Room Volume Calculator for HVAC & Air Quality

📐 Room Volume Calculator

Calculate cubic footage for HVAC sizing, air purifiers, humidifiers & ventilation

Units
Room Shape
Quick Presets
Room Dimensions
Room Type (for ACH)
Please fill in all required dimensions.
✅ Your Room Volume Results
Room Volume
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cu ft
Floor Area
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sq ft
CFM Needed (6 ACH)
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CFM
Min CADR Rating
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CFM (CADR)
📋 Full Application Breakdown
Typical Room Volumes Reference
Small Bedroom
800
cu ft (10x10x8)
Master Bedroom
2,016
cu ft (14x16x9)
Living Room
2,880
cu ft (16x20x9)
Open Plan
7,200
cu ft (24x30x10)

Air Changes Per Hour (ACH) by Room Type

Room TypeMin ACHRecommended ACHNotes
Bedroom44–6Lower for quiet, restful sleep
Living Room66–8Standard general ventilation
Home Office66–8Supports focus & air quality
Basement88–10Higher due to moisture risk
Open Plan / Great Room66–8Large combined space
Studio Apartment66–8Combined living area

Air Purifier CADR Guide by Room Volume

Room Volume (cu ft)Min CADR (CFM)Recommended CADRRoom Type Example
Up to 80053100+Small bedroom
801–1,20080150+Guest bedroom / office
1,201–2,000133200+Standard bedroom
2,001–3,000200300+Master bedroom / living room
3,001–5,000333400+Large living room / basement
5,001–8,000533600+Open plan / great room

Humidifier Output Guide by Room Volume

Room Volume (cu ft)Min Output (gal/day)Recommended OutputNotes
Up to 1,0000.50.5–1.0Small portable unit
1,001–2,0001.01.0–1.5Medium tabletop unit
2,001–3,5001.51.5–2.5Console humidifier
3,501–6,0002.52.5–4.0Large console unit
6,001–10,0004.04.0–6.0Whole-house or large unit
Vaulted Ceilings: For cathedral ceilings, the calculator uses the average of the low wall height and the peak height. This gives you an accurate volume equivalent for equipment sizing without complex geometry.
CADR Formula: The minimum CADR rating for an air purifier is calculated by dividing the room volume (cu ft) by 1.5. For better performance, choose a unit rated 20-30% higher than the minimum.

Room volume is the amount of space inside a room. It shows you how many cubic feet or cubic meters fit in that area. Figuring it out is quite easy and does not require hard math

To find the volume, measure the length, the width and the height of the room (from the floor to the ceiling). Later, multiply those three measures. This way you get the cubic volume.

How to Find Room Volume

If you use feet, the result will be in cubic feet, and if you use meters, it will be in cubic meters.

For instance, if a room measures 20 feet long, 15 feet wide and 8 feet high, the volume is 20 times 15 and later times 8. That equals 2,400 cubic feet. Other sample: a room of 10 x 5 x 9 feet gives 50, and later 50 times 9 equals 450 cubic feet.

Because most rooms have ceilings of 8 feet, measuring the height with a metal tape measure and later finding the length and width works well.

Sometimes you measure first with inches and need to convert that to feet before multiplying. For instance, 363 inches become 30 and one-quarter feet, 232 inches become 19 and a third of feet, and 108 inches become 9 feet. Later you multiply those numebers together.

Many folks already know the square area of their home, which is the sum of length times width of all rooms. Volume simply adds the height measure. A room volume calculator can give the result in cubic feet, yards or meters, all equivalent.

Some programs allow you to enter the dimensions in feet and easily convert them to cubic meters.

Knowing the volume of a room is important for more than just the size of the space. For ventilation, a good rule is to have about one square inch of air vent for every 25 cubic feet of volume. That helps the air flow properly.

Volume also matters for acoustics, but the ratios between the dimensions are also important. The smaller the room, the more important it is to have dimensions that are not simple multiples of each other. Many acousticians and designers say that the minimum volume for good acoustics is around 47 cubic meters.

Lowering the ceiling can dramatically reduce the volume. For instance, lowering the ceiling to 2.6 meters dropped the volume from 53 cubic meters to only 34.

Regarding sound, if the absorption stays same, doubling the volume of the room usually reduces the sound level by about 3 dB, because the energy spreads in double space.

Room Volume Calculator for HVAC & Air Quality

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