Tricks to Keep Your House Cool this Summer

Keep Your House Cool this Summer

As the temperature rises, so does the cost of cooling your home, especially if you use an air conditioner. Obviously, the best way to keep your home cool during the summer is to use an air conditioner to keep the temperature down, but there are other options that don’t raise your energy bill quite significantly. Air conditioners may offer tempting temporary relief from summer heat, but they’re a huge environmental no-no. You may be cooling your home, but the fossil fuels you’re burning in the process are only making your summers hotter. This summer, leave the air conditioner in storage and try these environmentally-friendly alternatives instead. Fundamentally, the idea is to minimize sources of heat and remove built-up heat from inside.

Fans and Ceiling Fans

  • If you’re looking for ways to beat the heat, a ceiling fan can be a great investment for your home. This one appliance can make a room feel 6 or 7 degrees cooler, and even the most power-hungry fan costs less than $10 a month to use if you keep it on for 12 hours a day. Good fans make it possible for you to raise your thermostat setting and save on air-conditioning costs. Fans don’t use much energy, but when air is circulating, it feels much cooler. Ceiling fans are best, but a good portable fan can be very effective as well.
  • You should remember that even mild air movement of 1 mph can make you feel three or four degrees cooler. Also make sure your ceiling fan is turned for summer – you should feel the air blown downward.

Shades, drapes, or blinds

  • Install white window shades, drapes, or blinds to reflect heat away from the house. Close blinds, shades and draperies facing the sun (east-facing windows in the morning and west-facing windows in the afternoon) to keep the sun’s heat out and help fans or air conditioners cool more efficiently. Always remember that the best way to keep your home cool is to keep the heat out.

Internal Heat

  • The most common sources of internal heat gain are; appliances, electronic devices, and lighting. Be aware from where the heat is comming. Now if you have air conditioning, use it wisely. Don’t put lamps, televisions or other heat-generating appliances next to your air-conditioning thermostat, because the heat from these appliances will cause the air conditioner to run longer. The heat they produce will make it think your house is warmer than it really is, and your system will run harder than it needs to.
  • Unless you absolutely need them, turn off incandescent lights and heat-generating appliances. Replace incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescents; they produce the same light but use a fifth the energy and heat.
  • You should also try to avoid heat-generating activities, such as cooking, on hot days or during the hottest part of the day. If you are cooking, use your range fan to vent the hot air out of your house. By reducing the amount of heat in your home, you will have to use less energy to cool it.

Plants

  • Plant trees or shrubs to shade air conditioning units, but not block the airflow. A unit operating in the shade uses less electricity. Deciduous trees planted on the south and west sides will keep your house cool in the summer and allow the sunlight to warm the house during the winter. For example just three trees, properly placed around a house, can save between $100 and $250 annually in cooling and heating costs, and daytime air temperatures can be 3 degrees to 6 degrees cooler in tree-shaded neighborhoods.

Roof and Walls

  • Paint your roof white – If you’ve got a flat roof, paint it with a specially formulated reflective paint or just paint it white. The reflective effect will help to keep the rooms under the flat roof much cooler.

Other things to remember

  • Humidity makes room air feel warmer, so reduce indoor humidity. Minimize mid-day washing and drying clothes, showering, and cooking. And when you must do these things, turn on ventilating fans to help extract warm, moist air.
  • Avoid landscaping with lots of unshaded rock, cement, or asphalt on the south or west sides because it increases the temperature around the house and radiates heat to the house after the sun has set.
  • If the attic isn’t already insulated or is under-insulated, insulate it NOW. Upgrading from 3 inches to 12 inches can cut cooling costs by 10 percent.

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130 Responses to “Tricks to Keep Your House Cool this Summer”

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  1. 100
    Crystal Says:

    I have found that freezing empty milk jugs full of water ( lid off) and placing them in front of any little portable fan… and the water melts you get a very nice cooling effect… and cheaper air conditioner cuz it does wonders for the whole room.

  2. 99
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  3. 98
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  4. 97
    All in a days work… Says:

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  5. 96
    Deb DoDaDay Says:

    Even a caveman can do it? The enviroment has been here longer than any of us. The human body can survive more than any of us, (99%), ever have had to endure. We are at a time when we know a flip of a switch or turn of a knob brings confort. Just 50 years ago what was air conditioning, yah water coolers if they worked for your climate? We did not have it and it was good, bad, but usually not noticed because we did not have a switch to flip. If you can efford the cost of cool great….if you have your energy provider shut you down for lack of payment, survival will take over and you will try anything to get the confort turned back on and you will be smarter about energy use for a while. Being smart and living according to income is the best way to stay out of the heat. There are govenment programs, less use, higher set thermostats or just go to where they have cool air in the heat of the day and leave your fan(s) running at home and turn the degree mark down when you get back and enjoy your night or rest time. If all of you honesty anwsered, when does the heat really get to you, most of us would state when we lay down to sleep.

    I have worked in 120 degrees for 30 years in the elements and a breeze felt like heaven. I worked this way because the money was the highest wage in TEXAS and I was traveling the world. Find you place and learn to live it….I am old now and live in the temp of the day and AIR CONDITIONING AT NIGHT!!!!! Sweat a little it is good for the junk in your trunk.

  6. 95
    every shut eye aint asleep Says:

    I prefer fans and covering windows that are receiving direct sun. Shut the windows when there is sun pouring in, open them at night.
    Of course, living in buildings that were designed with no understanding of the four directions, trees, shading or anything about nature other than destroying it leaves you with little option other than to blast the AC.
    I refuse to live in places like that. I like fresh air way too much.
    Always being inside a perfectly controlled bubble is not living. People are so deprived, even though they think they are priviledged.

  7. 94
    bigblu Says:

    Why can’t you global warming- climate change sceptics, get a life. Get your heads out of the sand and learn something instead of trying to use (very bad ) humour to attempt to discredit what every climate scientist worth a light can assure you. That our climate is changing, and largely because idiots like you continue to use your a/c’s to cool your fat arses.

    I was brought up in australia where daytime temperatures regularly get above 40 C ( about 104 F to you u.s.a people) and each summer we had many days when it was 45 C in the shade. We had never heard of A/C let alone used one. We worked regular hours with an hour or so off for lunch, then back to work in the sun. Believe me, sitting on a tractor all day in those temps hardens you up, and harvesting cotton, wheat, corn etc in late summer is FUN, FUN, FUN ! Also harvesting tobacco during the hottest part of the summer dressed only in shorts and a hat, strengthens your heart. My da lived to 95.!!!!

    You very soon develop strategies to keep cool, and build your house to take advantage of prevailing breezes, shade, etc etc as pointed out by many comments on this blog. We grew up loving our hot climate, and the balmy winter days, plus the frosts at night.

    people who depend on A/C to stay cool are definitely NOT COOL !!!!

    If you live in arizona, enjoy, enjoy, enjoy.
    Don’t try to make it like alaska. IT AINT !!!!

  8. 93
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  9. 92
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  11. 90
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  12. 89
    Jay Says:

    I am not sure if you mentioned this or not, but window film is good at blocking out the UV rays and heat. Some of them block 99% of UV rays and 70% of heat.

  13. 88
    Greenlou Says:

    Although these tips may seem banal it’s worth giving them a try. Through small efforts we can make a huge difference.
    If you’re interested in setting up a campaign to encourage people to economize on our planet’s energy check out our website:

    http://www.greenvoice.com

  14. 87
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  16. 85
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  17. 84
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  18. 83
    Robin Says:

    There is something called the Earth-Air-Pipe. All new home construction should be required to have these installed. Google it…

    http://www.oxfordplasticsinc.com/geothermalheating.htm

    Robin

  19. 82
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  22. 79
    Mike Dunn Says:

    We used “stokos” to paint our roof white, and the difference between external ambient temperature and internal temperature is roughly 9 – 10 C.
    We’re in Crete, and today’s external ambient was 42 C.

  23. 78
    hubs Says:

    I put together some much more practical tips last year, check it out if you want to stay cool:

    http://www.artifacting.com/blog/2006/07/19/how-to-survive-a-heatwave-comfortably/

  24. 77
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  25. 76
    Nick Says:

    Some of them are expensive but very interesting.
    Thanks
    http://www.weefly.com

  26. 75
    Mister Says:

    If you have A/C set up a drip system mister to spray the condensor with a fine mist. Cost is

  27. 74
    Stop Swimming in the Sea of Debt Says:

    Oh and always have a pitcher of refreshingly cold fresh orange juice up for grabs for anyone in your family who’s gone thirsty because of the summer heat. Cooling gel soles for the feet and water pillows can help, too.

  28. 73
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  29. 72
    wynn Says:

    “kewling-tricks” wouldn’t it be better to use the 5-10grand$ and take the family on a nice “cool”vacation instead of on the AC-bill…:)then the other 3 hot months wouldn’t be so bad,besides you can always come on digg:)and whine”…:)

  30. 71
    pligg.com Says:

    Tricks to Keep Your House Cool this Summer…

    As the temperature rises, so does the cost of cooling your home, especially if you use an air conditioner….

  31. 70
    VRod Says:

    Houston,TX gets really HOT & HUMID in the summer. We get “FEELS LIKE” temps. from the weather man… 96 but feels like 106. We’re considered one of the most air-conditioned cities on the planet. Due to deregulation in our state we also pay MORE not less for energy. Avg. house bill is $600 – $800 per summer month. Ours never exceeds $200 for 2200 sq.ft with 15 year old central A/C. Shut off A/C vents to rooms you don’t spend most time in; bathrooms, halls, guest B/R, storage rooms, etc. Keep these doors closed or use heavy curtains. Use towels or attach any material to bottom of doors to prevent hot air from these closed off rooms from circulating. While A/C is cooling, check for leaks around windows and around doors and seal up with whatever works; towels, tape, curtains, cloth, etc. Live in half your house if possible this way during the summer. Wear short loose cotton clothing and no shoes or socks. Keep traffic in and out of house to a minimum. Keep blinds and curtains closed, mostly. Adjust A/C thermostat to not turn on after you fall asleep; a few degrees higher. Use a personal fan ($9 at Wal-Mart) to fall asleep. Not cool enough, sleep naked, no covers. Not cool enough, place frozen gallon milk(ice) jug behind fan (use tray for condensation)…voila… personal A/C. Stop using clothes dryer if it is in a room that is cooled by central A/C. Hang wet clothes on hangers outside during peak heat and clothes dry faster than dryer. Wet your hair and T-shirt during peak hot time. Use ceiling fans only when you’re in the room. Keep thermostat at 82 deg. while sleeping, at 81 before noon and after 5pm. At 80 between noon and 5pm, if you’re home, otherwise 81. Never turn off A/C while away on short trips, just turn up to 82 degrees, even with pets inside.

  32. 69
    Hillary Clinton for President » Tricks to Keep Your House Cool this Summer Says:

    [...] Written by txwh.info [...]

  33. 68
    Colin Says:

    Even if you do avoid using the AC, the computer may overheat. And then you won’t be able to go onto your precious geek websites (digg) and pretend you have a girlfriend while reading about how to get one, while simultaneously learning how to shave, make a hamburger, and plan out your iphone sleepover.

    Who cares about Arizona? I mean really, aside from its’ impressive 5 million residents.

  34. 67
    Tricks to Keep Your House Cool this Summer | The Best Article Every day Says:

    [...] Written by txwh.info [...]

  35. 66
    Taylor Says:

    Thanks for your great tips, will definitely come in handy this summer!

  36. 65
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  37. 64
    boobies Says:

    I love snow.

  38. 63
    ruby Says:

    Move into a cave. They stay cool all year around. Use a mirror to direct sunlight in.

    No cave? If you’ve got a basement, it’s cool like a cave. Fix up part of it and live there during the afternoon.

  39. 62
    Funny Videos Says:

    Try taking a cold shower it works everytime, and yes I know how much women hate taking cold showers!

  40. 61
    osakaboy Says:

    ATTIC FAN! How come I haven’t read anything about attic fans which will blow the hot air out of the attic to keep the rest of the house cool?

    Uses a little energy, but what a difference it MAKES!

  41. 60
    ummk Says:

    no reason to keep a fan on if you’re not in the room. It DOES NOT cool a room, only makes it feel cooler because of evaporative cooling on your skin.

    Your suggestion to run your fan for 12 hours a day sounds ridiculous unless you’re sitting in the room with it.

  42. 59
    digg gets naked Says:

    strip down 2 your undies

  43. 58
    Joe Blow Says:

    How about hanging out in the basement?

  44. 57
    Mr_Slugo Says:

    LLumar Window Tint ….stops up to 79% of the solar energy and 99% of UV rays

  45. 56
    unclepaul Says:

    cooling towers are faster to put up than trees.Use the same poles and connecters from a portable or tent style carport.Four poles about 24 feet placed upright six feet apart covered with tent like fabric all the way up except the bottom four feet.Put a mister inside and one foot down from the top.Connect the mister to your garden hose and there you go.Just like a chimney only backwards.The mist falls and cools the air as it does blowing cool air out the bottom.This draws more air in the top and on and on it goes.Put it on your south side,direct the airflow at where you need it and it will provide shade and a cool breeze cheap and much sooner than a tree.I didn`t know Arizona had apartments.Good luck.Inland southern California (Mojave,Death Valley,etc)is also hot with little water or shade.

  46. 55
    Jessica Says:

    Amazing tips. Thanks a lot .. i will try them all and will let you know if they work for me.

  47. 54
    Tim Says:

    One of the best ways is a properly ventilated house. With the right window placement to receive cross-breezes you can dramatically reduce heat. Garages in front of the house are horrible (and prevalent in CA) as they allow no airflow (most anyway). Coordinate sliders and windows if possible so the wind flows right through your house.

  48. 53
    Bob Smith Says:

    Also, use ice packs – the blue-gel kind. On some days when I’m on the edge, I grab one of those out of the freezer, place it on my head/neck, and it’s just enough to keep me from turning on the A/C. I probably nix the A/C 10 days per year by doing that.

  49. 52
    Gordon R. Vaughan Says:

    Use flourescent light bulbs in place of incandescents, which use about 4 times as much wattage and also produce a lot of heat.

    Flourescents have done a lot to help keep our bill down here in Texas, despite rates doubling the last few years.

  50. 51
    Brady Cox Says:

    If you paint your roof white… be sure to paint it black again before winter…

    I’m not sure if silver is the best choice but it makes more sense.

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