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🔥 Gas vs Electric Heating Cost Calculator

Enter your annual heating energy need plus gas and electric prices and efficiency to see which heating method costs less.

Enter 1 for resistive electric heat (space heaters). Heat pumps typically run 2.5-4.5, delivering more heat per unit of electricity consumed.

Annual Heating Cost Comparison
Annual Gas Cost Annual Electric Cost Difference
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GUIDE

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01

How Gas and Electric Heating Costs Actually Compare

Comparing gas boiler and electric heating (electric resistance or heat pump) costs requires looking beyond the unit price to efficiency. Gas boilers lose some heat up the flue, so efficiency typically runs 85-95%, giving Annual gas cost = (Energy need ÷ Efficiency) × Gas price. Electric heating efficiency (COP) is close to 1 for resistive heaters, but heat pumps generate more heat than the electricity they consume, with COP typically 2.5-4.5, giving Annual electric cost = (Energy need ÷ COP) × Electric price. For example, with an annual need of 12,000 kWh, a gas price of $0.09/kWh at 90% efficiency costs 12,000 ÷ 0.9 × $0.09 = $1,200. Electric at $0.15/kWh with resistive heating (COP 1) costs 12,000 ÷ 1 × $0.15 = $1,800 — gas wins here — but the same electricity with a COP 3.5 heat pump costs only 12,000 ÷ 3.5 × $0.15 = about $514, flipping the comparison entirely in electricity's favor.
02

Why Heat Pumps Change the Math

In many regions electricity costs more per kWh than gas, leading to the common assumption that "electric heat is always more expensive." That assumption only holds for resistive electric heat. A heat pump doesn't convert electricity directly into heat — it moves existing heat from outside air (or ground) into your home, similar to a refrigerator in reverse, so it delivers far more heat energy than the electricity it consumes. A COP of 3 means 1 kWh of electricity delivers the equivalent of 3 kWh of heat, effectively dividing your real cost per unit of heat by 3. Heat pump COP does drop as outdoor temperature falls (it can fall below 2 in severe cold), so for cold climates use a manufacturer-published seasonal average (like HSPF-derived COP) rather than the peak-condition number for a realistic comparison. Plugging your local climate and equipment specs into this calculator gives a far more accurate picture than comparing raw per-unit prices alone.

Frequently asked questions

What exactly is COP?
COP (Coefficient of Performance) is the ratio of heat output to electricity input. A COP of 3 means 1 kWh of electricity produces 3 kWh of heat — higher is more efficient.
How do I find my gas boiler's efficiency?
Check the product label or AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency) rating in your manual. Modern condensing boilers typically run 90-95% AFUE, while older units run 80-85%.
My gas and electric bills use different units — how do I compare?
This calculator asks for both prices per kWh. To convert a gas bill priced per therm or m³ to kWh, use your utility's published conversion factor, or approximate it by dividing your total bill by your total kWh-equivalent usage.