Upgrade doors and cut drafts and bills. Enter your area, climate, and energy prices now. Get savings, payback, and emissions in one report instantly.
| Scenario | Doors | Area (sq ft) | Old U | New U | HDD / CDD | Energy prices | Install / rebate | Typical outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic upgrade | 1 | 20 | 0.60 | 0.30 | 4000 / 1200 | $0.16/kWh, $1.50/therm | $1200 / $0 | Moderate savings, mid-range payback |
| Colder climate | 2 | 20 | 0.70 | 0.25 | 7000 / 800 | $0.18/kWh, $1.80/therm | $2800 / $200 | Higher heating savings, faster payback |
| Hotter climate | 1 | 22 | 0.65 | 0.30 | 2000 / 2500 | $0.20/kWh | $1500 / $150 | Cooling savings dominate, depends on SEER |
This calculator estimates seasonal conductive heat transfer through doors using degree days:
Energy and cost conversions:
Exterior doors often sit on a home’s most pressured surfaces, so small gaps and weak insulation can amplify heating and cooling loads. A U factor drop from 0.60 to 0.30 across one 20 square foot door halves conductive transfer, and the effect scales linearly with door count and area.
The calculator combines door area, degree days, and U factor change to estimate seasonal Btu saved. HDD reflects heating demand and CDD reflects cooling demand; multiplying by 24 converts daily temperature difference into hours. Heating cost uses therms or kWh based on system type, while cooling uses SEER to convert Btu into electricity.
Results split savings into heating, cooling, and optional draft reduction. Draft reduction is modeled as a percent of baseline HVAC spending, so a 5% assumption on a $1,200 annual bill adds $60 of savings. CO2 avoided uses simple factors per kWh and per therm, helping compare upgrades when budgets include carbon targets. Because doors also affect comfort, consider the implied benefit per room. If annual savings are small, a higher quality unit may still be justified for noise control, security, or maintenance reduction, which the calculator does not monetize in your final decision process.
Simple payback divides net project cost by annual savings, but it ignores future price changes. The NPV estimate discounts each year’s escalated savings using your discount rate, showing whether the upgrade beats alternative uses of cash. IRR is an approximation of the effective annual return across the chosen lifespan and can be compared to other efficiency investments.
Use label data for U factor, and update efficiency, COP, and SEER from equipment documentation. Local degree days can be found from weather references or utility programs. If you air seal around frames during installation, increase the draft reduction percent modestly; if doors are sheltered from wind or sun, reduce expectations to stay conservative.
Savings grow when an old, uninsulated, or poorly sealed exterior door is replaced by a lower U factor model with quality weatherstripping. Larger door area, higher HDD or CDD, and higher energy prices increase the financial impact.
Look for the manufacturer label, product specification sheet, or energy certification documentation. If you only have an R value, use U ≈ 1/R for the insulated panel, then treat the result as an estimate for planning.
Degree days summarize how cold or hot a typical year is. Higher HDD usually increases heating savings, and higher CDD increases cooling savings. Using local degree days makes the estimate more location specific.
Start conservatively at 0–5% of your annual HVAC spending unless you know your door leaks badly. If you plan professional air sealing around the frame and threshold, modestly increase the percent to reflect improved infiltration control.
NPV converts future energy savings into today’s dollars using your discount rate and energy price escalation. A positive NPV suggests the upgrade returns more value than keeping the same cash invested at the discount rate assumption.
Interior doors rarely change building envelope heat loss, so energy savings are usually negligible. The tool is intended for exterior doors that separate conditioned indoor space from outdoor conditions and experience meaningful temperature differences.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.