WattCost

Data through April 2026

Cost to run · New York · 29.4¢/kWh residential average

How much does it cost to run a clothes washer in New York?

$32/yr · median certified model

Electricity in New York is genuinely expensive — 29.4¢/kWh, 56% above the national average — so the median certified clothes washer costs about $32 a year, and efficiency differences between models turn into real money.

New York sits at rank 48 of 51 — near the very top of the cost table for a clothes washer. At local rates, certified models span $11 (Hisense WF5S2845BB) to $92 (Maytag MVWB965H) per year — $80 of annual headroom that depends entirely on which unit you buy. For reference, the national extremes are North Dakota (12.3¢/kWh) and Hawaii (46.6¢/kWh); the same median clothes washer would cost $14 and $51 a year there.

New York
$32
US average
$21
North Dakota
$14
Hawaii
$51
Median certified clothes washer (110 kWh/yr) per year, at each rate

The cheapest clothes washers to run at New York rates

Price any model at New York rates

Your rate, your numbers

Per day
Per month
$2.70
Per year
$32

110 kWh/yr × 29.4¢/kWh = $32/yr

Prefilled with the median certified clothes washer (110 kWh/yr). Every model page on this site carries its exact certified figure.

Questions, answered with the data

How much does it cost to run a clothes washer in New York?
About $32 a year for the median ENERGY STAR certified clothes washer, at New York's average residential rate of 29.4¢/kWh — that's $2.70 a month.
Is electricity expensive in New York?
New York's residential average of 29.4¢/kWh is 56% above the U.S. average of 18.8¢/kWh, ranking 48 of 51 jurisdictions (1 = cheapest).
What's the cheapest clothes washer to run in New York?
Among currently certified models, the Hisense WF5S2845BB costs the least at about $11 a year at New York rates (39 kWh/yr).
How does New York compare with other states?
The same median clothes washer costs $14 a year in North Dakota (the cheapest state) and $51 in Hawaii (the priciest). New York sits at $32.

Keep digging

Rate source: US EIA, average residential price of electricity, see methodology.