NOAA 1991-2020 Climate Normals
AC & Heating Cost Factors for Salt Lake City, UT
Real climate and electricity-rate data for Salt Lake City, UT — the inputs that actually drive your cooling and heating costs, not a generic national estimate.
Get HVAC Quotes1,301
Cooling degree-days
Summed across the year, not a day count
4,967
Heating degree-days
Summed across the year, not a day count
39
Days ≥ 90°F
Per year, average
13.29¢
Electricity rate
UT residential, 2026-04
What this means if you live in Salt Lake City: your cooling load is about middle-of-the-pack (#17 of 20 we track) — about 40% below the average across the metros we track. In practice, that means your AC isn't just running on the hottest afternoons — in a city this hot, it's cycling on and off for a large share of the year, so total runtime hours (not just peak temperature) are what drive your bill up. Heating demand here is the opposite story — about middle-of-the-pack (#4 of 20 we track), about 58% above the average. Heating still accounts for a meaningful share of your annual HVAC cost here. That imbalance is exactly why a system sized and rated for Salt Lake City, UT's specific climate — not a generic national spec — matters more here than in a milder city: an undersized or lower-efficiency AC unit gets exposed fast under this much cumulative runtime, and a contractor unfamiliar with how extreme the local cooling season is can easily under-spec the job.
What's a "degree-day," exactly?
It's not a count of days — it's a cumulative unit. Every day, take how many degrees the average temperature sat above 65°F, then add that number up across all 365 days of the year. A 95°F day contributes 30 (95 − 65); a mild 68°F day contributes just 3. Add that arithmetic up across a full year and you get a number much bigger than 365 — it's tracking total heat load over time, not elapsed days. It's the actual measure HVAC engineers and utilities use to size systems and predict bills, because it captures both how hot it gets and how long it stays hot, which a single "average temperature" figure can't separate.
Degree-day and extreme-temperature data: NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, 1991-2020 U.S. Climate Normals, station GHCND:USC00427606. Electricity rate: U.S. Energy Information Administration, state-level residential average. Comparison figures are computed across the 20 metros ClearPick currently tracks, not a national survey. An exact annual dollar cost depends on your home's size, insulation, and system efficiency — get a contractor quote for a number specific to your house.
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