HRV Savings Calculator

Turn fresh air into measurable heating savings today. Model costs, rebates, and maintenance in minutes. See payback, ROI, and NPV before you buy anything.

Inputs
Set realistic averages. If you do not know a value, keep the defaults.
Typical homes: 80–200 CFM.
Often 60–80% for many units.
Hours where indoor-outdoor delta is meaningful.
Indoor minus outdoor during heating hours.
Hours where warm outdoor air must be cooled.
Outdoor minus indoor during cooling hours.
Convert your fuel to $/kWh if needed.
Gas furnace: 80–98%. Heat pump: 200%+ not modeled.
Used for cooling and fan electricity.
Typical AC: 2.5–4.0.
Both supply + exhaust, average power.
Filters, cleaning, occasional service.
Include unit, ducting, labor, permits.
Any incentives reducing upfront cost.
Used for ROI and NPV.
Your opportunity cost or hurdle rate.
Applies to savings and fan electricity.
If a major replacement happens within the period.
Only used if replacement year is set.
Reset
Tip: Keep delta T and hours conservative for realism.
How to use this calculator
  1. Enter airflow and sensible effectiveness from your unit specs.
  2. Estimate seasonal hours and average temperature differences.
  3. Set energy prices, heating efficiency, and cooling COP.
  4. Add fan power and maintenance to capture operating costs.
  5. Provide installed cost and rebates, then choose analysis years.
  6. Review net savings, payback, ROI, and NPV. Export if needed.
Formula used

The calculator estimates recovered sensible energy using a common airflow heat-transfer approximation:

This is a planning model. Real savings depend on climate, duct losses, control settings, infiltration, and how often bypass/defrost modes run.

Example data table
Example inputs Value What it represents
Airflow120 CFMAverage balanced ventilation rate
Effectiveness70%Sensible heat recovery effectiveness
Heating hours / ΔT1800 h / 35°FHeating season operating conditions
Cooling hours / ΔT800 h / 15°FCooling season operating conditions
Energy prices$0.12 / $0.18Heating kWh equivalent / electricity
Installed cost / rebate$1700 / $250Upfront investment and incentives
Run the calculator to see results for your own home and climate.
Professional notes

Energy recovery and annual loads

Heat recovery ventilation reduces the sensible load created by continuous fresh air. The model uses 1.08 × CFM × ΔT to estimate hourly BTU transfer, then multiplies by seasonal hours and sensible effectiveness. Example: 120 CFM, 35°F heating delta, 1,800 heating hours, and 70% effectiveness recovers about 5.3 million BTU, roughly 1,560 thermal kWh per year. Cooling recovery uses your cooling hours and delta.

Turning recovered energy into savings

Recovered thermal energy becomes savings after equipment performance is applied. Heating savings divide recovered thermal kWh by heating efficiency, then multiply by your heating price per kWh equivalent. Cooling savings convert thermal kWh to electric kWh using COP; a COP of 3.2 means 3.2 thermal kWh avoided saves 1 electric kWh. Fan electricity and annual maintenance are subtracted to produce net savings.

Payback, ROI, and NPV outputs

Net upfront cost equals installed cost minus rebates. Simple payback is net cost divided by net annual savings. ROI compares total net savings over the analysis period with the upfront cost, and can include a replacement event. NPV discounts each year’s cash flow by (1 + discount rate)year, which emphasizes earlier savings and reflects the value of money over time.

Sensitivity drivers and realistic ranges

Airflow, seasonal hours, and temperature difference drive results. Doubling airflow roughly doubles recovered energy. Mild climates with 800 heating hours and a 20°F delta may show modest savings, while colder conditions with 2,500 hours and a 40°F delta can improve payback. Fan power also matters: higher wattage raises operating cost, especially when electricity rates are high.

Using results for practical decisions

Compare scenarios by adjusting effectiveness, energy prices, and incentives. If payback is borderline, stress test by lowering seasonal deltas and hours by 15–25%. Export the report for budgeting and to track assumptions. The chart visualizes annual cash flow so you can see whether savings remain steady across years as prices escalate for decision clarity.

FAQs
1) What does sensible effectiveness mean?
It is the percentage of temperature difference the unit can transfer between outgoing and incoming air streams under steady conditions. Higher values usually increase savings, but real performance can vary with airflow, frost control, and installation.
2) How do I estimate seasonal hours and ΔT?
Use local weather patterns and your thermostat setpoint. Approximate the number of hours where indoor–outdoor differences are meaningful, then use an average temperature difference during those hours. Conservative estimates help prevent overstating savings.
3) Why does the calculator subtract fan electricity?
The HRV needs power to move air. That electricity is a real operating cost and can offset part of the heating and cooling savings, especially with high airflow, long runtime, or higher electricity rates.
4) My heating system is a heat pump. How should I use this?
Enter an effective “heating efficiency” that reflects typical seasonal performance, or convert heating to an equivalent electric cost. For more precision, treat heating price as electricity price and use an efficiency that represents your average seasonal COP.
5) What is the difference between payback and NPV?
Payback shows how quickly savings recover the upfront cost. NPV discounts future cash flows using your discount rate, helping compare this upgrade with other investments where time and risk matter.
6) How can I improve the accuracy of results?
Use measured airflow, confirm effectiveness at your intended speed, and refine hours and temperature differences with local climate data. Include maintenance, realistic rebates, and any mid‑life replacement costs so the financial metrics match your project plan.

Related Calculators

Energy Bill Savings CalculatorHome Retrofit ROI CalculatorWhole House ROI CalculatorMonthly Utility Savings CalculatorAnnual Energy Savings CalculatorEnergy Cost Reduction CalculatorEnergy Price Increase SavingsGas Rate Savings CalculatorDual Fuel Savings CalculatorNet Energy Savings Calculator

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.