Central AC vs Window Units: The Real 30-Year Cost in Denver

3-Ton Central AC vs Window Units: 30-Year Cost of Ownership in Denver

If you’re a homeowner in Denver, you realistically have two ways to cool your home:

  • Install a 3-ton central air conditioning system
  • Use 3–4 window or portable AC units

This article looks at the 30-year total cost of ownership for both options using conservative Denver assumptions.

No hype. Just math.


The 30-Year Bottom Line (Denver Example)

Using 800 cooling hours per year and $0.15/kWh electricity:

  • Window Units: ~$20,600 over 30 years
  • Central AC: ~$33,700 over 30 years
  • Central AC resale recovery: ~$8,000–$15,000

After resale value adjustment, the long-term difference often narrows to:

$3,000–$8,000 over 30 years

That’s the scale we’re talking about.

Now let’s walk through the numbers.


Assumptions Used

  • Location: Denver, Colorado
  • Cooling demand: ~800 equivalent full-load hours/year
  • Electric rate: $0.15 per kWh
  • Home size: ~1,800–2,200 sq ft
  • Time horizon: 30 years

Installation Cost

Central AC

Typical installed cost in Denver:

$8,000–$12,000
We’ll use $10,000 average

Expected lifespan: 15–20 years

Over 30 years, expect:

  • One full replacement
  • Some component repairs

Estimated 30-year equipment cost:

  • Initial install: $10,000
  • Replacement (inflation-adjusted): $12,000
  • Repairs over 30 years: $3,000

Total: ~$25,000


Window / Portable Units

3–4 quality units at ~$500 each:

Initial cost: ~$2,000

Lifespan: 7–10 years

Over 30 years:

  • 3 full replacement cycles
  • Occasional early failures

Estimated 30-year equipment cost:

  • Initial purchase: $2,000
  • Two replacement cycles: $4,000
  • Misc failures: $1,000

Total: ~$7,000


Energy Cost (Denver – 800 Cooling Hours)

This is where efficiency differences show up.

Central AC Energy Use

A typical 3-ton unit draws ~2.25 kW while running.

2.25 kW × 800 hours = 1,800 kWh/year

At $0.15/kWh:

1,800 × 0.15 = $270/year

Over 30 years:

$270 × 30 = $8,100


Window Unit Energy Use

Combined draw of 3–4 units: ~3.5 kW

3.5 kW × 800 hours = 2,800 kWh/year

At $0.15/kWh:

2,800 × 0.15 = $420/year

Over 30 years:

$420 × 30 = $12,600


What This Means

Window units cost ~$4,500 more in electricity over 30 years.

They are cheaper to buy.
They are more expensive to run.


Maintenance Cost

Central AC

  • Filters: ~$10/year
  • Occasional DIY coil rinse
  • Minor service calls

Estimated 30-year maintenance:

~$600


Window Units

  • Filter cleaning
  • Drain maintenance (portable units)
  • Occasional part failures

Estimated 30-year maintenance:

~$1,000


30-Year Total Cost Comparison

Central AC

  • Equipment & replacement: $25,000
  • Energy: $8,100
  • Maintenance: $600

Total: ~$33,700


Window Units

  • Equipment: $7,000
  • Energy: $12,600
  • Maintenance: $1,000

Total: ~$20,600


Resale Value Consideration (Often Overlooked)

In Denver’s housing market:

Central AC is increasingly expected.

Conservative resale value impact:

+$8,000 to +$15,000

Window units:

  • Add no value
  • May reduce buyer perception
  • Can affect aesthetics and security

Adjusted 30-Year Cost After Resale

If central AC recovers even $10,000 at sale:

$33,700 – $10,000 = $23,700

Now the gap narrows to roughly:

$3,000 difference over 30 years

That’s about $100 per year.


Comfort & Practical Differences

Central AC

  • Even cooling across entire home
  • Better humidity control
  • Quieter
  • No blocked windows
  • Cleaner appearance

Window Units

  • Room-by-room cooling
  • Louder operation
  • Uneven temperatures
  • Reduced natural light
  • Visible from outside

When Each Option Makes Financial Sense

Central AC Makes More Sense If:

  • You plan to stay 10+ years
  • Resale value matters
  • You want whole-home comfort
  • You prefer quieter operation

Window Units Make More Sense If:

  • You plan to move within a few years
  • You only cool select rooms
  • Budget is the primary constraint

The Real Takeaway

This is not a $20,000 mistake either way.

Over 30 years:

  • Window units cost less in raw dollars
  • Central AC often recovers much of the difference at resale
  • The true financial gap can shrink to a few thousand dollars

The decision is less about extreme savings…

…and more about:

  • Time horizon
  • Property value
  • Comfort expectations
  • Market conditions

Final Thought

Cooling systems don’t just consume electricity.

They affect:

  • Home value
  • Daily comfort
  • Buyer perception
  • Long-term planning

Run the math for your situation.

Then choose the option that fits your long-term goals — not just the lowest upfront cost.

Premier Mechanical
www.ClaimYourComfort.com
720.207.6812

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