What Size Ceiling Fan Do You Need?
Calculate the right ceiling fan diameter and CFM for any room size. Plus mounting height and downrod length.
Fan Size by Room Size
Under 75 sq ft (bathroom, closet): 29-36" fan. 75-144 sq ft (bedroom): 42" fan. 144-225 sq ft (living room): 48" fan. 225-400 sq ft (large room): 52" fan. Over 400 sq ft (great room): 60"+ fan or two 52" fans. An undersized fan moves too little air; an oversized fan in a small room creates an uncomfortably strong breeze and looks disproportionate.
Mounting Height Matters
Fan blades should be 7-9 feet above the floor and at least 18 inches from the nearest wall. For 8-foot ceilings, use a flush (hugger) mount. For 9-foot ceilings, use a standard mount with a short downrod. For 10-12 foot ceilings, use a downrod to bring the fan to the optimal height. Vaulted ceilings need an extended downrod and angled mount adapter.
CFM: The Number That Matters
CFM (cubic feet per minute) measures actual airflow — the higher the CFM, the more cooling effect. Look for fans with a high CFM-per-watt ratio (airflow efficiency). A good fan moves 5,000+ CFM at 50-60 watts. A cheap fan might move only 3,000 CFM at the same wattage. The Energy Star label ensures minimum efficiency standards.
Running a ceiling fan costs approximately $0.01-0.02 per hour vs $0.20-0.50/hour for air conditioning. Using a fan to raise your thermostat by 4°F saves roughly $50-100 per cooling season. In winter, reverse the fan direction (clockwise on low) to push warm air down from the ceiling.