BCBetter Calculators

Shower Cost Calculator

Calculate how much your daily shower costs in water and energy per year.

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Enter your values and click Calculate

How It Works

The calculation uses three steps. First, gallons per shower = shower length (minutes) × flow rate (gpm). Second, cost per shower = gallons per shower × (water cost per gallon + heating cost per gallon). Third, annual cost = cost per shower × (showers per week × 52). The monthly cost is annual cost ÷ 12. Water cost per gallon can be found on your water bill — US averages range from $0.004 to $0.015 per gallon. Heating cost per gallon depends on your energy source: natural gas heating typically costs $0.008–$0.015 per gallon; electric resistance heating costs $0.020–$0.035 per gallon. A simple way to reduce shower costs: install a WaterSense showerhead (2.0 gpm vs. the older 2.5 gpm standard) and reduce shower time by 2 minutes — together these can cut shower costs by 30–40%.

Examples

Average US Shower
8-minute shower, once daily, with standard costs and a 2.1 gpm showerhead.
Result: About $0.50 per shower, $3.53 per week, $183 per year. Uses about 6,350 gallons annually.
Long Shower
15-minute daily shower with a standard 2.5 gpm showerhead.
Result: About $1.13 per shower, $7.88 per week, $409 per year. Uses over 13,600 gallons annually.
Low-Flow Efficiency
5-minute shower with a 1.5 gpm low-flow showerhead, 5 days a week.
Result: About $0.19 per shower, $0.94 per week, $49 per year. Under 2,000 gallons annually.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find my water cost per gallon?
Check your water utility bill. Most bills show usage in either gallons or CCF (hundred cubic feet — 1 CCF = 748 gallons). Divide your total water charge (excluding fixed fees) by your total gallons used to get your cost per gallon. US averages range from $0.004 to $0.015 per gallon depending on your city. High-cost cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles can exceed $0.020 per gallon.
What is a typical showerhead flow rate?
Older showerheads (pre-1994) often ran at 3.5–5 gallons per minute. The federal maximum since 1994 is 2.5 gpm. WaterSense-certified showerheads (an EPA program) use 2.0 gpm or less and are widely available. Low-flow showerheads can drop to 1.25–1.5 gpm. Modern high-pressure low-flow heads maintain good water pressure despite reduced flow, making them a cost-effective upgrade. Check the packaging or the showerhead label for your flow rate.
What's the biggest lever for reducing shower costs?
Shower duration has the largest impact since it affects both water volume and heating costs equally. Reducing a 12-minute shower to 8 minutes cuts costs by 33%. Switching from a 2.5 gpm to a 2.0 gpm WaterSense showerhead saves 20% on water and heating. Using cold water would eliminate heating costs entirely, though most people find that impractical. Installing a low-flow showerhead is typically the easiest change with meaningful long-term savings.
Does shower cost vary significantly by heating type?
Yes, significantly. Natural gas water heaters are cheaper to operate than electric resistance heaters — typically 40–50% less per gallon heated. A natural gas heating cost might be $0.008–$0.012 per gallon, while electric resistance heating runs $0.020–$0.035 per gallon at average US electricity rates. Heat pump water heaters (a newer technology) are 2–3× more efficient than electric resistance and approach natural gas costs. Tankless (on-demand) heaters are more efficient than tank models regardless of fuel type.

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