BTU to Therms Converter: Fast Energy Calc

BTU to Therms Converter

Accurate energy conversion calculator for natural gas heating and billing

Conversion Result

Enter a value to convert

Quick Conversions

Conversion Formula

Therms = BTU ÷ 100,000
BTU = Therms × 100,000

One therm equals exactly 100,000 British Thermal Units. This standardized ratio simplifies natural gas billing calculations and energy comparisons across different heating systems.

Step-by-Step Conversion Process

  • Identify your starting value in BTU or therms
  • Apply the appropriate conversion factor (100,000)
  • Divide BTU by 100,000 to get therms, or multiply therms by 100,000 to get BTU
  • Round the result to the desired decimal places for practical use

Example Calculation:

Question: Convert 250,000 BTU to therms

Solution: 250,000 ÷ 100,000 = 2.5 therms

Verification: 2.5 × 100,000 = 250,000 BTU ✓

Common Conversion Values

BTU Therms Typical Application
1,000 0.01 Small appliance hourly use
10,000 0.1 Water heater hourly consumption
50,000 0.5 Furnace hourly output
100,000 1.0 One therm (billing unit)
500,000 5.0 Daily home heating winter
1,000,000 10.0 Monthly small home consumption
5,000,000 50.0 Monthly large home consumption
10,000,000 100.0 Commercial monthly usage

Practical Applications

Home Heating Bills

Natural gas utilities bill customers in therms. A typical household consumes 30-100 therms monthly during winter, equivalent to 3-10 million BTU.

Furnace Ratings

Furnaces are rated in BTU output per hour. A 100,000 BTU/hour furnace produces 1 therm of heat energy hourly when running at full capacity.

Water Heater Efficiency

Gas water heaters typically use 30,000-50,000 BTU/hour. Converting to therms helps calculate daily operating costs from utility rates.

Commercial Operations

Restaurants and manufacturing facilities track energy in therms for budgeting. A busy restaurant might use 200-500 therms monthly.

Energy Audits

Professionals convert BTU ratings to therms to estimate annual consumption and identify cost-saving opportunities in heating systems.

Fuel Comparison

Converting different fuels to therms allows direct cost comparisons. Natural gas at $1.20/therm versus propane or heating oil per equivalent BTU.

Visual Energy Comparison

Compare the relative scale of common energy values in therms:

0.01 Therms (1,000 BTU)

1K BTU

0.1 Therms (10,000 BTU)

10K BTU

0.5 Therms (50,000 BTU)

50K BTU

1 Therm (100,000 BTU)

100K BTU

5 Therms (500,000 BTU)

500K BTU

10 Therms (1,000,000 BTU)

1M BTU

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: Monthly Bill Verification

Your natural gas bill shows 85 therms used. Your furnace is rated at 80,000 BTU/hour and ran 150 hours this month.

Calculation: 80,000 BTU/hr × 150 hrs = 12,000,000 BTU

Convert: 12,000,000 ÷ 100,000 = 120 therms

Analysis: Bill shows 85 therms, but furnace alone accounts for 120 therms worth of capacity. Check for efficiency losses or meter readings.

Scenario 2: Appliance Energy Cost

Your gas dryer uses 22,000 BTU per cycle. You run it 20 times monthly. Gas costs $1.30 per therm.

Total BTU: 22,000 × 20 = 440,000 BTU

Convert: 440,000 ÷ 100,000 = 4.4 therms

Monthly Cost: 4.4 × $1.30 = $5.72

Scenario 3: Heating System Upgrade

Comparing a 60,000 BTU furnace at 80% efficiency versus a 48,000 BTU unit at 95% efficiency.

Old System Output: 60,000 × 0.80 = 48,000 BTU usable heat

New System Output: 48,000 × 0.95 = 45,600 BTU usable heat

Analysis: New unit provides similar heat output with lower input, reducing consumption by approximately 0.124 therms per operating hour.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is a therm?

A therm is a unit of heat energy equal to 100,000 BTU. Natural gas companies use therms as their standard billing unit because it provides a convenient scale for residential and commercial consumption.

Why do gas companies bill in therms instead of BTU?

Therms simplify billing by reducing large BTU numbers to manageable figures. Instead of billing for 8,500,000 BTU, utilities charge for 85 therms, making invoices clearer and calculations simpler.

How many therms does an average home use monthly?

Consumption varies by climate and home size. Winter months typically see 40-100 therms for heating, while summer usage drops to 5-20 therms for water heating and cooking. Annual average ranges from 400-1,000 therms.

Is the BTU to therm conversion always exact?

Yes, the conversion is standardized at exactly 100,000 BTU per therm. However, natural gas heating value can vary slightly (1,020-1,050 BTU per cubic foot), affecting how many cubic feet equal one therm.

Can I convert my furnace BTU rating directly to monthly therms?

Not directly. The BTU rating shows maximum output per hour. Calculate actual therms by: (BTU rating × hours operated × efficiency factor) ÷ 100,000. A 100,000 BTU furnace at 90% efficiency running 300 hours uses 270 therms monthly.

What affects my therm consumption beyond appliance ratings?

Several factors impact usage: insulation quality, thermostat settings, outdoor temperature, home size, appliance efficiency, air leaks, and usage patterns. Two identical homes can show 30-50% consumption differences based on these variables.

How do I estimate annual heating costs from BTU ratings?

Multiply appliance BTU/hour by estimated annual operating hours, divide by 100,000 to get therms, then multiply by your local rate per therm. Example: 80,000 BTU furnace × 2,000 hrs ÷ 100,000 × $1.20 = $1,920 annually.

Are BTU and BTU/hour the same thing?

No. BTU measures total energy quantity, while BTU/hour indicates energy flow rate. A furnace rated at 100,000 BTU/hour produces 100,000 BTU each hour it operates, or 1 therm per hour.

Energy Units Comparison

1 Therm Equals

100,000 BTU

105.5 Megajoules

29.3 Kilowatt-hours

96.7 Cubic feet natural gas

Heating Equivalents

1 gallon propane ≈ 0.91 therms

1 gallon fuel oil ≈ 1.39 therms

1 CCF natural gas ≈ 1.04 therms

34.1 kWh electricity ≈ 1 therm heat

Cost Perspective

At $1.20/therm national average

1 million BTU costs $12.00

Monthly 50 therms = $60

Annual 600 therms = $720

References

  1. U.S. Energy Information Administration. “Natural Gas Explained: Units and Calculators.” Published May 2024. Available at: https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/units-and-calculators/british-thermal-units.php
  2. U.S. Energy Information Administration. “What are Ccf, Mcf, Btu, and therms? How do I convert natural gas prices?” Last updated May 14, 2024. Available at: https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=45&t=8
  3. American Gas Association. “Natural Gas Measurement Standards and Conversion Factors.” Gas Industry Standards, 2024.
  4. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). “Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI).” NIST Special Publication 811, 2008 Edition.