RV Electricity Usage Calculator – How Much Power Do You Use?

⚡ RV Electricity Usage Calculator

Estimate how much electricity your RV uses per month — enter your appliances and daily usage hours

🔌 Quick Presets
⚙️ Settings
📋 Appliance Usage
✔ On? Appliance Watts (W) Hours/Day kWh/Month
📊 Your Monthly RV Electricity Results
💡 RV Appliance Power Reference
1,500W
Air Conditioner (avg)
150W
Refrigerator (12V)
1,200W
Electric Heater
1,000W
Water Heater (elec)
1,200W
Microwave
1,500W
Hair Dryer
50W
LED Lighting
300W
Laptop + Chargers
📐 Appliance kWh Reference Chart
Appliance Watts Avg Hrs/Day kWh/Day kWh/Month
Air Conditioner (13,500 BTU)1,500 W812.0360
Air Conditioner (15,000 BTU)1,800 W814.4432
Electric Space Heater1,200 W67.2216
Electric Water Heater1,000 W22.060
Refrigerator (12V compressor)150 W243.6108
Refrigerator (2-way propane/elec)300 W247.2216
Microwave (1,100W)1,200 W0.50.618
Electric Cooktop / Induction1,800 W11.854
TV (32″)60 W40.247.2
Laptop Computer45 W60.278.1
Smartphone Charging10 W80.082.4
LED Interior Lighting (total)50 W50.257.5
Ceiling Fan35 W80.288.4
CPAP Machine30 W80.247.2
Washing Machine (portable)500 W0.50.257.5
🚌 Typical Monthly kWh by RV Type
RV Type Usage Scenario Avg kWh/Month Amps (30A svc)
Class A MotorhomeFull hookups, summer400 – 70030–50A
Class B / Camper VanMixed hookups / solar60 – 15015–20A
Class C MotorhomeFull hookups250 – 50025–40A
Travel Trailer (30’+)Full hookups200 – 45020–35A
Fifth WheelFull hookups, full-time350 – 65030–50A
Pop-Up / Tent TrailerCampground hookup30 – 8010–15A
Any RV (boondocking)Solar + battery only15 – 60N/A
🔋 RV Electrical Service Levels
Service Type Max Amps Max Watts Best For
15A Standard Outlet15A1,800WSmall trailers, vans
20A Outlet20A2,400WSmall trailers
30A RV Hookup30A3,600WMost travel trailers, Class C
50A RV Hookup50A12,000WClass A, fifth wheels, dual AC
Generator (2,000W)~16A2,000WBoondocking basics
Generator (3,500W)~29A3,500WSingle AC unit + essentials
Generator (5,500W)~45A5,500WDual AC, full-time off-grid
💡 Tip: AC is the Biggest Consumer. A single 13,500 BTU air conditioner running 8 hours per day uses roughly 360 kWh per month — often more than all other RV appliances combined. If you’re trying to reduce usage, controlling AC run time is the single most impactful change.
⚡ Tip: How kWh is Calculated. Electricity consumption = Watts ÷ 1,000 × Hours per day × Days per month. For example: a 1,500W AC running 6 hrs/day for 30 days = 1,500 ÷ 1,000 × 6 × 30 = 270 kWh. Use this formula to verify any individual appliance result.

The typical use of electricity in rv are around 20 kWh daily, like the use in many homes. That amount changes a lot based on the model of the rv, its size, the installed devices and the way the owners use them. During a month that results roughly in 608 kWh or around 7 300 kWh yearly.

The use rises in rough weather, warm or cold, and drops in mild periods.

RV Electricity Use, Costs and How to Save

Air conditioners are one of the main drains of energy. Without the air conditioner, the day uses only 5 to 8 kWh. When it runs, the use jumps to 12 to 15 kWh a day.

Only the air conditioner itself can use 400 to 500 kWh in one month. The big AC units pull around 1 500 watts. The insulation of rv are not good, and the air condtiioners themselves do not work well, which worsens the situation.

Besides that, other devices add to the amount. A typical water heater in an rv uses around 1 200 watts. The refrigerator, when it works on electricity, pulls about 600 watts.

Space heaters are another heavy drain, with most using 1 300 to 1 700 watts. Electric heaters commonly take almost three times more than other usual devices. In most rv, the three main energy users are the air conditioner, the refrigerator and the microwave.

A 30-amp connection in an rv allows you to work with around 3 600 watts. When the rv does not need more then 2 100 maximum watts, one can safely plug it in a normal 20-amp outlet. A 50-amp system can handle even up to 12 000 watts.

The prices for electricity in rv parks range a lot. Typical rates are around 8 cents each kWh in areas with water energy to almost 19 cents in areas with fuel sources of high cost. Most fall between 13 and 16 cents.

Some parks charge even 30 cents each kWh. For short trips, the electricity usually is part of the overnight payment. For longer stays or permanent residents, one gets a separate meter for the energy.

Monthly bills can go from around 33 dollars to more than 200 dollars, based on the use and the place. For instance, one person in a warm area paid roughly 170 dollars monthly because of heavy use of AC at 27 cents each kWh.

There are ways to reduce the energy. Solar panels can help, and some rv already have them installed. Even so, most rv need to connect to an outside source for heavy devices like microwaves and air conditioners.

Simple savings work well, for instance heat water on a propane stove instead of using an electric coffee maker, choose LED lights rather than old ones and limit the use of electronics. Using a propane water heater instead ofelectrical is another good option for folks in rural areas.

RV Electricity Usage Calculator – How Much Power Do You Use?

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