ACH50 Calculator
Calculate air leakage and building envelope tightness instantly.
Enter the airflow in Cubic Feet per Minute at 50 Pascals (CFM50).
Total internal volume of the conditioned space in cubic feet.
Used to estimate Natural Air Changes (ACHn).
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Enter values to see rating
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Chart Comparison: Your ACH50 vs. Common Standards
What is an ACH50 Calculator?
An ACH50 calculator is a specialized tool used by energy auditors, HVAC contractors, and home performance professionals to determine the airtightness of a building’s envelope. The term “ACH50” stands for Air Changes per Hour at 50 Pascals of pressure.
During a standard Blower Door Test, a calibrated fan pulls air out of the house to create a negative pressure of 50 Pascals (Pa). The fan measures the airflow required to maintain this pressure, typically in Cubic Feet per Minute (CFM50). This calculator converts that raw CFM50 reading into ACH50, which normalizes the leakage based on the size (volume) of the house.
Common misconceptions include confusing ACH50 with ACHn (Natural Air Changes). ACH50 is a stress-test measurement under induced pressure, whereas ACHn estimates leakage under normal living conditions. This ACH50 calculator provides both metrics to give a complete picture of building performance.
ACH50 Formula and Explanation
The calculation behind the ACH50 calculator is relatively straightforward but critical for energy code compliance. It determines how many times the entire volume of air inside the home is replaced by outside air in one hour at the test pressure.
The Formula
ACH50 = (CFM50 × 60) / Volume
Variable Breakdown
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| CFM50 | Airflow at 50 Pascals | Cubic Feet / Minute | 300 – 5,000+ |
| 60 | Minutes in an Hour | Constant | 60 |
| Volume | Conditioned Internal Volume | Cubic Feet (ft³) | 8,000 – 40,000+ |
| ACH50 | Air Changes per Hour @ 50Pa | 1/hr | 0.6 – 10.0+ |
Practical Examples of ACH50 Calculation
Example 1: New Construction (Tight Home)
Consider a modern, energy-efficient home built to the 2018 IECC code standards. The house has a conditioned floor area of 2,500 sq ft and 9 ft ceilings.
- Volume: 2,500 sq ft × 9 ft = 22,500 ft³
- Blower Door Reading (CFM50): 1,100 CFM
- Calculation: (1,100 × 60) / 22,500
- Result: 2.93 ACH50
Interpretation: This home passes the standard requirement of 3.0 ACH50 found in many climate zones.
Example 2: Older Home (Leaky)
Now consider an older Victorian home with the same volume but less insulation and air sealing.
- Volume: 22,500 ft³
- Blower Door Reading (CFM50): 4,500 CFM
- Calculation: (4,500 × 60) / 22,500
- Result: 12.0 ACH50
Interpretation: This result is very high, indicating significant air leakage. This home would benefit greatly from air sealing measures to reduce energy bills.
How to Use This ACH50 Calculator
- Perform a Blower Door Test: You must have the CFM50 reading from a calibrated blower door fan.
- Calculate Building Volume: Determine the total internal cubic footage of the conditioned space (Length × Width × Average Height).
- Enter Data: Input the CFM50 and Volume into the fields above.
- Select N-Factor: Choose the shielding factor (usually 20) to estimate natural infiltration.
- Analyze Results: Use the chart and rating to see if the building meets Passivhaus (0.6), Energy Star (3.0), or standard code requirements.
Key Factors That Affect ACH50 Results
Several variables influence the final ACH50 calculator result and the building’s performance:
- Building Geometry: Complex rooflines, dormers, and cantilevers create more joints and surface area, increasing the potential for leakage compared to a simple box shape.
- Penetrations: Every pipe, wire, and duct that penetrates the building envelope is a potential leak path. Proper sealing around plumbing stacks and electrical outlets is crucial.
- HVAC Ductwork: If ducts run through unconditioned spaces (like attics), leakage in the ducts adds directly to the ACH50 score.
- Windows and Doors: The quality of weatherstripping and the installation detailing of fenestration units significantly impact the total leakage area.
- Foundation Type: Basements often have rim joist leakage, while crawlspaces may lack proper vapor barriers or air sealing at the floor connection.
- Age of Construction: Older materials degrade, caulk cracks, and building components settle, often increasing ACH50 over time unless maintained.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
For new construction in many US climate zones, 3.0 ACH50 or lower is required by code. Passive House standards require 0.6 ACH50 or lower (extremely tight). Existing homes often range from 5.0 to 10.0+.
50 Pascals is a strong enough pressure difference to override most natural wind and stack effects, providing a stable and repeatable measurement standard for the ACH50 calculator.
Yes. If a home is very tight (typically under 3.0 to 5.0 ACH50), it requires mechanical ventilation (like an HRV or ERV) to ensure fresh air for occupants and to control moisture.
You must calculate the area of the floor and multiply it by the average ceiling height, or break the room into geometric shapes (cubes and prisms) and sum their volumes.
CFM50 is measured at 50 Pascals, while CFM25 is measured at 25 Pascals (common in Duct Blaster tests). You generally cannot convert them accurately without a flow exponent, but CFM50 is the standard for whole-house leakage.
Absolutely. A lower ACH50 means less heated or cooled air is escaping, directly reducing the load on your HVAC system and lowering utility costs.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
Explore more tools to help with your building performance and energy auditing:
- Building Airflow Calculator – Estimate airflow requirements for different room sizes.
- Ventilation Rate Standard Tool – Check compliance with ASHRAE 62.2 standards.
- Energy Efficiency ROI Calculator – Calculate the return on investment for air sealing upgrades.
- Duct Leakage Calculator – Analyze duct blaster test results specifically.
- Insulation R-Value Estimator – Determine the thermal resistance of your walls and attic.
- HVAC Sizing Calculator – Proper sizing for heating and cooling equipment based on load.