load distribution is the correct tool — see the Manual J methodology article.

Try other AC sizing examples

Compare to nearby sizes or different scenarios.

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Jonathan Stowe

Reviewed May 22, 2026