Seating Warmth Zone Calculator

Plan patio lounges with realistic comfort targets always. Pick heaters, windbreaks, and seating layouts smartly. Save results as files and share with your team.

Inputs
Choose units, exposure settings, and heater details.
Reset
Results follow your selected unit.
Wind strongly changes outdoor comfort.
Used for heater sizing estimates.
Current air temperature near seating.
Your preferred “feels-like” comfort target.
Affects heat index in warmer conditions.
After shields, wind is reduced automatically.
More people slightly warms the microclimate.
Cover reduces heat loss and drafts.
Seating Footprint
Use dimensions or enter total area.
Used when “Length × Width” is selected.
Enter average footprint width.
Used when “Total Area” is selected.
Windbreaks can reduce effective wind by 25–45%.
Enclosures reduce convective heat loss dramatically.
Surface is logged for planning notes (not heavily weighted).
Adds a comfort bonus (perceived warmth).
Blankets can add ~2°C of comfort perception.
Type influences efficiency and radiant comfort.
If provided, coverage is evaluated.
Radiant comfort drops as distance increases.
Accounts for gusts, openings, and heat distribution.
Example Data Table
Sample scenarios to compare seating comfort targets.
Scenario Ambient Wind Enclosure Target Suggested Output Expected Zone
Hedge-screened patio, four seats 12°C 10 km/h Partial 20°C 6–9 kW Comfortable
Open deck, breezy evening 8°C 20 km/h Open 20°C 12–18 kW Mild → Comfortable
Covered nook, low wind 14°C 5 km/h Enclosed 21°C 3–5 kW Warm
Fire pit circle, short distance 10°C 8 km/h Partial 19°C 8–14 kW (delivered varies) Mild
Values are illustrative and depend on shielding and distance.
Formula Used
The calculator blends comfort indices with a practical heat-loss model.
  • Feels-like temperature: wind chill for cool conditions, heat index for warm/humid conditions, otherwise a mild humidity and breeze adjustment.
  • Comfort baseline: feels-like + clothing bonus + blanket bonus + small people bonus.
  • Heat-loss estimate: Q(kW) = Area(m²) × Ueff(W/m²·K) × ΔT(K) / 1000.
  • Effective Ueff: Ueff = Ubase × (1 + 0.10×Windm/s) × EnclosureFactor × CoverFactor.
  • Recommended heater output: Recommended = Q × SafetyFactor / Efficiency (efficiency depends on heater type).
  • If existing heater output is provided: delivered heat is reduced by distance and radiant factors to estimate a temperature lift.
How to Use This Calculator
A quick workflow for planning outdoor seating comfort.
  1. Select your units for temperature, wind, and area.
  2. Enter ambient temperature, wind speed, and humidity.
  3. Choose the seating footprint using dimensions or total area.
  4. Set windbreak and enclosure levels to match your site.
  5. Choose clothing and blanket availability for realistic comfort.
  6. Pick a heater type, then set a safety factor for gusts.
  7. If you already own a heater, enter its output and distance.
  8. Press Calculate and review the zone and sizing guidance.
  9. Download CSV or PDF to share, compare, or keep records.

Comfort inputs that matter

Outdoor seating warmth depends on air temperature, humidity, and wind at seat height. The calculator converts units, estimates a feels-like temperature, then adds small comfort bonuses for clothing level, blankets, and nearby people. Enter readings taken close to your seating area, because patios can be several degrees cooler than sheltered doors or walls.

Area and layout sensitivity

Heater demand scales with footprint. Use length and width for rectangular lounges, or total area for curved benches and mixed seating. A larger footprint spreads radiant heat, so the same heater can feel “balanced” in a nook but “undersized” across an open dining set. Keep the target comfort constant when comparing layouts.

Windbreaks and enclosures

Wind strips heat quickly by increasing convective loss. Selecting partial or full windbreak reduces effective wind, while enclosure level reduces heat loss further. In practice, a covered corner with partial walls often needs far less output than a fully open deck at the same ambient temperature. Use these settings to test whether adding screens can replace buying a bigger heater.

Heater sizing method

The sizing model estimates heat load with Q = Area × Ueff × ΔT, where Ueff rises with wind and drops with enclosure and overhead cover. The recommended output applies a safety factor for gusts and uneven distribution, then divides by heater efficiency. Electric radiant usually delivers more usable warmth near seats, while fire pits lose more energy to open air. For quick checks, 1 kW equals about 3,412 BTU/hr. Many patio heaters range from 4 to 14 kW equivalent, but comfort depends on distance, shielding, and airflow patterns.

Warmth zones and decisions

Warmth zones translate predicted comfort into actions. “Very Cold” suggests stronger shielding, higher output, or closer placement. “Mild” and “Comfortable” suit longer gatherings, especially with blankets. “Warm” and “Hot” indicate you should increase distance, lower output, or improve ventilation. Export CSV to compare scenarios, and use the PDF for simple sharing and approvals for repeatable planning decisions consistently.


FAQs

What does “warmth zone” mean?

It is a practical label based on predicted comfort temperature: Very Cold, Cool, Mild, Comfortable, Warm, or Hot. Use it to decide whether to add shielding, change heater placement, or adjust output.

Should I enter a heater output?

If you already own a heater, enter its output to see an estimated coverage label and comfort lift. If you are shopping, leave it blank and use the recommended output to shortlist options.

Why is distance included?

Radiant heat weakens quickly as seats move away from the source. Enter the typical seat-to-heater distance so the calculator can reduce delivered warmth and avoid overestimating comfort.

How do windbreak and enclosure differ?

Windbreak reduces wind speed, while enclosure reduces overall heat loss by limiting airflow around the seating area. Using both often produces a larger comfort gain than increasing heater size.

What safety factor is reasonable?

Use 1.10–1.25 for sheltered patios, 1.30–1.50 for open or gusty sites, and up to 1.75 for very exposed layouts. Higher factors add margin but can oversize heaters once shielding improves.

Are exports saved automatically?

Exports use your latest calculation stored for the current browser session. Click Calculate, then use the CSV or PDF buttons. Recalculate after changing any input to refresh the downloadable results.

Note Outdoor comfort depends on airflow, placement, and radiant exposure.
Use results as planning guidance, then test on-site safely.

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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.