Heat Loss / Gain Calculations for Construction

Advanced construction calculator for heat loss and cooling gain. Compare surfaces, airflow, solar, and occupancy. Plan efficient spaces using clearer thermal performance insights today.

Build a practical heating-loss and cooling-gain estimate using envelope conduction, infiltration, glazing solar gains, lighting, equipment, occupancy, and a design safety factor.

Calculator inputs

The page uses one main column. Input fields switch to 3, 2, and 1 columns by screen size.

Reset defaults
Used in the report heading and downloads.
Also used for lighting and equipment gains.
Volume = floor area × height.
Typical occupied winter setpoint.
Use your winter design outdoor condition.
Typical occupied summer setpoint.
Use your summer design outdoor condition.
Net opaque wall area works best.
Lower values indicate better insulation.
Enter the area exposed to outdoor conditions.
Used in conductive transfer calculations.
Use the portion with significant temperature difference.
Include slab or suspended floor performance.
Total glazed area facing load conditions.
Used for conductive heating and cooling loads.
Include exterior doors only.
Used in door conduction calculations.
Air changes per hour during heating analysis.
Air changes per hour during cooling analysis.
Defaults suit standard design conditions.
Used in infiltration heat transfer.
Applied to cooling solar gain through glazing.
Use a value between 0 and 1.
Accounts for orientation, shading, and exposure.
Used in internal sensible gains.
Office-type values often range around 70–80 W.
Included as internal heat gain.
Use plug loads, process loads, or office devices.
Optional winter solar benefit offset.
Applied to final heating and cooling design loads.

Example data table

Input item Example value Unit Notes
Floor area180Used for volume and internal loads.
Ceiling height3.1mVolume becomes 558 m³.
Wall U-value0.42W/m²·KInsulated wall assembly.
Window SHGC0.52-Controls solar admission through glazing.
Heating ACH0.70ACHWinter infiltration estimate.
Cooling ACH0.90ACHSummer infiltration estimate.
Lighting density8W/m²Internal sensible gain.
Safety factor10%Applied at the end.

Formula used

Envelope conduction:
Q = U × A × ΔT

Each surface load equals the assembly U-value multiplied by exposed area and the design temperature difference. This is used for walls, roof, floor, windows, and doors.

Infiltration sensible load:
Q = ρ × Cp × (ACH × Volume / 3600) × ΔT

Air density, specific heat, volume, and air change rate define the sensible heating or cooling effect from outside air leakage.

Solar window gain:
Q = Window Area × Solar Irradiance × SHGC × Exposure Factor

This captures solar heat entering through glazing during cooling design conditions.

Internal gains:
Q = (Lighting W/m² × Floor Area) + (Equipment W/m² × Floor Area) + (People × W/person)

Internal loads are added to cooling gain and treated as offsets against heating demand.

Final design loads:
Heating Design = max(Gross Heating Loss − Offsets, 0) × (1 + Safety Factor)
Cooling Design = Gross Cooling Gain × (1 + Safety Factor)

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter your project name and floor geometry.
  2. Provide winter and summer indoor and outdoor design temperatures.
  3. Add exposed areas and U-values for each main envelope element.
  4. Set infiltration rates for heating and cooling using ACH values.
  5. Fill in glazing solar inputs, occupancy, lighting, and equipment loads.
  6. Optionally enter a winter solar offset and a design safety factor.
  7. Press the calculate button to show results below the header and above the form.
  8. Review the summary cards, breakdown table, and Plotly chart.
  9. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the output.

Frequently asked questions

1) What does this calculator estimate?

It estimates sensible heating loss and cooling gain for a building zone or small project area. It combines conductive envelope transfer, infiltration, internal gains, glazing solar gain, and a final safety factor.

2) Can I use this for early-stage sizing?

Yes. It works well for concept design, budget studies, and quick comparisons between insulation levels or glazing choices. Final equipment selection should still be checked against a full mechanical design method.

3) Why are there separate heating and cooling temperatures?

Winter and summer design conditions are usually different. Separate inputs let you calculate heat loss in one scenario and heat gain in another, using more realistic peak design assumptions.

4) Why do internal gains reduce heating demand?

People, lighting, and equipment release sensible heat into the occupied space. That heat helps offset winter losses, so the net heating load can be lower than the gross envelope loss.

5) What is a reasonable ACH value?

That depends on envelope tightness, entrance traffic, and construction quality. Tighter buildings may sit near 0.3 to 0.5 ACH, while leakier or frequently opened spaces can be much higher.

6) What is SHGC?

SHGC means solar heat gain coefficient. It represents the fraction of incident solar energy transmitted through glazing into the space. Lower values generally reduce cooling loads.

7) Should I include a safety factor?

A modest safety factor can cover modeling uncertainty, small load omissions, and operating variations. Oversizing too much can still create inefficiency, so use it carefully rather than automatically choosing a large number.

8) Is this enough for code compliance documentation?

Usually no. Compliance submissions often require approved procedures, local climate data, detailed assemblies, ventilation schedules, and equipment assumptions. This page is best treated as an engineering support tool.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.