WattCost

Data through April 2026

Running cost · Refrigerators · ENERGY STAR certified

Hisense FV10C7HSE

Running around the clock, the Hisense FV10C7HSE uses a certified 243 kWh per year — about $46 at the U.S. average rate, or $3.81 a month, the equivalent of a steady 28-watt draw. Compared with the median certified freezerless-and-single-door refrigerator, it uses 16% less electricity — rank 28 out of 259. Where you live moves the bill from $30 a year in North Dakota to $113 in Hawaii.

Estimated annual running cost · U.S. average rate 18.8¢/kWh

$46/yr

$7.91 · cheapest certified refrigerators$152 · priciest
Per month
$3.81
Per day
13¢
Certified use
243 kWh/yr
Configuration
Freezerless and Single Door
Total capacity
9.7 cu ft
Defrost
Automatic
Ice maker
No
Through-door dispenser
No
42 kWh805 kWh
Where the Hisense FV10C7HSE (▮) sits among all 4,229 certified refrigerators, by annual kWh

What it costs in every state

Hisense FV10C7HSE: 243 kWh/yr × each state's average residential rate (EIA)
StateRate ¢/kWhThis model $/yrRelative cost
Alabama17.4¢$42
Alaska27.4¢$66
Arizona15.5¢$38
Arkansas14.2¢$34
California35.3¢$86
Colorado16.5¢$40
Connecticut32.2¢$78
Delaware18.8¢$46
District of Columbia25.4¢$62
Florida15.4¢$37
Georgia15.4¢$37
Hawaiipriciest46.6¢$113
Idaho12.7¢$31
Illinois20.5¢$50
Indiana17.9¢$43
Iowa13.9¢$34
Kansas15.8¢$38
Kentucky15.0¢$36
Louisiana14.4¢$35
Maine28.4¢$69
Maryland22.1¢$54
Massachusetts29.4¢$72
Michigan21.4¢$52
Minnesota16.4¢$40
Mississippi16.8¢$41
Missouri14.0¢$34
Montana13.9¢$34
Nebraska13.3¢$32
Nevada14.3¢$35
New Hampshire27.2¢$66
New Jersey23.5¢$57
New Mexico15.2¢$37
New York29.4¢$72
North Carolina16.3¢$39
North Dakotacheapest12.3¢$30
Ohio19.5¢$47
Oklahoma13.3¢$32
Oregon15.8¢$38
Pennsylvania21.5¢$52
Rhode Island28.3¢$69
South Carolina17.1¢$41
South Dakota14.5¢$35
Tennessee14.9¢$36
Texas17.0¢$41
Utah13.3¢$32
Vermont24.6¢$60
Virginia17.4¢$42
Washington14.4¢$35
West Virginia16.1¢$39
Wisconsin19.2¢$47
Wyoming14.7¢$36

Certified models closest in efficiency

freezerless-and-single-door refrigerators within reach of 243 kWh/yr
ModelkWh/yr$/yr (US avg)
ELEMENT EUF17CE244$46
Midea MRU17F6A244$46
Midea MU170CWBR1RC1244$46
Midea WHS-625FWESS1244$46
Midea WHS-625FWEW1244$46
Liebherr MRB 3010245$46

Run your own numbers

Your rate, your numbers

Per day
13¢
Per month
$3.81
Per year
$46

243 kWh/yr × 18.8¢/kWh = $46/yr

Prefilled with this model's certified 243 kWh/yr — adjust if your usage differs from the DOE test basis. The certified annual kWh comes from the DOE test procedure, which measures continuous 24/7 operation at standardized temperatures — refrigerators never get a day off.

Questions, answered with the data

How much electricity does the Hisense FV10C7HSE use?
ENERGY STAR certifies the Hisense FV10C7HSE at 243 kWh per year. The certified annual kWh comes from the DOE test procedure, which measures continuous 24/7 operation at standardized temperatures — refrigerators never get a day off.
How much does the Hisense FV10C7HSE cost to run per month?
About $3.81 a month at the U.S. average residential rate (18.8¢/kWh) — 13¢ a day, or $46 a year. Your state's rate moves this up or down; see the table above.
Is the Hisense FV10C7HSE energy efficient?
It uses 16% less electricity than the median certified freezerless-and-single-door refrigerator, placing it in the efficient third of certified models.
What does the Hisense FV10C7HSE cost to run in the cheapest vs. priciest state?
At current residential rates it costs about $30 a year in North Dakota (12.3¢/kWh) and $113 in Hawaii (46.6¢/kWh).
How many watts does the Hisense FV10C7HSE draw on average?
Spread over a year of continuous operation, 243 kWh works out to an average draw of about 28 watts — like leaving a 28-watt bulb on 24/7.

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