ACCA Manual J (Heating Load)

How Many BTU to Heat 500 Square Feet?

Heating 500 sq ft takes about 15,000 BTU in a moderate climate, but climate swings it widely. Here is the range, the furnace it maps to, and the calculator.

Quick answer: Heating 500 sq ft needs about 15,000 BTU in a moderate climate (~30 BTU/sq ft), from 10,000 BTU in a mild climate to 22,500 BTU in a very cold one. That maps to about a 16,500 BTU furnace.

The Numbers for 500 Sq Ft

Heat load, moderate climate (~30 BTU/sq ft)15,000 BTU/hr
Mild climate (~20 BTU/sq ft)10,000 BTU/hr
Very cold climate (~45 BTU/sq ft)22,500 BTU/hr
Furnace size (90% AFUE input, moderate)~16,500 BTU

Heat-loss basis. A furnace is sized to the load divided by its AFUE efficiency; a heat pump is sized at the winter design temperature with backup heat. Insulation and air-sealing lower all of these, so a Manual J calculation is the accurate method.


Estimate Your Exact Load

Enter your climate zone, insulation, windows, and ceiling height for a Manual-J-style estimate.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many BTU to heat 500 square feet?

About 15,000 BTU per hour in a moderate climate (roughly 30 BTU per square foot). The realistic range is 10,000 BTU in a mild climate to 22,500 BTU in a very cold one, because heating load is driven mainly by your winter design temperature. Insulation, ceiling height, and air leakage move it further, so use a load calculation for equipment you will install.

What size furnace for 500 sq ft?

About a 16,500 BTU input furnace in a moderate climate. A furnace is rated by input BTU, and at 90% AFUE it delivers 90% of that as heat, so to cover the ~15,000 BTU load you need roughly 15,000 / 0.90 = 16,500 BTU input. A colder climate pushes this toward the 22,500 BTU load and a larger furnace.

Does climate change how many BTU I need for 500 sq ft?

A lot. The same 500 sq ft space needs about 10,000 BTU in a mild southern climate and up to 22,500 BTU in a very cold northern one, more than double. Heating load tracks the winter design temperature, so a square-foot rule of thumb is only a starting point; the accurate number comes from a Manual J heat-loss calculation.


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