Fire Pit Runtime Calculator

Dial in burn time for cozy backyard nights. Choose fuel, output, and weather factors easily. Save a shareable report before lighting your pit today.

Pick the fuel you actually use in your garden setup.
Use the fire pit label or manual rating.
100% = full flame. 60–80% often lasts longer.
Accounts for heat losses and incomplete transfer.
Wind can raise burn rate and shorten runtime.
Cold air can increase fuel demand in practice.

Fuel details

Fill in the section that matches your fuel type.
Common portable tanks: 20 lb, 30 lb, 40 lb.
Estimate remaining fuel as a percent.
Optional: used for cost per hour.
Moisture drives big runtime changes.
Only used when Wood type = Custom.
Optional: convert your bulk cost to $/lb.
Some blends burn hotter; adjust if known.
Optional: used for hourly cost estimate.
Typical range: 950–1100 BTU/ft³.
Optional: used for hourly cost estimate.
Leave blank for continuous supply.
Reset

Formula used

The calculator estimates usable fuel energy, then divides by the adjusted burn rate. Adjustments account for heat setting, wind, and cold conditions.

Notes: Real runtime varies with airflow, burner condition, and refueling technique.

How to use this calculator

  1. Select your fuel type and enter the fire pit’s rated BTU/hr.
  2. Set a heat percentage that matches your usual flame setting.
  3. Choose wind and cold factors that match your outdoor conditions.
  4. Fill in the matching fuel details (tank, wood, ethanol, or gas).
  5. Press Calculate runtime to view results above the form.
  6. Download a CSV or PDF report for planning and recordkeeping.

Fuel energy and capacity inputs

This calculator converts your available fuel into usable heat energy, then compares it against your chosen output. For propane, the tank size and fill level define stored energy. For wood, weight and moisture-driven energy density define the heat budget. For ethanol, volume and blend strength set the energy pool. For natural gas, supply is often continuous, but an optional therm limit can model a capped session.

Adjusted burn rate factors

Rated BTU per hour is rarely the whole story outdoors. Heat setting scales burner output to match real use. Wind and cold factors approximate extra demand created by gusts, heat loss, and comfort tuning. Efficiency represents losses from open-air combustion and imperfect heat transfer. Together these inputs produce an effective burn rate that reflects typical backyard conditions.

Interpreting runtime output

Runtime is reported as hours and minutes . If you enter a therm limit for natural gas, the tool estimates how long that allowance supports your selected settings. If no limit is entered, the result shows a continuous supply message while reporting consumption per hour. Use the effective burn rate and fuel use figures to compare scenarios consistently.

Cost and consumption planning

Optional pricing fields estimate cost per hour using the calculated fuel consumption rate. This is useful when you compare fuels or decide whether to lower the heat setting for longer gatherings. For propane and wood, consumption is expressed in pounds per hour. For ethanol, it is gallons per hour. For natural gas, it is therms per hour, with an additional cubic‑feet estimate for quick utility checks.

Practical garden operation tips

Plan a safety buffer by targeting 80 to 90 percent of the displayed runtime, especially for breezy evenings. Shield the pit from wind, keep the burner ports clean, and pre-stage your refill or extra logs before guests arrive. When using wood, smaller splits ignite faster but can raise consumption; larger pieces extend runtime but may reduce peak heat. Re-check inputs whenever conditions change.

FAQs

1) Why does wind reduce my expected runtime?

Wind pushes heat away and often leads to higher flame settings. The wind factor increases the effective burn rate, so the same fuel supply is consumed faster in exposed areas.

2) What efficiency value should I use?

Use 70–85% for most open fire pits. Higher values suit well-designed burners with shields, while lower values fit very open bowls, tall flames, or poor heat capture.

3) Can I estimate runtime for mixed wood loads?

Yes. Enter the total weight and choose the closest wood type, or use a custom BTU value. Mixed moisture levels can swing results, so treat the runtime as planning guidance.

4) Why does natural gas sometimes show “continuous supply”?

Natural gas is typically not limited by a tank. If you leave the therm limit blank, the tool avoids a session runtime estimate, but still reports fuel use and hourly cost.

5) How accurate are the energy density defaults?

They are reasonable averages for planning. Real values vary by fuel purity, wood moisture, and product labeling. If you know your fuel specification, enter custom values where available.

6) What should I do if my results feel too high or low?

Check the rated BTU/hr, reduce the heat setting to match real use, and adjust wind or cold factors. For wood, verify the weight and select the correct moisture category.

Example data table

Scenario Fuel Fuel amount Rated BTU/hr Setting Wind Efficiency Estimated runtime
Patio evening Propane 20 lb at 100% 50,000 80% Calm 85% ≈ 7h 21m
Fire bowl Ethanol 3 L 15,000 100% Breezy 80% ≈ 0h 59m
Garden gathering Wood 10 lb seasoned hardwood 35,000 90% Windy 75% ≈ 1h 54m
Example runtimes are rounded and meant for planning.

Safety note

Always follow manufacturer instructions, keep fuel containers away from flames, and use outdoor fire pits in well-ventilated areas. If conditions are very windy, postpone use for safety.

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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.