Appliances · Updated May 2026

Clothes dryer electricity cost in 2026: electric vs gas vs heat pump.

The clothes dryer is the third-largest residential electricity load after HVAC and water heating — typically 5-8% of an annual bill. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive way to dry clothes is roughly $100/yr. Here are the four real choices and when each pays back.

TL;DR: At US-average rates, 260 cycles/yr: electric resistance dryer = $138/yr, gas dryer = $85/yr, heat pump dryer = $45/yr. Hanging clothes outside = $0. Heat pump dryer is the cleanest electric upgrade if you've already cut gas elsewhere.

Annual cost — 260 cycles, US averages

Dryer type Energy per cycle Cost per cycle $/yr · 260 cycles
Electric resistance (vented)3.0 kWh$0.53$138
Gas (vented)0.22 therm + 0.5 kWh$0.33$85
Heat pump (ventless, condensing)1.0-1.2 kWh$0.17-$0.21$45-$55
Compact condenser (no heat pump)2.4 kWh$0.42$109
Worked example · reproduce it in the calculator

A typical household: 5 loads a week

Inputs: a household doing 5 loads/week (5 × 52 = 260 cycles/yr, the US average) at the 2026 US-average rate of $0.175/kWh. Formula: loads/week × 52 × kWh/load × $/kWh.

Electric resistance — 5 × 52 × 3.0 kWh × $0.175$136.50 / yr
Gas — 5 × 52 × $0.33/cycle (0.22 therm + 0.5 kWh)$85.80 / yr
Heat pump — 5 × 52 × 1.1 kWh × $0.175$50.05 / yr
Saved by going resistance → heat pump$86.45 / yr
Payback: a heat pump dryer runs about $500 more than a resistance unit at the midpoint ($1,500 vs $1,000). At $86 saved per year that's a ~5.8-year payback on electricity alone — but if your old dryer just died and you're buying anyway, you only compare the $500 premium, so the upgrade essentially pays for itself in lower bills.

Different rate or load count? Drop your own kWh-per-cycle and price into the electricity cost calculator for your exact number.

Why heat pump dryers will eat this category

A heat pump dryer recirculates the same warm air, using a heat exchanger to wring out moisture rather than venting hot air outdoors. Two consequences:

Payback math: $138 − $45 = $93/yr saved. On a $500 premium ($1,500 heat pump vs $1,000 resistance, midpoints), that's about a 5.4-year payback on electricity alone. If you're replacing a 12-year-old broken resistance dryer anyway, the premium is the only number that matters and the math is essentially a "free upgrade".

Ways to cut dryer cost without replacing

  1. Clean the lint filter every load + the duct annually. Lint-clogged ducts add 15-30% to drying time.
  2. Use moisture sensing, not timed cycles. 95% of modern dryers sense — turn it on if you've been using timed.
  3. Skip dryer balls and "wrinkle release" settings. Marketing line items; energy waste.
  4. Air-dry heavier items (jeans, towels) and finish in dryer for 10 min. Cuts dryer time by 40%.
  5. Avoid running with 2 items. The drum heats regardless of load — fill it 75% full.

Is a heat pump dryer worth it for you?

Go heat pump if…

  • Your old dryer just died — you compare only the ~$500 premium, not the full price.
  • You run 5+ loads a week, so the ~$86/yr saving actually adds up.
  • You have no exterior vent (apartment, second floor, interior laundry) — ventless installs anywhere with an outlet.
  • You're electrifying the whole home and want to drop the gas line.

Stick with electric resistance (or gas) if…

  • Your current dryer still works — paying $1,500 to save $86/yr is a ~6-year payback you don't need to start.
  • You dry only a couple of loads a week — the saving shrinks below ~$40/yr.
  • You want the fastest cycle — heat pump runs ~90 min vs ~50 min for resistance.
  • You already have cheap gas and a vented gas dryer at $86/yr — close to heat pump running cost without the upfront jump.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to run a clothes dryer?

Electric resistance: $138/yr at US-average rates (260 cycles). Gas: $85. Heat pump: $45-$55.

Are heat pump dryers worth the higher price?

5-6 year payback on electricity alone if you'd be buying a dryer anyway. Worth it for new construction or whole-home electrification.

Is a clothesline really $140/yr cheaper than a dryer?

Yes for an electric household. The trade-off is the labor of hanging + taking down.

Sources: ENERGY STAR dryer database (May 2026), DOE Appliance Energy Use Survey 2024, EIA fuel prices Feb 2026, Consumer Reports dryer testing 2025. Last reviewed May 12, 2026.