Data through April 2026
Running cost · Water Heaters (Electric) · ENERGY STAR certified
LG APHWC502D
For a standard household draw pattern, the LG APHWC502D uses a certified 1,181 kWh per year: roughly $222 annually at the national average rate. That's close to the middle of the certified pack — about 9% above the median electric water heater, ranked 296 of 566. The same unit costs $146 a year in North Dakota but $551 in Hawaii — electricity rates, not the appliance, make the difference.
Estimated annual running cost · U.S. average rate 18.8¢/kWh
$222/yr
- Per month
- $18.53
- Per day
- 61¢
- Certified use
- 1,181 kWh/yr
- Type
- Hybrid/Electric Heat Pump
- Heat pump type
- 240 Volt Integrated HPWH
- Storage volume
- 53 gal
- First-hour rating
- 81 gal
- UEF
- 4.2
What it costs in every state
| State | Rate ¢/kWh | This model $/yr | Relative cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 17.4¢ | $206 | |
| Alaska | 27.4¢ | $323 | |
| Arizona | 15.5¢ | $183 | |
| Arkansas | 14.2¢ | $167 | |
| California | 35.3¢ | $416 | |
| Colorado | 16.5¢ | $195 | |
| Connecticut | 32.2¢ | $381 | |
| Delaware | 18.8¢ | $222 | |
| District of Columbia | 25.4¢ | $300 | |
| Florida | 15.4¢ | $182 | |
| Georgia | 15.4¢ | $182 | |
| Hawaiipriciest | 46.6¢ | $551 | |
| Idaho | 12.7¢ | $150 | |
| Illinois | 20.5¢ | $242 | |
| Indiana | 17.9¢ | $211 | |
| Iowa | 13.9¢ | $164 | |
| Kansas | 15.8¢ | $186 | |
| Kentucky | 15.0¢ | $177 | |
| Louisiana | 14.4¢ | $171 | |
| Maine | 28.4¢ | $336 | |
| Maryland | 22.1¢ | $261 | |
| Massachusetts | 29.4¢ | $348 | |
| Michigan | 21.4¢ | $253 | |
| Minnesota | 16.4¢ | $194 | |
| Mississippi | 16.8¢ | $198 | |
| Missouri | 14.0¢ | $165 | |
| Montana | 13.9¢ | $164 | |
| Nebraska | 13.3¢ | $157 | |
| Nevada | 14.3¢ | $169 | |
| New Hampshire | 27.2¢ | $322 | |
| New Jersey | 23.5¢ | $278 | |
| New Mexico | 15.2¢ | $179 | |
| New York | 29.4¢ | $348 | |
| North Carolina | 16.3¢ | $192 | |
| North Dakotacheapest | 12.3¢ | $146 | |
| Ohio | 19.5¢ | $230 | |
| Oklahoma | 13.3¢ | $157 | |
| Oregon | 15.8¢ | $186 | |
| Pennsylvania | 21.5¢ | $254 | |
| Rhode Island | 28.3¢ | $334 | |
| South Carolina | 17.1¢ | $201 | |
| South Dakota | 14.5¢ | $171 | |
| Tennessee | 14.9¢ | $176 | |
| Texas | 17.0¢ | $201 | |
| Utah | 13.3¢ | $157 | |
| Vermont | 24.6¢ | $290 | |
| Virginia | 17.4¢ | $205 | |
| Washington | 14.4¢ | $170 | |
| West Virginia | 16.1¢ | $190 | |
| Wisconsin | 19.2¢ | $227 | |
| Wyoming | 14.7¢ | $173 |
Certified models closest in efficiency
| Model | kWh/yr | $/yr (US avg) |
|---|---|---|
| Bradford White RE2HP65**-1NCTT | 1,181 | $222 |
| JETGLAS RE2HP65*-1NCTT | 1,181 | $222 |
| LG APHWC502L | 1,181 | $222 |
| LG APHWC502M | 1,181 | $222 |
| Friedrich PROH65 T2 FD400-30 | 1,184 | $223 |
| Friedrich PROH65 T2 FD400-SO | 1,184 | $223 |
Run your own numbers
Your rate, your numbers
- Per day
- 61¢
- Per month
- $18.53
- Per year
- $222
1,181 kWh/yr × 18.8¢/kWh = $222/yr
Prefilled with this model's certified 1,181 kWh/yr — adjust if your usage differs from the DOE test basis. The certified annual kWh comes from the DOE Uniform Energy Factor test, which simulates a typical household's daily hot-water draw pattern. Only electric models (including heat-pump units) are listed — gas models burn gas, not kWh.
Questions, answered with the data
- How much electricity does the LG APHWC502D use?
- ENERGY STAR certifies the LG APHWC502D at 1,181 kWh per year. The certified annual kWh comes from the DOE Uniform Energy Factor test, which simulates a typical household's daily hot-water draw pattern. Only electric models (including heat-pump units) are listed — gas models burn gas, not kWh.
- How much does the LG APHWC502D cost to run per month?
- About $18.53 a month at the U.S. average residential rate (18.8¢/kWh) — 61¢ a day, or $222 a year. Your state's rate moves this up or down; see the table above.
- Is the LG APHWC502D energy efficient?
- It uses 9% more electricity than the median certified electric water heater.
- What does the LG APHWC502D cost to run in the cheapest vs. priciest state?
- At current residential rates it costs about $146 a year in North Dakota (12.3¢/kWh) and $551 in Hawaii (46.6¢/kWh).