RV Propane Days Remaining Calculator

RV Propane Days Remaining Calculator

Estimate how long your RV propane supply will last from tank pounds or gallons, current level, reserve margin, appliance BTU ratings, burner minutes, furnace duty cycle, fridge demand, and cold-weather load.

🏕RV Propane Load Presets

Tank, Reserve, Weather, and Appliance Inputs

DOT cylinders are often labeled in pounds; ASME motorhome tanks are often listed in gallons.
Use total combined capacity for paired cylinders or a connected tank bank.
Use a scale reading, tank monitor, or best gauge estimate.
Reserve is held back from total tank capacity before trip days are counted.
This multiplier adjusts the base furnace duty cycle only.
The result shows an approximate useful heat derate above 2,000 ft.
Use the LP input rating on the furnace data plate.
Duty cycle is burner run time as a share of the day before weather adjustment.
Use 0 for a compressor fridge. Absorption fridges often use propane all day.
Six and ten gallon RV water heaters are commonly around 8,800 to 12,000 BTU/hr.
Include recovery after showers, dishes, and hand washing.
Add active burners together; two medium burners may be near this value.
Enter flame-on time, not full meal prep time.
Use 0 if the RV oven is not used during this trip.
Ovens cycle, so estimate actual burner-on minutes.
Use the appliance burner rating if it draws from the same RV propane supply.
High-BTU outdoor gear can shorten propane days quickly.
Use for a catalytic heater, LP generator, washer dryer, or bay heater.
Keep this at 0 unless that appliance uses the same propane source.
Adds margin for gauge error, relights, extra hot water, and changed habits.
Days remaining
0
days before reserve
Usable propane
0 lb
0 gal after reserve
Daily propane burn
0 lb/day
0 BTU/day
Refill planning point
0 nights
with reserve held back

Propane Planning Spec Grid

91,500
BTU in one gallon of liquid propane
21,548
BTU in one pound of propane
4.24 lb
Approximate weight of one gallon
80%
Typical liquid fill limit for expansion room
16-40k
Common RV furnace input BTU/hr band
8-12k
Common RV water heater input BTU/hr
10-25%
Useful reserve band for trip planning
4%/1k ft
Approximate heat derate above 2,000 ft

📋RV Propane Reference Tables

ApplianceTypical inputDuty cueDaily BTU cue
RV furnace16,000 to 40,000 BTU/hr5% to 60% of dayWeather drives the result most.
Absorption fridge1,000 to 2,200 BTU/hrCycles across 24 hrOften 15,000 to 45,000 BTU/day.
Water heater8,800 to 12,000 BTU/hr15 to 90 min/dayShowers and dishes raise burn.
Cooktop burner5,000 to 9,000 BTU/hr each15 to 90 min/dayTotal active burners matter.
Tank setupPropane poundsGallonsTotal BTU
Single 20 lb cylinder20 lb4.7 galAbout 431,000 BTU
Single 30 lb cylinder30 lb7.1 galAbout 646,000 BTU
Dual 20 lb cylinders40 lb9.4 galAbout 862,000 BTU
25 gallon ASME tank106 lb25 galAbout 2,288,000 BTU
Weather settingMultiplierBase dutyAdjusted duty
Warm nights0.45x10%4.5% furnace run
Mild nights0.75x18%13.5% furnace run
Cold nights1.45x22%31.9% furnace run
Freezing wind2.25x25%56.3% furnace run
Daily burnPounds/day20 lb usable40 lb usable
Light fridge and cooking1.0 lb17 days at 15% reserve34 days at 15% reserve
Mild furnace mix2.5 lb6.8 days at 15% reserve13.6 days at 15% reserve
Cold furnace mix5.0 lb3.4 days at 15% reserve6.8 days at 15% reserve
Severe winter load8.0 lb2.1 days at 15% reserve4.3 days at 15% reserve

💡Propane Planning Tips

Weigh removable cylinders: A bathroom scale can be more useful than a small dial gauge because it turns remaining fuel into real pounds for the calculator.
Separate furnace from everything else: Cooking and hot water matter, but cold, windy nights can make furnace duty cycle dominate the whole propane plan.

Propane availability require that you understand in what length of time your propane supply will decrease while you are on the road. Many traveler find that their propane supplies will decrease quick while on the road due to the operation of appliances that use propane, such as the furnace taking longer to run while camping through the night, taking more longer showers, or the refrigerator running while propane is being used. Beyond considering propane level in your propane tank alone, you should also consider the length of the night that you will have propane to support your camping appliances.

Each of your appliance will contribute to the propane use that you will experience daily. For instance, the furnace will not necessarily run at its full capacity while you are on the road; instead, the furnace will cycle on and off according to the outside temperature, the wind, and how well your RV retain heat. Appliances like the stove will use propane in short burst, but appliances like the refrigerator will run continuous.

How Long Will Your Propane Last While Camping

Additionally, water heater will use propane according to the number of showers and number of dish that are washed daily. Each of these factor will contribute to the daily propane burn that you experience, and each of these factor will reduce your available number of day that you can enjoy your vacation with propane that is supplied by your propane tank. You can use a propane calculator to determine the number of days that you will have propane based off the size of your propane tank, the amount of propane that you currently have, the amount of propane that you would like to leave in your tank as a reserve, and your daily propane burn rate.

Additionally, weather factor in the amount of propane that is used; for instance, if the outside temperature drop, the furnace will need to run longer to heat your RV. The same is true for altitude; at higher altitude, the propane appliance will not run as efficiently. Both of these factor is considered in the calculator, but you will need to know the altitude at which you will be camping and the weather forecast to make certain that you accurately enter these factor into the calculator.

Another factor to consider prior to travel is the amount of propane to leave in your tank as a reserve. Some traveler may choose to reserve 15-20% of their propane tank as a reserve to ensure they dont run out of propane while traveling. While some may use their propane reserve to cover travel day in addition to potential emergency, both of these use of propane are valid.

It is essential that you enter the amount of propane that you plan to leave as a reserve in your tank in the calculator, rather than an estimated amount. Common mistake when estimating propane use for travel is to either consider the propane tank gauge to determine propane use; however, the gauge indication may not accurately represent the amount of propane in the tank. Additionally, travelers may only consider the propane use of the appliances that use the most propane, such as the furnace.

While the refrigerator will use propane each and every day while camping, the amount of propane that the refrigerator uses daily is small but contribute to the total amount of propane that will be used each week. Each of these factor can be entered into the calculator to determine the total number of days that you can travel on the propane that you have in your tank prior to needing to refill it. The value of calculating propane use prior to departure on a camping trip is in the fact that you will no longer have to guess at the length of time until the propane that you have in your tank will be use up.

Additionally, you will be certain of the number of day that you will have propane for camping, as well as when you will need to refill the propane tank for the next portion of your trip. This information will eliminate the worry associated with propane use while on the road.

RV Propane Days Remaining Calculator

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