Pellet Stove Size Calculator

Pellet Stove Size Calculator

Estimate room heat loss, stove output, pellet burn rate, hopper runtime, and airflow needs using room geometry, insulation, window area, placement, and design temperature assumptions for pellet heating projects.

Typical sizing density Well sealed rooms may land near 12 to 18 BTU per square foot, while older or glass-heavy rooms often need 22 to 35 BTU per square foot.
Pellet fuel window Premium pellets usually deliver about 8300 BTU per pound, while blended fuel often sits closer to 7700 BTU per pound with more ash.
Why hopper matters Two stoves can cover the same heat load, but the bigger hopper may hold overnight output longer before a refill is needed.

Room and Stove Inputs

Design day sizing mode

Imperial mode uses feet, square feet, and Fahrenheit. Metric mode converts the same geometry and temperatures internally before running the pellet stove heat loss math.

This calculator combines wall, window, ceiling, and infiltration losses, then adjusts for pellet stove placement, fuel quality, and heating goal so the recommended stove class is practical instead of purely nominal.

📊Pellet Stove Sizing Results

Required Delivered Heat
0
BTU/h
Calculated design output appears here.
Suggested Stove Class
0
Nominal output
Recommended pellet stove family appears here.
Pellet Burn and Hopper
0
lb/hr
Fuel draw and refill window appear here.
Coverage and Airflow
0
sq ft
Effective coverage and blower target appear here.
Floor area0 sq ft
Room volume0 cu ft
Design temperature delta0 F
Infiltration rate0 ACH
Opaque wall loss0 BTU/h
Window loss0 BTU/h
Ceiling loss0 BTU/h
Infiltration loss0 BTU/h
Reserve and goal adder0 BTU/h
Placement adjustment0%
Chosen nominal output0 BTU/h
Estimated hopper runtime0 hr
Design load summary appears here once the calculator runs.
Pellet stove recommendation appears here once the calculator runs.

📦Selected Stove Snapshot

Auto
Stove Class
Auto select compares each stove family and chooses the smallest class that still meets the adjusted room load.
0%
Steady Efficiency
Thermal efficiency drives how much pellet fuel is needed to hold the design output target.
0 lb
Hopper Capacity
Larger hoppers reduce refill frequency when the stove is working near peak output.
0 CFM
Blower Target
Airflow matters most in open plans or basement stairwell placements where warm air must travel farther.
0 lb/hr
Design Burn Rate
Fuel draw is based on the chosen nominal output, fuel grade BTU value, and the selected stove efficiency.
0
Load Density
BTU per square foot helps explain why a large glass room and a tight bedroom can need very different stoves.
0 hr
Full Hopper Runtime
Runtime shows how long a full hopper may last at the design day output target, not only on low fire.
3 in
Typical Vent Path
Most compact stoves stay on 3 inch venting while bigger whole-home units often move to longer 4 inch equivalent runs.

📑Reference Tables

Room Load Benchmarks

Room TypeTight HomeAverageOlder Shell
Bedroom 180 sq ft10k-13k13k-16k16k-21k
Living room 320 sq ft16k-21k21k-27k27k-34k
Great room 520 sq ft24k-30k30k-38k38k-47k
Open zone 850 sq ft34k-42k42k-52k52k-64k

These bands assume a design day delta near 40 to 50 F and help validate whether your detailed result is in a realistic pellet stove range.

Pellet Stove Family Comparison

ClassNominalHopperBest Use
Micro cabin14k-26k18 lbTiny tight zones
Compact insert18k-30k25 lbBedrooms dens
Mid-size stove24k-42k45 lbMain rooms
Large stove32k-60k60 lbGreat rooms
Basement circulator36k-65k80 lbStairwell lift
Whole-home hopper42k-70k90 lbLarge cottages

Nominal outputs are steady-state bands rather than startup peak claims, which makes them more useful for sizing around real room load.

Common Project Sizes

ProjectFloor AreaTypical LoadSuggested Class
Tight bedroom insert170-220 sq ft12k-18k BTU/hCompact insert
Main living room280-420 sq ft20k-30k BTU/hMid-size stove
Vaulted great room450-650 sq ft30k-45k BTU/hLarge stove
Basement carry-up500-900 sq ft36k-55k BTU/hBasement circulator
Small cottage plan850-1200 sq ft45k-65k BTU/hWhole-home hopper

If your result falls outside these reference bands, double-check design temperature, glass area, and air sealing because those three inputs shift pellet stove recommendations fastest.

💡Sizing Notes

When to size up

Choose more hopper and blower reserve when the stove sits in a basement, on a perimeter wall, or below a vaulted room. Delivery losses can matter almost as much as raw BTU output.

When to stay smaller

A tighter envelope can use a smaller stove if the heating goal is only supplemental or shoulder season support. Oversizing often leads to short cycling and more frequent cleaning.

Find the right size for pellet stove matters for well warm the house. Everything comes down to BTUs or British thermal units, that shows how much heat the stove can discharge. Pellet stoves usually have efficiency of 75 until 90 percent and produce at least 40,000 BTUs.

You choose the physical size according to the heat making skill and the use.

How to Choose the Right Size Pellet Stove

The most many pellet stoves have rating between 8,000 and 90,000 BTUs per hour. Here a rough guide: small model until 20,000 BTUs work for small, open plan home or big room. Medium range of 20,000 until 60,000 BTUs.

Rule thumb say that 60,000 BTUs are enough for 2,000 square foot home, while 42,000 BTUs heat 1,300 square foot space. Even a 50,000 BTU unit can easily cover 2,700 square feet.

Well choose the size needs because too little pellet stove will not heat the space quite a lot. That leads to compensate by means of higher work, consuming more pellets than big stove working below. More easily lower the temperature than discharge maximum heat.

Hence commonly well choose a bit bigger than needed.

For precise calculation of 500 until 3,000 square foot home, use pellet stove size calculator. Whether home little or big, it eases the sizing. For right size pellet stove, helps expert store.

It considers many factors for the best model. For instance, the Ecoteck Francesca is small European style stove that gives 8,500 BTUs on low. Its dimensions are 37 inches high 18 inches wide and 18 inches deep.

Maximum it burns until 30 hours on low.

Pellet Stove Size Calculator

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