ACCA Manual J (Whole House)
What Size Air Conditioner for 1,000 Square Feet?
A 1,000 sq ft house lands near 2 tons, but climate moves it a lot. Here is the range, the typical size, and the calculator to nail it down.
The Numbers for 1,000 Sq Ft
| Cooling capacity (typical, moderate climate) | 20,000 BTU/hr |
| Tonnage | ~2 ton |
| Range by climate (cold to hot) | 14,000 - 25,000 BTU |
| Typical equipment | a 1.5-2 ton mini split or central system |
Whole-house figures use ~14 BTU/sq ft (cold climate) to ~25 (hot humid), ~20 typical. The accurate number comes from an ACCA Manual J calculation; use the calculator below.
Estimate Your Exact Load
Enter your climate zone, insulation, windows, and duct location for a Manual-J-style estimate and tonnage.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size AC does a 1,000 square foot house need?
Roughly 2 tons (about 20,000 BTU) in a moderate climate. The real range runs from about 14,000 BTU (1.2 tons) in a cold climate to about 25,000 BTU (2.1 tons) in a hot, humid one. A whole-house load depends on climate, insulation, windows, and ceiling height, so it is sized with an ACCA Manual J calculation, not floor area alone. Typical equipment: a 1.5-2 ton mini split or central system.
How many BTU for a 1,000 sq ft house?
Plan on about 18-20 BTU per square foot in a moderate climate, which is roughly 20,000 BTU for 1,000 sq ft. Hot climates push toward 22-25 BTU/sq ft and cold climates drop to 12-16, so the same house can need anywhere from 14,000 to 25,000 BTU depending on where it is.
Can I size a whole house by square feet alone?
Only as a ballpark. Square footage gives a starting tonnage, but two 1,000 sq ft houses in different climates, or with different insulation and window areas, can need a full ton apart. For equipment you are going to buy and install, run a Manual J load calculation. Oversizing short-cycles the system and leaves the house humid; undersizing cannot keep up on design days.