Result
$46.08
The pool pump costs about $46.08 for this period.
- Daily kWh
- 9.6 kWh
- Daily cost
- $1.54
Estimate only. Verify wattage, utility rates, equipment ratings, and safety requirements before relying on this cost. Read the full disclaimer.
Quick answer
Quick answer
With the sample inputs, this calculator returns $46.08. Daily kWh: 9.6 kWh. The result is an estimated operating cost from the wattage, run time, and rate you enter. Use your all-in kWh rate if you want it to line up more closely with a bill.
Publisher
Published by EverydayCalc Editorial
Our calculator pages are built to show the formula, explain the inputs, provide examples, and highlight assumptions so readers can understand how each result is estimated.
Results are estimates based on the inputs provided and the assumptions shown on this page. For financial, tax, legal, medical, or other high-stakes decisions, verify results with a qualified professional or official source.
How to use this calculator
Pump wattage is converted to kilowatts and multiplied by run time, days, and kWh rate.
When to round up
Round up for single-speed pumps, high pressure, clogged filters, or longer summer schedules.
When to use this calculator
- Estimating monthly or yearly energy cost
- Testing watts, runtime, rate, and duty cycle changes
- Comparing efficient alternatives before buying or changing use
Tips for better estimates
- Use measured watts when possible, especially for appliances that cycle on and off.
- Enter the all-in local electricity rate from a recent bill.
- Rerun the estimate for seasonal use, lower runtime, or a more efficient alternative.
How this calculator is reviewed
This page is checked for inputs, formulas, examples, assumptions, topic fit, and related links. For this calculator, the review also covers watts, hours used, local electricity rate, duty cycle, seasonal use, and efficient alternatives.
The sample result is covered by automated tests, and the page links to supporting guides so readers can check the assumptions before acting. This review note is current for May 2026. If a formula, label, or assumption looks off, send the page URL and your inputs through the contact page.
Formula and methodology
Cost = energy used or fuel consumed multiplied by your rate, adjusted for runtime, efficiency, or usage period.
Result details: This page uses the inputs above to show daily kwh and daily cost in the result area.
Assumptions to check
The key inputs are Pump power draw, Hours per day, Days used, Electricity rate. Confirm watts, hours used, local electricity rate, duty cycle, seasonal use, and efficient alternatives before relying on the cost.
Worked example
Example inputs: Pump power draw: 1200 watts; Hours per day: 8; Days used: 30; Electricity rate: $0.16 /kWh. With those values, the calculator returns $46.08. The pool pump costs about $46.08 for this period.
Appliance wattage to estimated monthly cost
| 100 watts for 8 hours/day | About $3.90/month at $0.16/kWh |
|---|---|
| 500 watts for 8 hours/day | About $19.47/month at $0.16/kWh |
| 1,000 watts for 8 hours/day | About $38.93/month at $0.16/kWh |
| 1,500 watts for 8 hours/day | About $58.40/month at $0.16/kWh |
Example scenarios
- Use $46.08 as a cost snapshot, then rerun it with the device's measured watts and your local kWh rate.
- A heater, pump, refrigerator, or dehumidifier may cycle, so duty cycle can matter more than nameplate wattage.
- Seasonal use can change the yearly total; compare efficient alternatives before replacing equipment.
Quick reference chart
| Sample result | $46.08 |
|---|---|
| Daily kWh | 9.6 kWh |
| Daily cost | $1.54 |
| Best next step | Use this estimate with the real watts, hours used, local electricity rate, duty cycle, and seasonal use. Compare efficient alternatives if the monthly or yearly cost is higher than expected. |
FAQs
Pool Pump Electricity Cost Calculator questions
Can I use this as my exact bill amount?
No. Use it as a planning estimate, then compare watts, hours used, local electricity rate, duty cycle, seasonal use, taxes, and fees with your actual bill.
What rate should I use?
Use the all-in local kWh rate from a recent bill when possible, including delivery charges, riders, taxes, and usage-based fees.
How can I lower the estimated cost?
Try fewer hours, a lower wattage device, better duty-cycle assumptions, off-peak use where available, or a more efficient alternative.
Is the pool pump electricity cost calculator exact?
No. It is a cost planning estimate. Actual bills depend on all-in rates, taxes, fees, runtime, duty cycle, weather, and real equipment performance.
What inputs matter most?
Pump wattage and daily run time drive the estimate.
Should I add a cost buffer?
Yes. Rates, fees, runtime, weather, standby power, and real-world efficiency can make actual costs higher than a simple estimate.
Common planning mistakes
Using nameplate watts when actual draw is lower, ignoring duty cycle, using the advertised rate instead of the all-in local rate, and assuming seasonal use stays the same all year.
Cite or embed this calculator
If this calculator helps a blog post, classroom resource, forum answer, or local planning page, link to the canonical calculator URL so readers can run their own numbers.
EverydayCalc.org, "Pool Pump Electricity Cost Calculator", last updated May 2026, https://everydaycalc.org/calculators/pool-pump-electricity-cost-calculator/
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