BillShocker · Cost to run

How Much Does It Cost to Run a Ceiling fan? (April 2026)

Running a Ceiling fan (60 W typical) for 8 hours a day costs between $1.78 per month in North Dakota and $6.71 per month in Hawaii, at each state's official average residential rate for April 2026.

Ceiling fan: what it costs you

Pick your state and how long it runs each day. Nothing you type is stored.

Cost per month
$2.81
Cost per year
$33.68

Assumes a 30-day month (year = 12 × month) at Ohio's average residential rate of 19.49¢/kWh (U.S. EIA, April 2026). Your plan's price differs.

Typical wattage: 60 W (DOE Energy Saver, verified 2026-07-17) — ~15-90 W depending on speed/size. A representative figure, not a spec sheet for your model.

Monthly cost in every state (8 hours/day)

StatePriceCost / month
Hawaii46.62¢/kWh$6.71
California35.25¢/kWh$5.08
Connecticut32.24¢/kWh$4.64
Massachusetts29.45¢/kWh$4.24
New York29.45¢/kWh$4.24
Maine28.42¢/kWh$4.09
Rhode Island28.30¢/kWh$4.08
Alaska27.35¢/kWh$3.94
New Hampshire27.24¢/kWh$3.92
District of Columbia25.41¢/kWh$3.66
Vermont24.56¢/kWh$3.54
New Jersey23.53¢/kWh$3.39
Maryland22.07¢/kWh$3.18
Pennsylvania21.47¢/kWh$3.09
Michigan21.39¢/kWh$3.08
Illinois20.47¢/kWh$2.95
Ohio19.49¢/kWh$2.81
Wisconsin19.21¢/kWh$2.77
Delaware18.79¢/kWh$2.71
Indiana17.90¢/kWh$2.58
Alabama17.41¢/kWh$2.51
Virginia17.38¢/kWh$2.50
South Carolina17.06¢/kWh$2.46
Texas16.99¢/kWh$2.45
Mississippi16.76¢/kWh$2.41
Colorado16.54¢/kWh$2.38
Minnesota16.39¢/kWh$2.36
North Carolina16.25¢/kWh$2.34
West Virginia16.06¢/kWh$2.31
Kansas15.78¢/kWh$2.27
Oregon15.78¢/kWh$2.27
Arizona15.48¢/kWh$2.23
Florida15.38¢/kWh$2.21
Georgia15.37¢/kWh$2.21
New Mexico15.15¢/kWh$2.18
Kentucky15.02¢/kWh$2.16
Tennessee14.94¢/kWh$2.15
Wyoming14.68¢/kWh$2.11
South Dakota14.52¢/kWh$2.09
Louisiana14.44¢/kWh$2.08
Washington14.36¢/kWh$2.07
Nevada14.29¢/kWh$2.06
Arkansas14.16¢/kWh$2.04
Missouri14.01¢/kWh$2.02
Montana13.90¢/kWh$2.00
Iowa13.86¢/kWh$2.00
Oklahoma13.31¢/kWh$1.92
Utah13.29¢/kWh$1.91
Nebraska13.28¢/kWh$1.91
Idaho12.70¢/kWh$1.83
North Dakota12.35¢/kWh$1.78

How to cut this cost

Rates: U.S. Energy Information Administration residential average retail price, April 2026 (public domain). Typical wattage: 60 W, DOE Energy Saver, verified 2026-07-17 (~15-90 W depending on speed/size.). Costs assume a 30-day month at the state's average residential rate; your model, usage and plan price differ.