🔥 Shop Heater BTU Calculator
Estimate heating load for garages, service bays, wood shops, studios, and pole sheds using room size, insulation, air leakage, door traffic, and heater efficiency.
📌 Preset Shop Layouts
⚙ Calculator Inputs
🎯 Heating Results
📊 Heater Technology Comparison
📘 Insulation Reference
| Package | Avg U | Wall / Roof | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bare metal shell | 0.32 | None / none | Unlined shed or steel shell |
| Light wrap and thin door | 0.22 | Bubble / light deck | Seasonal storage building |
| R-11 walls / basic ceiling | 0.14 | R-11 / R-19 | Typical detached garage |
| R-13 walls / R-19 ceiling | 0.11 | R-13 / R-19 | Daily use service shop |
| R-19 walls / R-30 ceiling | 0.08 | R-19 / R-30 | Insulated workroom or barn |
| Tight spray foam shell | 0.05 | Foam / foam | High-retention envelope |
| Block wall workshop | 0.18 | CMU / basic roof | Masonry utility building |
🌬 Air Leakage and Door Traffic
| Condition | ACH | Door Factor | Typical Building |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very tight envelope | 0.40 | 1.00 | Foam-sealed room with gasketed door |
| Tight weather-sealed shop | 0.70 | 1.05 | Newer garage with insulated doors |
| Average detached garage | 1.20 | 1.10 | Standard wood-frame or mixed shell |
| Drafty bay with older doors | 1.80 | 1.18 | Service bay with worn weatherstrip |
| Open frame or leaky shed | 2.60 | 1.28 | Pole shed or semi-conditioned outbuilding |
🛠 Heater Output Guide
| Heater Type | Efficiency | Best Ceiling | Shop Fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gas unit heater | 82% | 8–14 ft | General garage and service bay |
| Condensing gas unit | 92% | 8–16 ft | Tighter all-day heated shop |
| Radiant tube heater | 85% | 10–18 ft | Tall welding or fabrication floor |
| Electric forced air | 100% | 8–12 ft | Small enclosed room or studio |
| Electric infrared | 100% | 8–14 ft | Task zone or finish room |
| Waste-oil heater | 80% | 10–16 ft | Fleet or farm maintenance bay |
📋 Common Shop Loads
| Scenario | Approx Size | Winter Lift | Typical Need |
|---|---|---|---|
| One-car garage bay | 12 × 22 × 9 | 40°F | 30k–45k BTU/hr |
| Two-bay repair shop | 24 × 32 × 10 | 45°F | 55k–85k BTU/hr |
| Insulated hobby barn | 30 × 40 × 12 | 35°F | 60k–90k BTU/hr |
| Drafty metal shed | 24 × 40 × 12 | 45°F | 85k–120k BTU/hr |
| Studio workroom | 14 × 18 × 8 | 30°F | 18k–28k BTU/hr |
💡 Shop Heating Tips
This calculator estimates shop heater BTU demand from size, temperature lift, insulation, and leakage so you can compare heater output, reserve sizing, and warm-up recovery before installation.
When choosing between shop heaters, a person must calculate the heat loss of the garage to determine which heater to choose. Many peoples believe that a larger heater is better for there garage, but using a larger shop heater can result in inefficient cycling of the heater and wasted fuel. In order to calculate the heat loss of a garage, a person must consider three main factor: the loss of heat through the building shell, air infiltration, and the number of cycles the garage doors undergo.
The loss of heat through the building shell is one of the major factors to consider when calculating the heat loss of the garage. The more greater the surface area of the building shell (walls and ceiling), the more heat will escape through the structure of the garage. Additionally, garages with tall ceilings will experience heat loss due to the fact that heat rise towards the ceiling.
How to Choose the Right Garage Heater
Finally, the insulation of the building shell will determine the amount of heat that escapes through the shell; R-19 insulation will result in less heat loss than structures with R-11 insulation, and metal buildings will lose heat faster than buildings with insulation. Air infiltration is the third main factor to consider when calculating the heat loss of the garage. Air infiltration is measured in Air Changes per Hour (ACH) and is the amount of air that infiltrates into the garage through cracks and doors.
Even tight garages will experience air infiltration, so incorrectly calculating the ACH of the garage will cause the heater to cycle constant without ever reaching the desired temperature in the garage. Additionally, the number of cycles the garage doors undergo will contribute to the heat loss of the garage; each time that a door opens, cold air will enter the garage and warm air will exit the garage. A person who works in a service bay that has doors that are opened and closed frequently will require a heater of more greater capacity then an individual who works in a studio filled with the garage.
The type of heater to use relates to the height of the ceilings in the garage and the heating method. Gas unit heaters are economical for spaces with ceilings under fourteen feet because gas unit heaters mix air quick. Radiant tube heaters are better for tall spaces because radiant tube heaters warm the floor and the people direct instead of heating all of the air in the room.
Electric forced-air heaters can convert every watt of electricity into heat. However, if the space requires electric heaters that require more than thirty kilowatts of power, then there may be expensive electrical upgrades required. Waste-oil heaters are useful in a fleet shop because these heaters burn used oil from the cars and reduce the costs associated with disposing of that oil.
Efficiency is a critical measurement for any heater. The efficiency of a heater will determine how much of the fuel used will become usable heat for the space. For example, if a gas heater has eighty-two percent efficiency, the heater will only provide eighty-two percent of the input BTUs of heat.
To determine the delivered output of a heater, you would have to multiply the input of the heater by the efficiency of the heater. So if a heater has a seventy thousand BTU input with eighty-two percent efficiency, the BTU output will be fifty-seven thousand BTUs. A person also has to consider heat stratification.
Heat stratification cause heat to rise to the ceiling of a building, leaving the rest of the work area feeling cold. To combat this problem, destratification fans can be used. These fans will increase the effectiveness of a heater by approximately twenty percent.
Finally, a person has to consider the safety of the heating unit and the local building codes. A heater will have clearances that must be maintained to prevent accidents. If the heater exceeds the capacity of the electrical panel or the gas line, the heater will not function correct.
By calculating the building shell loss, the air infiltration, and the door cycles, a person can determine the appropriate heating unit to ensure that the building maintains a steady temperature throughout the winter.
