Data through April 2026
Running cost · Clothes Dryers · ENERGY STAR certified
Crosley CED7464G
Across a standard year of loads (283 cycles under the DOE test), the Crosley CED7464G uses 608 kWh — about $114 at the U.S. average electricity rate, or roughly 40¢ per load. Efficiency-wise it's unremarkable in a good way: within 0% of the median certified clothes dryer (rank 176 of 318). The same unit costs $75 a year in North Dakota but $283 in Hawaii — electricity rates, not the appliance, make the difference.
Estimated annual running cost · U.S. average rate 18.8¢/kWh
$114/yr
- Per month
- $9.54
- Per day
- 31¢
- Certified use
- 608 kWh/yr
- Type
- Electric Standard Vented
- Drum capacity
- 7.4 cu ft
- CEF
- 3.93 lbs/kWh
- Venting
- Vented
What it costs in every state
| State | Rate ¢/kWh | This model $/yr | Relative cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 17.4¢ | $106 | |
| Alaska | 27.4¢ | $166 | |
| Arizona | 15.5¢ | $94 | |
| Arkansas | 14.2¢ | $86 | |
| California | 35.3¢ | $214 | |
| Colorado | 16.5¢ | $101 | |
| Connecticut | 32.2¢ | $196 | |
| Delaware | 18.8¢ | $114 | |
| District of Columbia | 25.4¢ | $154 | |
| Florida | 15.4¢ | $94 | |
| Georgia | 15.4¢ | $93 | |
| Hawaiipriciest | 46.6¢ | $283 | |
| Idaho | 12.7¢ | $77 | |
| Illinois | 20.5¢ | $124 | |
| Indiana | 17.9¢ | $109 | |
| Iowa | 13.9¢ | $84 | |
| Kansas | 15.8¢ | $96 | |
| Kentucky | 15.0¢ | $91 | |
| Louisiana | 14.4¢ | $88 | |
| Maine | 28.4¢ | $173 | |
| Maryland | 22.1¢ | $134 | |
| Massachusetts | 29.4¢ | $179 | |
| Michigan | 21.4¢ | $130 | |
| Minnesota | 16.4¢ | $100 | |
| Mississippi | 16.8¢ | $102 | |
| Missouri | 14.0¢ | $85 | |
| Montana | 13.9¢ | $85 | |
| Nebraska | 13.3¢ | $81 | |
| Nevada | 14.3¢ | $87 | |
| New Hampshire | 27.2¢ | $166 | |
| New Jersey | 23.5¢ | $143 | |
| New Mexico | 15.2¢ | $92 | |
| New York | 29.4¢ | $179 | |
| North Carolina | 16.3¢ | $99 | |
| North Dakotacheapest | 12.3¢ | $75 | |
| Ohio | 19.5¢ | $118 | |
| Oklahoma | 13.3¢ | $81 | |
| Oregon | 15.8¢ | $96 | |
| Pennsylvania | 21.5¢ | $131 | |
| Rhode Island | 28.3¢ | $172 | |
| South Carolina | 17.1¢ | $104 | |
| South Dakota | 14.5¢ | $88 | |
| Tennessee | 14.9¢ | $91 | |
| Texas | 17.0¢ | $103 | |
| Utah | 13.3¢ | $81 | |
| Vermont | 24.6¢ | $149 | |
| Virginia | 17.4¢ | $106 | |
| Washington | 14.4¢ | $87 | |
| West Virginia | 16.1¢ | $98 | |
| Wisconsin | 19.2¢ | $117 | |
| Wyoming | 14.7¢ | $89 |
Certified models closest in efficiency
| Model | kWh/yr | $/yr (US avg) |
|---|---|---|
| Amana NED5800H | 608 | $114 |
| Crosley CFDMHE8105AW | 608 | $114 |
| Crosley CFDMHE8105AX | 608 | $114 |
| Direct Supply 0-36CJ6 | 608 | $114 |
| Direct Supply 0-36CJ8 | 608 | $114 |
| Electrolux EFME427 | 608 | $114 |
Run your own numbers
Your rate, your numbers
- Per day
- 31¢
- Per month
- $9.54
- Per year
- $114
608 kWh/yr × 18.8¢/kWh = $114/yr
Prefilled with this model's certified 608 kWh/yr — adjust if your usage differs from the DOE test basis. The certified annual kWh assumes 283 drying cycles per year under the DOE test procedure. Only electric dryers are listed here — a gas dryer's running cost is mostly gas, not electricity.
Questions, answered with the data
- How much electricity does the Crosley CED7464G use?
- ENERGY STAR certifies the Crosley CED7464G at 608 kWh per year. The certified annual kWh assumes 283 drying cycles per year under the DOE test procedure. Only electric dryers are listed here — a gas dryer's running cost is mostly gas, not electricity.
- How much does the Crosley CED7464G cost to run per month?
- About $9.54 a month at the U.S. average residential rate (18.8¢/kWh) — 31¢ a day, or $114 a year. Your state's rate moves this up or down; see the table above.
- Is the Crosley CED7464G energy efficient?
- It uses 0% more electricity than the median certified clothes dryer.
- What does the Crosley CED7464G cost to run in the cheapest vs. priciest state?
- At current residential rates it costs about $75 a year in North Dakota (12.3¢/kWh) and $283 in Hawaii (46.6¢/kWh).
- What does one load cost with the Crosley CED7464G?
- Roughly 40¢ per cycle at the U.S. average rate, based on the DOE test's 283 cycles a year.