Gas Bill Calculator

Estimate a monthly gas bill range for a heating-heavy home.

Use this page when natural gas is doing the work for space heating, water heating, or cooking. The result is a directional monthly range for a typical heating month, not a utility statement reconstruction.

If the home is all-electric, use the electricity calculator. If both fuels are material every month, use the dual-fuel calculator.

Electricity Gas Dual Fuel

Gas-only directional tool. This page is for gas-bill framing, especially during heating months. It does not estimate your electric bill, identify your utility, or show live gas tariffs.

Expert-use caution: this tool is not a heat-loss calculation, combustion analysis, or utility-bill normalization model. Use it to decide whether the problem looks more like weather, heat loss, runtime, or statement detail before you blame the equipment.

Last updated April 7, 2026
Source direction U.S. household heating patterns and public energy references
Best use Check a heating-month gas bill before replacing equipment

Tool Notes

Use this when gas is a real part of the bill.

The gas calculator is meant for homes where heating, water heating, or cooking rely on gas. It estimates a broad monthly range so readers can decide whether the next step should be air sealing, control, or an equipment check.

What it uses

ZIP code as a regional proxy, square footage, household size, gas-heating setup, water-heating fuel, cooking fuel, and heating-month intensity.

What it does not use

No account data, no live utility tariffs, no taxes, no delivery riders, and no exact utility matching.

When to verify

Compare the output against your winter bill and your utility statement. If the range still looks wrong, check the Methodology before assuming an appliance fix will solve it.

This tool is most useful when the home relies on gas for heat, hot water, or cooking. It is less useful for all-electric homes.

Choose the right calculator

If your home is all-electric, use the electricity calculator. If both fuels matter, use the dual-fuel calculator.

How To Use It

Use the gas estimate to separate heating problems from billing surprises.

If the range feels close

The bill may be broadly normal for a heating month. Focus on heat loss, thermostat behavior, and whether the home is using more heated space than necessary.

If the range feels low

The issue may be leakage, older equipment, water heating, or a utility-bill detail that the tool does not model. That is the point to compare the estimate against your actual bill line by line.

When this tool is wrong

It can miss homes with unusual setpoints, severe envelope losses, oversized heated area, very high domestic hot-water demand, or utility pricing features and riders that are not visible in the model.

If both fuels matter

Switch to the dual-fuel calculator when the home has a meaningful electric and gas split and you need a broader household view.

If the bill question is mostly electric

Use the electricity calculator instead when cooling, appliances, and electric heating carry most of the real monthly cost.