How to Size a Tankless Water Heater: The Complete GPM & BTU Guide
Table of Contents
- Why Sizing Matters
- The Three Sizing Factors
- Step 1: Calculate Flow Rate (GPM)
- Step 2: Determine Temperature Rise
- Step 3: Calculate BTU Requirements
- Climate Zone Adjustments
- Gas vs Electric Sizing Differences
- Common Sizing Mistakes
- Real-World Sizing Examples
- Quick Reference Sizing Charts
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Sizing Matters: The $3,000 Mistake You Can Avoid
Sizing a tankless water heater incorrectly is one of the most expensive mistakes in home improvement. Buy too small, and you'll suffer through lukewarm showers when two people need hot water simultaneously. Your unit will run at maximum capacity constantly, shortening its lifespan and voiding warranties due to overwork. You'll spend $2,500+ on installation only to discover the system can't meet your household's actual needs.
Buy too large, and you're wasting money on unused capacity, oversized gas lines or electrical service upgrades you didn't need, and potentially more complex venting. While modern units modulate down efficiently, extreme oversizing (50%+ beyond your need) can cause short-cycling and efficiency losses.
The good news: sizing a tankless water heater correctly is straightforward when you understand three core factors. This guide walks you through the exact process HVAC contractors use, with real-world examples, climate adjustment tables, and sizing charts for every scenario.
By the end of this article, you'll know exactly what GPM (gallons per minute) and BTU rating you need, how to adjust for your climate zone, and how to verify your calculations. Let's start with the fundamentals.
The Three Critical Sizing Factors
Tankless water heater sizing comes down to three measurable factors:
1. Flow Rate (GPM - Gallons Per Minute)
Flow rate is the amount of hot water your household uses simultaneously during peak demand. A shower uses 2.0-2.5 GPM. A dishwasher uses 1.0-1.5 GPM. A bathroom sink uses 0.5-1.0 GPM. Add up everything that might run at the same time during your morning rush hour, and that's your minimum GPM requirement.
This is the single most important number in tankless sizing. Get GPM wrong, and nothing else matters.
2. Temperature Rise (°F)
Temperature rise is the difference between incoming cold water (inlet) and your desired hot water temperature (outlet). If your winter groundwater enters at 45°F and you want 110°F at the tap, you need a 65°F temperature rise. This number varies dramatically by geography - Florida homes might need only a 40°F rise, while Minnesota homes need 70°F in January.
Temperature rise directly affects how much GPM your unit can deliver. Every tankless water heater produces different GPM at different temperature rises. A unit rated for 10 GPM at 35°F rise might deliver only 5 GPM at 70°F rise.
3. BTU or kW Input (Energy)
BTU (British Thermal Units) measures how much energy the unit can deliver to heat water. For gas units, this ranges from 140,000 to 199,900 BTU for whole-house models. For electric units, power is measured in kilowatts (kW) - a 36 kW electric unit provides roughly 123,000 BTU equivalent.
The formula connecting all three factors is:
BTU = GPM × Temperature Rise (°F) × 8.33 × 60
Where 8.33 is the weight of one gallon of water in pounds, and 60 converts minutes to hours. This formula is how manufacturers rate their units, and it's how you'll verify your sizing calculations.
Step 1: Calculate Your Required Flow Rate (GPM)
Start by mapping your household's peak hot water demand. This isn't about what's theoretically possible (every fixture running at once) - it's about realistic simultaneous usage during your busiest times.
Standard Fixture Flow Rates
| Fixture | Typical Flow Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shower (standard) | 2.0 - 2.5 GPM | Modern low-flow heads: 1.5-2.0 GPM |
| Bathtub (filling) | 4.0 - 6.0 GPM | Rarely simultaneous with other fixtures |
| Bathroom sink | 0.5 - 1.0 GPM | Aerators reduce flow; actual usage often under 0.5 |
| Kitchen sink | 1.5 - 2.0 GPM | Higher for pot-filling, lower for hand-washing |
| Dishwasher | 1.0 - 1.5 GPM | Modern efficient models: 1.0 GPM |
| Clothes washer | 1.5 - 2.0 GPM | Hot water cycle only; many use cold |
| Utility sink | 1.5 - 2.0 GPM | Garage/basement sinks |
How to Calculate Your Peak GPM
Example 1: Typical Family of 4
Morning rush hour scenario: two teenagers showering simultaneously, one parent at the kitchen sink, dishwasher running from last night.
- 2 showers × 2.0 GPM = 4.0 GPM
- 1 kitchen sink × 1.5 GPM = 1.5 GPM
- 1 dishwasher × 1.0 GPM = 1.0 GPM
- Total peak demand: 6.5 GPM
Add 10-20% buffer for safety: 7.2 - 7.8 GPM required
Example 2: Large Household, Cold Climate
Family of 6 in Minnesota - three bathrooms, two showers running, one tub filling for young kids, kitchen sink in use.
- 2 showers × 2.5 GPM = 5.0 GPM
- 1 bathtub × 5.0 GPM = 5.0 GPM
- 1 kitchen sink × 1.5 GPM = 1.5 GPM
- Total peak demand: 11.5 GPM
In cold climates, temperature rise limitations reduce effective GPM. Add 20-30% buffer: 13.8 - 15.0 GPM required
This scenario requires two cascaded tankless units or reconsidering whether tankless is the right solution.
The 80% Rule for Realistic Sizing
Don't size for every fixture running simultaneously unless that's truly your household pattern. Most homes never exceed 70-80% of theoretical maximum demand. A home with 4 bathrooms doesn't run 4 showers simultaneously every day.
That said, if you have teenagers, guests frequently, or multi-generational living, size for your actual observed peak - not what seems reasonable to an outsider.
Step 2: Determine Your Required Temperature Rise
Temperature rise is the difference between your incoming cold water temperature and your desired outlet temperature. This varies dramatically by geography and season.
Finding Your Inlet (Groundwater) Temperature
Your groundwater temperature depends on your location. The USGS maintains groundwater temperature maps, or check with your local water utility. Here are typical ranges by region:
| Region | Winter Low | Summer High | Use for Sizing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alaska / Far North | 35-40°F | 45-50°F | 40°F |
| Northern States (MN, WI, MI, NY, ME) | 40-45°F | 55-60°F | 45°F |
| Midwest / Great Plains | 45-50°F | 60-65°F | 50°F |
| Mid-Atlantic (PA, MD, VA) | 50-55°F | 65-70°F | 55°F |
| Pacific Northwest (WA, OR) | 50-55°F | 55-60°F | 52°F |
| Southern States (TN, NC, SC, OK, AR) | 55-60°F | 70-75°F | 58°F |
| Deep South (GA, AL, MS, LA) | 60-65°F | 75-78°F | 62°F |
| Florida / Gulf Coast | 65-70°F | 78-82°F | 68°F |
| Southwest Desert (AZ, NV, NM) | 58-62°F | 75-80°F | 60°F |
| California (coastal) | 55-60°F | 65-70°F | 58°F |
DIY Method: Run your cold water tap for 2-3 minutes (to clear warmed water from pipes), then measure with a thermometer. Do this in January or February for the most conservative sizing number.
Determining Your Outlet Temperature
Most households set their hot water heater to deliver 110-120°F at the fixture. The EPA recommends 120°F as a balance between comfort, energy efficiency, and scalding prevention. Some scenarios require higher temperatures:
- 110°F: Comfortable showers, low scalding risk, sufficient for most uses
- 120°F: EPA recommended standard - adequate for dishwashers and laundry
- 140°F: Required for some commercial dishwashers and sanitizing needs (hospitals, restaurants)
For residential sizing, use 120°F as your outlet target unless you have specific higher-temperature requirements.
Calculating Temperature Rise
Temperature Rise = Outlet Temp - Inlet Temp
Example: Minneapolis in Winter
- Inlet temperature: 42°F (winter groundwater)
- Desired outlet: 120°F
- Temperature rise: 78°F
Example: Atlanta in Winter
- Inlet temperature: 58°F (winter groundwater)
- Desired outlet: 120°F
- Temperature rise: 62°F
Example: Miami Year-Round
- Inlet temperature: 72°F (consistent groundwater)
- Desired outlet: 120°F
- Temperature rise: 48°F
Why Temperature Rise Matters for GPM
Here's the critical insight most buyers miss: a tankless water heater's GPM rating drops as temperature rise increases.
A unit advertised as "10 GPM" is rated at a specific temperature rise - usually 35°F or 45°F. That same unit might only deliver 6 GPM at a 70°F rise. Always check the manufacturer's GPM chart across multiple temperature rises.
This is why cold-climate homeowners need to size up 20-30% compared to mild climates, even with identical household size and fixture counts.
Step 3: Calculate Required BTU (or kW for Electric)
Now that you know your required GPM and temperature rise, you can calculate the energy (BTU or kW) your tankless unit must deliver.
The BTU Calculation Formula
BTU/hr = GPM × Temperature Rise (°F) × 8.33 × 60
Where:
- GPM = Your required flow rate from Step 1
- Temperature Rise = Your calculated rise from Step 2
- 8.33 = Weight of one gallon of water in pounds
- 60 = Converts per-minute to per-hour
Example Calculations
Example 1: Family of 4, Moderate Climate
- Required GPM: 7.5
- Temperature rise: 60°F (inlet 60°F → outlet 120°F)
- BTU = 7.5 × 60 × 8.33 × 60
- BTU = 224,910 BTU/hr
Recommendation: A high-capacity gas condensing unit rated at 199,000 BTU will work, but will run near maximum continuously. Consider a 199,900 BTU unit (Navien NPE-240A2, Noritz EZ111) or accept slightly reduced flow during peak demand.
Example 2: Small Home, Warm Climate
- Required GPM: 5.0
- Temperature rise: 48°F (inlet 72°F → outlet 120°F)
- BTU = 5.0 × 48 × 8.33 × 60
- BTU = 119,952 BTU/hr
Recommendation: Any mid-range gas unit (Rinnai RU180iN at 180,000 BTU) easily covers this. For electric, a 36 kW unit (123,000 BTU equivalent) works perfectly.
Example 3: Large Home, Cold Climate
- Required GPM: 10.0
- Temperature rise: 75°F (inlet 45°F → outlet 120°F)
- BTU = 10.0 × 75 × 8.33 × 60
- BTU = 374,850 BTU/hr
Recommendation: A single residential tankless unit cannot meet this demand. Options: (1) Install two units in cascade, (2) Install a commercial-grade unit, (3) Reduce simultaneous demand through behavior changes or scheduling, (4) Reconsider whether tankless is the right technology - a large well-insulated tank might be more practical.
Converting BTU to kW (Electric Units)
If you're sizing an electric tankless water heater, use this conversion:
kW = BTU ÷ 3,412
Example: 119,952 BTU ÷ 3,412 = 35.15 kW required
A 36 kW electric unit (Stiebel Eltron Tempra 36 Plus) would cover this demand.
Understanding Efficiency Ratings (UEF)
The formulas above assume 100% efficiency, but no water heater is perfectly efficient. Modern condensing gas units achieve 0.93-0.97 UEF (Uniform Energy Factor). Non-condensing gas units run 0.80-0.85 UEF. Electric units are 0.98-0.99 UEF because resistive heating is nearly 100% efficient.
In practice, buy a unit rated for the BTU you calculated. Manufacturers already account for efficiency losses in their GPM ratings. You don't need to adjust your calculations for efficiency when matching to a unit's published specs.
Climate Zone Adjustments: Why Location Changes Everything
Climate doesn't just affect temperature rise - it fundamentally changes how tankless water heaters perform. A unit that works beautifully in Phoenix will struggle in Minneapolis, even if both homes have identical GPM needs on paper.
How Temperature Rise Impacts GPM Output
Manufacturers publish GPM ratings at multiple temperature rises. Here's a real example from the Rinnai RU199iN spec sheet:
| Temperature Rise | Actual GPM Delivered | % of Maximum |
|---|---|---|
| 35°F rise | 11.1 GPM | 100% |
| 45°F rise | 8.6 GPM | 77% |
| 55°F rise | 7.0 GPM | 63% |
| 65°F rise | 5.9 GPM | 53% |
| 75°F rise | 5.1 GPM | 46% |
Notice that at a 75°F rise (common in northern winters), this "11 GPM" unit delivers only 5.1 GPM - less than half its advertised rating. This isn't deceptive marketing; it's physics. The unit has a fixed BTU input, and higher temperature rises consume more energy per gallon.
Climate-Based Sizing Multipliers
Use these rules of thumb when sizing based on climate:
- Warm climates (Florida, Gulf Coast, Southern California): Size for calculated GPM with 10% buffer
- Moderate climates (Mid-Atlantic, Pacific Northwest, most of California): Size for calculated GPM with 15-20% buffer
- Cold climates (Northern states, Great Plains, Mountain states): Size for calculated GPM with 25-30% buffer, or check manufacturer GPM charts at 70-80°F rise
- Extreme cold (Alaska, far northern tier): Size for calculated GPM with 40-50% buffer, or plan for two cascaded units
Seasonal Variation Strategy
Some homeowners in variable climates choose to size for summer comfort and accept slight flow reduction during January-February peaks. This works if:
- You can schedule hot water use (avoid simultaneous showers during coldest weeks)
- Your household is flexible and doesn't have rigid morning routines
- You're willing to trade occasional inconvenience for $500-$1,000 lower upfront cost
This strategy doesn't work for families with teenagers, households with inflexible schedules, or homes where hot water frustration creates family conflict.
Gas vs Electric Sizing: Different Constraints, Different Approaches
Gas and electric tankless water heaters face fundamentally different sizing limitations.
Gas Tankless Sizing Constraints
Advantage: High BTU capacity (140,000-199,900 BTU residential units) delivers 9-11 GPM at moderate temperature rises. This covers whole-house demand for most families.
Constraints:
- Gas line capacity: A 199,000 BTU unit pulls 4× the gas of a standard tank heater. Your existing 1/2" gas line may need upgrading to 3/4" or even 1" ($300-$800).
- Venting: Condensing units require PVC vent runs ($150-$400). Non-condensing require expensive stainless steel venting ($400-$800) or compatible chimney flues.
- Outdoor clearances: Check local codes for vent termination distance from windows, doors, and property lines.
Electric Tankless Sizing Constraints
Advantage: No venting needed. Compact wall-mount. 0.99 UEF efficiency (nearly perfect). Simpler installation if electrical capacity exists.
Constraints:
- Lower GPM: Even a 36 kW unit (the largest practical for residential) delivers only ~7 GPM at 50°F rise. At 70°F rise, this drops to ~5 GPM - covering one shower, not two.
- Electrical service: 36 kW requires 150A at 240V (two 60A breakers or one 80A depending on model). Many older homes have only 100A service and need panel upgrades ($1,500-$3,000).
- Wire sizing: 150A loads require 1/0 or 2/0 gauge wire from panel to unit. Long runs get expensive.
When Electric Makes Sense Despite Lower GPM
Electric tankless is the right choice when:
- No gas service is available and extending gas lines isn't economical
- You're in a warm climate (groundwater 65°F+) where electric delivers 6+ GPM comfortably
- You have a small household (1-2 people) with minimal simultaneous demand
- Venting restrictions make gas impossible (interior condo units)
- Local electricity is cheap (hydropower regions like Pacific Northwest)
Cascade Systems for Higher Capacity
For demands exceeding a single unit's capacity, both gas and electric units can be cascaded (plumbed in parallel). Two Rinnai RU199iN units linked together deliver 22 GPM - enough for commercial applications or very large homes.
Cascade installation costs are high ($4,000-$7,000 total), but deliver unlimited hot water capacity. This is common in:
- Luxury homes with 5+ bathrooms
- Multi-generational households
- Bed and breakfast operations
- Small commercial facilities (salons, restaurants)
Common Sizing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Using Advertised GPM Without Checking Temperature Rise
The Problem: A buyer in Montana sees "10 GPM" on the spec sheet and assumes that's what they'll get in January. In reality, their 75°F temperature rise drops output to 5 GPM.
The Fix: Always check the manufacturer's GPM chart at YOUR required temperature rise. Don't rely on the headline number.
Mistake 2: Sizing for Average Demand Instead of Peak
The Problem: Calculating that the household uses 60 gallons per day and sizing for that average. Tankless units must meet instantaneous peak demand, not daily averages.
The Fix: Size for your worst-case realistic simultaneous demand - typically weekday mornings or evenings when everyone needs hot water at once.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Future Needs
The Problem: Sizing perfectly for current household of 2, then discovering it's undersized when kids become teenagers, guests visit, or you add a bathroom.
The Fix: Add 15-20% capacity buffer for life changes over the unit's 15-20 year lifespan.
Mistake 4: Forgetting About Appliances
The Problem: Counting showers and sinks but forgetting the dishwasher runs during breakfast cleanup or the washing machine kicks on during morning routines.
The Fix: Map your actual household patterns, not just bathroom fixtures. Walk through your morning and evening routines mentally.
Mistake 5: Assuming Electric and Gas Are Equivalent
The Problem: Seeing a 27 kW electric unit and assuming it matches a 9 GPM gas unit because the pricing is similar.
The Fix: Check actual GPM output at YOUR temperature rise. 27 kW delivers only 3-4 GPM at 70°F rise - fine for warm climates, disastrous for cold.
Mistake 6: Over-Optimizing for Edge Cases
The Problem: Sizing for the scenario where all 4 bathrooms, both kitchen sinks, the dishwasher, and washing machine run simultaneously - something that happens once per year.
The Fix: Size for realistic 95th-percentile demand, not theoretical maximum. If that extreme scenario happens once, someone waits 5 minutes. Don't spend an extra $2,000 on capacity you'll use twice a year.
Real-World Sizing Examples
Scenario 1: Young Couple, Condo, Pacific Northwest
Household: 2 people, 1 bathroom, no gas service, groundwater 52°F winter
Peak Demand:
- 1 shower: 2.0 GPM
- 1 bathroom sink: 0.5 GPM
- Total: 2.5 GPM
Temperature Rise: 120°F - 52°F = 68°F
BTU Required: 2.5 × 68 × 8.33 × 60 = 84,966 BTU
Recommendation: Stiebel Eltron Tempra 24 Plus (24 kW / 82,000 BTU) or Tempra 29 Plus (29 kW / 99,000 BTU) for comfort buffer. Electric makes sense here due to no gas service and low GPM needs.
Scenario 2: Family of 4, Suburban Home, Texas
Household: 2 adults + 2 kids, 3 bathrooms, gas available, groundwater 65°F winter
Peak Demand:
- 2 showers: 4.0 GPM
- 1 bathroom sink: 0.5 GPM
- 1 dishwasher: 1.0 GPM
- Total: 5.5 GPM
Temperature Rise: 120°F - 65°F = 55°F
BTU Required: 5.5 × 55 × 8.33 × 60 = 151,239 BTU
Recommendation: Rinnai RU180iN (180,000 BTU, 10 GPM capacity). At 55°F rise, this unit delivers 7+ GPM - comfortable margin. The warm climate and moderate rise make this an easy sizing scenario. See our best tankless water heater guide for detailed reviews.
Scenario 3: Large Family, Minnesota, 4 Bathrooms
Household: 6 people, 4 bathrooms, gas available, groundwater 42°F January
Peak Demand:
- 3 showers: 6.0 GPM (teenagers + parents)
- 1 kitchen sink: 1.5 GPM
- 1 dishwasher: 1.0 GPM
- Total: 8.5 GPM
Temperature Rise: 120°F - 42°F = 78°F
BTU Required: 8.5 × 78 × 8.33 × 60 = 332,838 BTU
Challenge: No single residential unit can deliver this. The Navien NPE-240A2 (199,900 BTU) delivers only 5.5 GPM at 75°F rise.
Recommendation Options:
- Option A: Two Rinnai RU180iN units in cascade ($4,500-$6,000 total installed) - delivers 10+ GPM at 78°F rise
- Option B: Single Rinnai RU199iN + behavior management - schedule showers to avoid 3 simultaneous, accept 5-6 GPM during peak ($2,800-$4,200 installed)
- Option C: Reconsider tankless - a large 80-gallon high-efficiency tank heater might be more practical and cost-effective for this scenario
Scenario 4: Retirement Couple, Florida, Minimal Demand
Household: 2 people, 2 bathrooms (rarely used simultaneously), groundwater 72°F
Peak Demand:
- 1 shower: 2.0 GPM
- 1 kitchen sink: 1.5 GPM
- Total: 3.5 GPM
Temperature Rise: 120°F - 72°F = 48°F
BTU Required: 3.5 × 48 × 8.33 × 60 = 83,664 BTU
Recommendation: EcoSmart ECO 27 (27 kW electric, ~$300). At 48°F rise in warm Florida climate, this unit delivers 6+ GPM - massive overkill for 3.5 GPM needs, but the price point and lifetime warranty make it the smart value play. No gas infrastructure needed.
Quick Reference Sizing Charts
GPM by Household Size and Climate
| Household Size | Bathrooms | Warm Climate GPM | Moderate Climate GPM | Cold Climate GPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-2 people | 1 | 3-4 GPM | 4-5 GPM | 5-6 GPM |
| 2-3 people | 1-2 | 4-6 GPM | 5-7 GPM | 7-9 GPM |
| 3-4 people | 2 | 5-7 GPM | 7-9 GPM | 9-11 GPM |
| 4-5 people | 2-3 | 7-9 GPM | 8-10 GPM | 10-12 GPM |
| 5+ people | 3-4 | 9-11 GPM | 10-13 GPM | 13-16 GPM* |
* 13+ GPM in cold climates typically requires two cascaded units
Recommended Units by Calculated BTU
| Your BTU Requirement | Gas Recommendation | Electric Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Under 100,000 BTU | Consider point-of-use units or stick with tank | EcoSmart ECO 27 (27 kW) |
| 100,000 - 150,000 BTU | Rinnai RU180iN or Rheem RTGH-95DVLN | Stiebel Eltron Tempra 36 Plus (36 kW) |
| 150,000 - 200,000 BTU | Rinnai RU199iN or Navien NPE-240A2 | Electric insufficient - use gas |
| 200,000 - 300,000 BTU | Navien NPE-240A2 (stretching capacity) or cascade two units | Not viable - use gas |
| Over 300,000 BTU | Two cascaded units or commercial unit | Not viable - use gas |
Frequently Asked Questions
What size tankless water heater do I need for a family of 4?
A family of 4 typically needs 7-9 GPM in moderate climates. Calculate peak demand by adding up simultaneous fixtures: two showers (2.0 GPM each) plus a dishwasher (1.0 GPM) equals 5 GPM minimum. Add 20-30% buffer for temperature rise limitations and future flexibility. In cold climates, increase to 9-10 GPM to compensate for lower inlet temperatures.
How do I calculate the GPM I need for my tankless water heater?
List all fixtures that might run simultaneously during peak usage (morning shower rush). Assign flow rates: showers (2.0-2.5 GPM), bathroom sinks (0.5-1.0 GPM), kitchen sinks (1.5-2.0 GPM), dishwashers (1.0-1.5 GPM), washing machines (1.5-2.0 GPM). Add them up. That's your minimum GPM. Add 10-20% buffer for safety.
What is temperature rise and why does it matter?
Temperature rise is the difference between your incoming cold water temperature (inlet) and your desired hot water temperature (outlet). The formula is: Temperature Rise = Outlet Temp - Inlet Temp. A home in Minnesota with 40°F winter groundwater needing 110°F hot water requires a 70°F rise. The same home in Florida with 70°F groundwater needs only a 40°F rise. Higher temperature rise requires more energy (BTU) and reduces available GPM.
How many BTUs do I need for my tankless water heater?
Use this formula: BTU = GPM × Temperature Rise × 8.33 × 60. For example: 8 GPM × 50°F rise × 8.33 × 60 = 199,920 BTU. Most residential gas tankless units range from 140,000 to 199,900 BTU. For electric, 1 kW equals approximately 3,412 BTU, so a 36 kW electric unit provides about 123,000 BTU equivalent.
Does climate affect tankless water heater sizing?
Yes, significantly. Cold climates have lower inlet water temperatures, which increases temperature rise requirements. A unit rated for 10 GPM at a 35°F rise might only deliver 5-6 GPM at a 70°F rise. Northern states should size up 20-30% compared to mild climates. Check your local average groundwater temperature and use manufacturer GPM charts that show performance across multiple temperature rises.
Can I oversize a tankless water heater?
Yes, but within reason. Modern tankless units modulate down to minimum fire rates (11,000-15,000 BTU for most gas units), so a properly designed unit won't waste much energy when demand is low. However, oversizing by 50%+ increases installation cost, may require larger gas lines or electrical service, and can cause short-cycling in very low-demand scenarios. Size for peak demand plus 10-20% buffer, not worst-case every-fixture-running scenarios.
What is the difference between gas and electric tankless sizing?
Gas tankless units typically deliver 9-11 GPM for whole-house use, powered by 140,000-199,900 BTU burners. Electric tankless units are limited by available electrical power - even a 36 kW unit (the largest practical for residential) delivers only about 7 GPM at a 50°F rise. Electric sizing is constrained by your home's electrical service capacity (most need 150-200 amps). Gas sizing is limited mainly by gas line capacity and venting.
How do I find my groundwater inlet temperature?
Check the USGS groundwater temperature map or your local water utility. General ranges: Florida/Gulf Coast 70-75°F, Southern states 60-70°F, Mid-Atlantic 50-60°F, Northern states 45-55°F, Alaska/far north 35-45°F. For sizing, use the coldest winter temperature, not the annual average. Run your cold water tap for 2 minutes and measure with a thermometer for a DIY estimate.
Conclusion: Get It Right the First Time
Sizing a tankless water heater correctly is the difference between 15-20 years of reliable unlimited hot water and a $3,000+ investment that never quite meets your needs. The process isn't complicated:
- Calculate your peak GPM demand by adding up realistic simultaneous fixture use
- Determine your temperature rise using local groundwater temperature and desired outlet temp
- Calculate required BTU with the formula: GPM × Temp Rise × 8.33 × 60
- Adjust for climate by checking manufacturer GPM charts at your specific temperature rise
- Add 10-20% buffer for future needs and edge cases
If your calculations show you need more than 200,000 BTU or your required temperature rise exceeds 75°F, carefully consider whether a single tankless unit is the right solution. Cascade systems work but double the cost. In extreme cold climates or very high-demand households, a large well-insulated tank heater might be more practical and economical.
For most American homes in moderate climates with 2-4 people and 2-3 bathrooms, the sizing sweet spot is 7-10 GPM - covered beautifully by gas condensing units like the Rinnai RU180iN or Navien NPE-240A2. If you're still unsure which specific unit to buy, check our complete buyer's guide to the best tankless water heaters of 2026.
Take the time to size correctly. Run the numbers twice. Check with your installer that your gas line and electrical service can support your choice. Get this right, and you'll have unlimited hot water for decades. Get it wrong, and you'll wish you had.