Use this dehumidifier size calculator to estimate the right pint range for a room, basement, apartment, garage, crawlspace, or connected area.
Enter the square footage the unit can realistically serve, select the moisture condition, and choose the space type. The calculator returns a planning estimate, a practical shopping range, and the closest sizing guides.
Before You Calculate
- Count only the room or connected area that can exchange air with the dehumidifier.
- Do not automatically include closed bedrooms, separate floors, or rooms behind closed doors.
- Use a measured humidity reading when possible. Comfort, odor, and condensation can have more than one cause.
- Treat the result as a practical starting range, not an engineering moisture-load calculation.
Not sure whether the space is actually humid? Start with How to Measure Humidity in Your Home.
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Calculate Your Starting Dehumidifier Size
Enter the area, moisture condition, and space type. The calculator applies the same sizing model used throughout this page.
Recommended Dehumidifier Size
Next steps:
- Product class: Check 30–35 pint dehumidifiers on Amazon
- Closest square-footage guide: Dehumidifier for 1,000 Square Feet
- Space-specific guidance: Main Dehumidifier Sizing Guide
- Manual comparison: Dehumidifier Size Chart by Square Footage
The calculated number is a planning estimate. Shop by the recommended range and compare actual product capacity, drainage, operating temperature, noise, and placement.
What the Calculator Result Means
The calculator returns two numbers:
- Calculated planning estimate: the output of the current square-footage, moisture, and space-type model.
- Practical shopping range: the nearest product-capacity class commonly used for comparison.
An estimate of 54 pints per day does not mean you must find a product labeled exactly 54 pints. It routes you to the 50-to-70-pint class, where you can compare drainage, noise, operating temperature, controls, and layout needs.
Pint capacity describes moisture removal under test conditions. Actual home performance also depends on temperature, air movement, moisture entering the space, placement, doors, and drainage.

Calculator Methodology
The calculator uses a four-step model:
- Square footage establishes the base capacity. Larger zones begin with a larger pint estimate.
- Moisture condition adjusts the base. Slight humidity reduces the estimate. Condensation, damp spots, wet surfaces, or seepage increase it.
- Space type applies a difficulty adjustment. Basements and garages receive a higher adjustment than ordinary living areas. Crawlspaces receive the largest adjustment.
- The calculated value is placed into a shopping range. This prevents an overly precise result from being mistaken for an exact product requirement.
| Input | How it affects the result |
|---|---|
| Square footage | Establishes the starting pint estimate. |
| Slightly humid or clammy | Reduces the starting estimate slightly. |
| Musty or damp | Uses the normal base for the selected square footage. |
| Condensation or damp spots | Moves the estimate upward. |
| Wet surfaces or seepage | Moves the estimate higher and displays a water-source warning. |
| Bedroom or office | Applies a small downward adjustment for a compact above-grade room. |
| Living area or apartment | Uses the standard square-footage result. |
| Basement or garage | Applies a higher-load adjustment. |
| Crawlspace | Applies the largest space-type adjustment and displays a specialty warning. |
Important Limit
This calculator estimates capacity for airborne moisture. It does not diagnose or repair water intrusion, plumbing leaks, foundation seepage, failed drainage, wet drywall, roof problems, or standing water.
Fix active water first. Then use a dehumidifier to help control the remaining indoor humidity.
Representative Calculator Results
These examples show how the current model responds to different inputs.
| Example | Planning estimate | Shopping range |
|---|---|---|
| 300 sq ft, slightly humid bedroom | 20 pints/day | 20–25 pint |
| 500 sq ft, musty living area | 25 pints/day | 20–25 pint |
| 800 sq ft, musty living area | 35 pints/day | 30–35 pint |
| 1,000 sq ft, condensation in a basement | 54 pints/day | 50–70 pint |
| 1,500 sq ft, musty open living area | 45 pints/day | 40–50 pint |
| 1,500 sq ft, condensation in a basement | 66 pints/day | 50–70 pint |
| 2,500 sq ft, musty basement | 75 pints/day | 70–95 pint |
These are planning outputs, not promises that every space with the same inputs will perform identically.
How to Choose the Moisture Condition
Slightly humid or clammy
Use this when the space feels mildly heavy but has no strong musty odor, recurring damp spots, or persistent high readings.
Musty or damp
Use this when the area smells musty, feels damp after rain, or repeatedly measures in the mid-to-upper 50% RH range.
Condensation or damp spots
Use this when you see recurring condensation, damp corners, moisture on cool surfaces, or readings that often remain above 60% RH.
Select wet surfaces or seepage only when the condition is more severe. The result will size upward, but the warning remains more important than the calculated capacity.
Why Space Type Changes the Result
The same square footage can require different equipment depending on location and construction.
| Space type | Why the load changes |
|---|---|
| Bedroom or office | Usually compact, above grade, and easier to circulate. |
| Living area or open room | Uses the standard square-footage result when air can move through the zone. |
| Apartment or condo | Works as one zone only when rooms are connected and doors remain open. |
| Basement | Concrete, ground moisture, cooler surfaces, laundry, and weaker airflow can increase the load. |
| Garage | Outdoor-air entry, temperature swings, and incomplete sealing can make control harder. |
| Crawlspace | Ground vapor, drainage, encapsulation, temperature, and specialty equipment requirements make it the most difficult case. |
When to Use the Upper End of the Range
- The space is below grade.
- Humidity repeatedly stays above 55% to 60% RH.
- The room smells musty.
- Concrete walls or floors add moisture.
- The area includes laundry or wet storage.
- Air movement is weak or the layout is long and divided.
- Ceilings are higher than normal.
- You need faster recovery after rain or humid weather.
A drain hose does not increase the moisture load by itself. It makes continuous operation more practical, especially in a basement or other area where the bucket would fill frequently.
Quick Dehumidifier Size Chart
Use this manual chart to check whether the calculator result falls in a reasonable product class.
| Space size | Mild humidity | Damp or musty | Wet or basement-like |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to 500 sq ft | 20–25 pint | 25–35 pint | 35–50 pint |
| 500–1,000 sq ft | 30–35 pint | 35–50 pint | 50 pint |
| 1,000–1,500 sq ft | 35–50 pint | 45–50 pint | 50–70 pint |
| 1,500–2,500 sq ft | 50 pint | 50–70 pint | 70+ pint |
| 2,500+ sq ft | 70 pint or multiple units | 70+ pint or multiple units | Large-capacity or whole-house review |
For the full chart and condition notes, use the Dehumidifier Size Chart by Square Footage.
Dehumidifier Size Guides by Square Footage
FAQ
Bottom Line
Use the calculator for a fast starting estimate, then shop within the recommended pint range.
Square footage establishes the base. Moisture condition and space type adjust the result. Placement, drainage, temperature, airflow, and active water sources determine how well the selected unit will work in the actual home.
For a second check, compare the result with the Dehumidifier Size Chart and the Main Dehumidifier Sizing Guide.
Last reviewed: PH4 July 11, 2026.
