BTU Load for 2,500 sq ft — Climate Zone 2 (Hot-Humid)
How This Was Calculated
Simplified Manual J methodology. Cooling: 2500 sqft × 32 BTU/sqft (zone 2) × 1.0 (average insulation) × 1.0 (8 ft ceiling) × 1.0 (15% windows).
- sqft
- Conditioned area: 2,500 sq ft
- zone_multiplier
- Zone 2 cooling factor: 32 BTU/sqft
- insulation_factor
- Insulation adjustment: 1.0 (average)
- Q_cool
- Cooling load: 80,000 BTU/hr
Important Considerations
This estimate uses simplified multipliers based on ACCA Manual J methodology. For equipment selection, a full Manual J room-by-room calculation is strongly recommended and required by code (ACCA Standard 5, IRC Section M1401) in many jurisdictions. Manual J accounts for: actual window area, orientation, and SHGC; wall and ceiling R-values; infiltration; duct location; internal gains; and local design temperatures. Automated Manual J software (WrightSoft, RHVAC, CoolCalc) produces code-compliant reports for a few hundred dollars — a worthwhile investment before a $5,000–$15,000 equipment purchase.
Zone 2 (Houston, Tampa, Phoenix) requires high cooling capacity with long run times. In humid cities (Houston, Tampa), latent dehumidification is a major factor. In dry cities (Phoenix), sensible cooling dominates and evaporative cooling may be viable as a supplement. SEER2 ratings of 15+ are recommended for efficiency. Minimal heating load — heat strips or heat pump suffice for most applications.
Total cooling load = sensible load (temperature) + latent load (humidity removal). In humid climates (zones 1–3 humid, coastal zones 4), latent load can be 30–50% of total cooling load. Standard SEER ratings are measured at fixed conditions that may not reflect latent performance. For homes with humidity complaints, look for equipment with enhanced dehumidification modes, variable-speed compressors (better part-load latent removal), or dedicated whole-house dehumidifiers. Target indoor relative humidity of 40–50% for comfort and mold prevention.
Heating and cooling load estimates use a simplified methodology based on ACCA Manual J (Residential Load Calculation, 8th Edition) with climate zone multipliers from IECC 2021. For accurate sizing, a full Manual J calculation using room-by-room analysis is recommended per ACCA Standard 5 (HVAC Quality Installation Specification).