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Power-Hungry PC? Here's How Much Electricity Your Computer Consumes

How much does it cost to run your PC? It's not a one-size-fits-all answer, but here's how to measure how much electricity your home computer eats up.

 & Whitson Gordon Contributing Writer
 & Jason Cohen Senior Editor, Help & How To
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Whether you're worried about your carbon footprint or are just looking to take control of your electric bill, we all know we should put our computers to sleep when we're not using them. Still, it's easy to get lazy and leave them on all day long. No big deal, right? Not necessarily.

How much money are you actually wasting in electricity by doing that? It all comes down to where you live, your PC's internal components, and how you use the machine. After a few calculations, you should be able to figure it out.


Calculation Factors

The cost of running your computer will vary widely from person to person, since there are a few contributing factors to keep in mind:

Location: In the US, the average cost of electricity is about 17 cents per kilowatt hour (KWh), a measurement of electricity usage over time. But electricity is more costly in certain areas than others. For example, Seattle averages 13 cents/KWh, while New York City sees about 27 cents/KWh, and San Diego costs 41 cents/KWh. So it helps to know what electricity costs in your city.

Time of Day: Electric companies bill their customers based on demand, so when there is an increased need, rates go up. This is where on-peak and off-peak hours come into play. For instance, electricity may be more expensive in the late afternoon (when people come home from work and school) than it is in the middle of the night. Exact hours and rates can differ based on location and company, so make sure to get specific information directly from your provider.

Time of Year: In the same way companies bill based on time of day, they also bill based on time of year. Prices can often rise in the summer and winter months due to our reliance on air conditioning and heating. You may then notice that prices can drop in the spring and fall.

PC Components: Obviously, a powerful gaming PC with top-of-the-line components will use more electricity under load than a Chromebook with a low-power CPU. If you have an expensive gaming rig with a discrete graphics card from Nvidia or AMD, you'll need more electricity to power it, and will pay more in turn.

Usage: Just because your PC is a beast with a 750-watt power supply doesn't mean it's going to use 750 watts all the time. Most PCs come with power-saving features that lower energy usage when the computer is idle, or doing basic tasks like browsing the web. So someone mining Bitcoin or folding@home is going to use more power than someone typing up Word documents on the exact same PC for the same number of hours each day.


Measure Your Electricity Usage

(Credit: P3 International)

Since usage can vary so much from PC to PC (and person to person), the best way to find out your electricity cost is to measure it yourself. You can buy a simple Kill-A-Watt meter, and use it to measure just about anything in your house.

To measure your PC's usage, turn everything off, plug your PC into the Kill-A-Watt, then plug that into the wall. You may want to plug your entire surge protector into the Kill-A-Watt to measure the PC's energy usage, when including the monitor, speakers, and other peripherals.

Press the purple KWh button on the Kill-A-Watt meter, then turn the PC back on and use it as you normally would. Check the Kill-A-Watt once a day or so to make sure it hasn't lost power and reset to zero. Before recording any results, I recommend waiting a week so it has a good period of usage with which to work.


Calculate Your Electricity Cost

From here, it's just a bit of simple math: Multiply the number you get from the Kill-A-Watt by the cost of electricity in your area (if your city uses tiered pricing based on time of day, just use the average rate for your city to get a ballpark figure). The result is how much your computer costs to run for one week.

For my tests, I left my computer on for about 12 hours each weekday—about eight of which it was in active use, since I work from home, and the other four it was left idle. Weekends saw only a few hours of use, with me letting the computer sleep most of the day.

A typical weekday's workload for me includes lots of web browsing and document writing, along with occasional gaming and other heavy workloads. At the end of the week, my Kill-A-Watt meter read 11.02 KWh of usage. Since the average cost of electricity is around 41 cents/KWh here in San Diego, my weekly cost is roughly: 11.02 KWh x $0.41/KWh = $4.51 per week, and so $4.51 x 52 weeks/year gives us a yearly estimate of $234.94 per year.


What to Make of the Results

(Credit: Talaj / Getty Images)

Given that I let my computer idle for a few hours a day during this test, It's easy to see how putting my computer to sleep when I'm not using it could probably save me $30-$50 per year. That's nothing to sneeze at, but it's not exactly rent money, either. Still, your computer is just a small part of your total home power usage, so there are reasons—both environmental and financial—to conserve electricity.

Furthermore, most people will probably have a much lower yearly cost than me—possibly in the tens of dollars—if they only use their computers for a few hours a day or live in a cheaper city. The bottom line here is that you don't need to stress yourself out because you accidentally left the computer on last night. It probably won't make a huge dent in your bill.

About Our Experts

Whitson Gordon

Whitson Gordon

Contributing Writer

Whitson Gordon is a writer, gamer, and tech nerd who has been building PCs for 10 years. He eats potato chips with chopsticks so he doesn't get grease on his mechanical keyboard.

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Jason Cohen

Jason Cohen

Senior Editor, Help & How To

My Experience

As PCMag's editor of how to content, I have to cover a wide variety of topics and also make our stories accessible to everyday users. Considering my history as a technical writer, copywriter, and all-around freelancer covering baseball, comics, and more at various outlets, I am used to making myself into an expert.

I believe tech corporations are bad, but you might as well know how to use technology in everyday life. Want more how to content delivered right to your inbox? Sign up for the tips and tricks newsletter that I curate twice a week.

The Technology I Use

My job as how-to guru means I use just about every gadget under the sun, so I can figure out how everything works. I work from a Lenovo ThinkPad running Windows 11, but also have a very large Dell Inspiron 17 3000 and Apple silicon MacBook. I also have a Google Pixel 6a for personal use and use a Galaxy Z Flip 4 for additional Samsung-related testing. For iOS coverage, an iPhone 13 mini works like a charm, though it's already becoming a little long in the tooth.

My desktop situation includes a dual monitor setup with a modest Acer monitor. I also use a Logitech mouse (who can use these ThinkPad trackpads) and a Havit keyboard (my first mechanical keyboard; I love it but my wife hates it!). I'm a recent convert from wired headphones; I have Anker Soundcore Liberty Air wireless earbuds for personal use and have taken to the Sennheiser HD 450BT headphones for work.

Whenever I have a second to myself, I'm probably gaming on my Nintendo Switch, Steam Deck, or Xbox Series S. I also still have a bunch of classic consoles lying around as well.

  • Breaking down complicated and confusing processes into simplified instructions
  • Finding new tech problems to solve
  • OS-level tips and tricks

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