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CalcWolf Everyday Life Cost Per Use Calculator
Everyday Life

Calculate the Real Cost Per Use of Any Purchase

Divide purchase price by expected uses to see the true per-use cost. Justify expensive purchases or avoid waste.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

The Cost Per Use Framework

A $200 pair of boots worn 3x/week for 3 years = $0.43 per use. A $50 pair worn 3x/week for 6 months = $0.64 per use. The expensive option is actually cheaper per use. This framework helps make rational purchasing decisions: expensive items used frequently are often better value than cheap items that wear out quickly or sit unused.

When Expensive Is Worth It

Items with the best cost-per-use: daily-wear shoes, a good mattress (used 8 hours/day for 10 years = $0.03/hour), a quality winter coat, kitchen knives, and a reliable car. Items with the worst cost-per-use: exercise equipment (statistically, 70% goes unused after 3 months), specialty kitchen gadgets, occasion-specific clothing, and trending electronics.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

The Diderot Effect explains why one purchase leads to more: you buy a nice desk, then need a better chair, then a desk lamp, then organizers. Before a purchase, ask: "Will this create a chain of additional purchases?" A $500 stand mixer might also require $200 in attachments, $50 in new bowls, and a kitchen reorganization.

Frequently asked questions
What is a good cost per use?
Under $1/use is excellent value. $1-5/use is good for most items. $5-20/use is acceptable for special items (formal wear, specialty tools). Above $20/use suggests you should rent or borrow instead of buying. A $2,000 mattress used for 10 years (3,650 nights) costs $0.55/use — exceptional value for something that affects your health daily.
How do I avoid buying things I will not use?
The 72-hour rule: wait 72 hours before any non-essential purchase over $50. If you still want it after 3 days, buy it. This eliminates 60-70% of impulse purchases. Also calculate the cost-per-use before buying — if the per-use cost seems high, you probably will not use it enough to justify the price.
✓ Math logic verified against primary sources → See our verification process
Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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