Water Usage Calculator

Track every gallon — get your Eco Score, detect leaks, and build a personalized conservation plan.

Household
Location & Season
Summer
Spring/Fall
Winter
Showers & Baths
Standard (2.1 gpm)
Low-Flow (1.5 gpm)
Toilet
Laundry & Dishes
Outdoor & Irrigation
Hose
Sprinkler
Drip System
No Irrigation
None
Hot Tub (~50 gal/wk)
Pool (~300 gal/wk)
Both
Faucets & Cost
Leak Estimator
None
Slow Leak (~20 gal/day)
Running (~200 gal/day)
Virtual Water (Food)
Vegan (~600 gal/day)
Vegetarian (~900 gal/day)
Omnivore (~1,300 gal/day)
Meat-Heavy (~1,800 gal/day)
Eco Score
A+BCDF
Daily Household Usage
Total household gallons per day
Daily Usage
Monthly Cost
Annual Usage
Per Person/Day
Leak Waste/Day
0 gal
Annual Cost
Shower: gpm × min/day Bath: 36 gal each Drip faucet: 8.2 gal/day Faucet: 2.2 gpm
Usage Breakdown
🌵
Drought Year
calculate first
💧
Normal Year
Current
🌧️
Wet Year
calculate first
Your Home
VS
Efficient Home
Sensitivity Matrix — Members × Shower Minutes → Daily Gallons
Quick Wins — Ranked by Annual Savings
12-Month Savings Projection — If All Upgrades Made
Usage by Category
CategoryDaily (gal)Annual (gal)% of TotalCost/yr
Set Your Reduction Target
Calculate first to see your savings potential.
Monthly Bill Simulator
30-Day Conservation Habits

Check off daily habits you're practicing. Progress is saved in your browser.

Drought Stage Advisor
StageRestrictionsTarget (gal/person/day)Your Status

How to Use This Calculator

01

Enter Daily Habits

Input your shower frequency, toilet type, appliances, and outdoor watering. Add leaks and your climate region for precision.

02

Read Your Eco Score

Your A+–F rating shows how you rank against US and EPA benchmarks. Under 60 gal/person/day earns an A.

03

Build a Plan

Switch to "My Water Profile" for a sensitivity matrix and ranked Quick Wins. Use "Conservation Planner" to set a savings target.

Formula & Methodology

Shower: showers/day × minutes × GPM
GPM: 2.1 standard, 1.5 low-flow. A 10-min standard shower = 21 gallons.
Toilet: members × flushes/day × GPF
GPF: 3.5 old, 1.6 standard, 1.28 WaterSense. Old toilets waste 2–3× more.
Outdoor: gal/wk ÷ 7 × season_mult × irrig_eff
Drip irrigation multiplier: 0.6 (40% more efficient than sprinklers).
Leak: faucets × 8.2 + toilet_leak_gal/day
EPA: 1 drip/sec = ~3,000 gal/yr. Running toilet = 200 gal/day.

Key Terms

Gallons Per Day (GPD)
The standard unit for measuring individual or household water consumption.
Flow Rate (GPM)
Water output of a fixture in gallons per minute. Standard showerhead: 2.1–2.5 GPM. Low-flow: 1.5 GPM.
Gallons Per Flush (GPF)
Federal standard: 1.28 GPF (WaterSense) or 1.6 GPF. Pre-1994 toilets use 3.5–7 GPF.
Virtual Water
Water embedded in food and goods during production — invisible to the consumer but significant in total impact.
WaterSense
EPA program certifying fixtures that use at least 20% less water than standard models.
Eco Score
Our 0–100 rating based on per-person daily usage. A+ (≥90) means you're in the top 5% of efficient US households.
Greywater
Wastewater from sinks, showers, and laundry that can be recycled for toilet flushing or irrigation.

Real-World Examples

Example
Average US Household
2 people, 8-min showers, std head, 1.6 gpf toilet, HE washer, 4 loads/wk, 200 gal/wk outdoor
Result: ~148 gal/day total, 74 gal/person. Eco Score: C
Near US average. Upgrade toilet + showerhead for a grade jump.
Example
Water-Efficient Household
2 people, 5-min showers, 1.5 gpm low-flow, 1.28 gpf WaterSense, front-load washer, drip irrigation
Result: ~62 gal/day total, 31 gal/person. Eco Score: A+
Best-in-class fixtures cut usage 60% with zero lifestyle change.
Example
Leak Problem Household
2 people, normal usage + 1 running toilet (200 gal/day) + 2 dripping faucets (16 gal/day)
Result: Leaks add 216 gal/day — $390/year wasted.
Fix leaks first. A $5 toilet flapper pays back in a week.

Water Conservation at Home: Where the Water Goes and How to Save It

The US Water Challenge

Americans use an average of 80–100 gallons of water per person per day for indoor use alone — about twice the European average. When outdoor irrigation is included, per-capita use can exceed 300 gallons daily in dry western states during summer. US water infrastructure is aging, with 240,000 water main breaks per year losing 6 billion gallons per day. Meanwhile, 40 states expect water shortages in the next decade due to population growth, agricultural demand, and climate change reducing snowpack and rainfall.

Indoor Water Use: Where It Actually Goes

Indoor home water use breaks down approximately as: toilets 24%, clothes washers 20%, showers 17%, faucets 16%, leaks 12%, baths 3%, dishwashers 2%, and other 6%. The most impactful upgrades are therefore: installing a WaterSense-labeled toilet (saves 13,000 gallons/year per toilet), replacing older showerheads with 1.5 GPM low-flow models (saves 2,900 gallons/year for a daily 10-minute shower), and fixing leaks (a dripping faucet at 1 drip/second wastes 3,000 gallons/year).

The Leak Opportunity

The EPA estimates that household leaks account for nearly 1 trillion gallons of water wasted annually in the US. The average home leaks about 10,000 gallons per year. The most common culprits are running toilets (can waste 200 gallons per day), dripping faucets, and outdoor irrigation systems. A simple toilet leak check (food dye in the tank — if color appears in the bowl without flushing, you have a leak) takes 2 minutes and can reveal $100–300 in annual water waste from a single toilet.

Outdoor Water: The Biggest Opportunity

In western US states, outdoor watering represents 50–70% of residential water use in summer. A typical suburban lawn (6,000 sq ft) needs about 1–2 inches of water per week, totaling 20,000–40,000 gallons per irrigation season. Key strategies: water early morning (to minimize evaporation), use smart controllers with weather-based adjustment (save 20–50%), convert high-water areas to native/drought-tolerant plants (xeriscaping saves 50–75%), and check for system leaks and broken heads regularly.

Virtual Water: What You Eat and Buy Matters Too

Direct home water use is only part of the picture. Virtual water — embedded in food and manufactured goods — dwarfs direct consumption. Producing 1 kg of beef requires about 15,400 liters; 1 kg of cotton clothing about 10,000 liters; 1 smartphone about 13,000 liters. The average American's total water footprint (including food and consumer goods) is about 2,000 gallons per day — 20× higher than direct home use. Dietary choices and purchasing habits therefore have major water implications that individual conservation measures cannot fully address.

More Questions Answered

What is the average household water bill in the US? +
The average US household spends about $70–100 per month on water and sewer service. Water rates have been rising 3–5% annually as utilities invest in aging infrastructure.
How much water does a 10-minute shower use? +
A standard showerhead (2.5 GPM) uses 25 gallons in 10 minutes. A low-flow showerhead (1.5 GPM) uses 15 gallons. Switching to low-flow saves 3,650 gallons per year for a daily shower.
Does a dishwasher use more water than hand washing? +
Modern efficient dishwashers use 3–5 gallons per cycle, while hand-washing a similar load uses 15–27 gallons. Running a full dishwasher is significantly more water-efficient than hand-washing.
How do I check for a toilet leak? +
Add 10 drops of food coloring to your toilet tank. Wait 10–15 minutes without flushing. If color appears in the bowl, you have a flapper leak. Flappers cost $3–10 and take 5 minutes to replace.
What is the most effective way to reduce water use? +
In order of impact: (1) Fix leaks. (2) Install WaterSense toilets if you have pre-1994 fixtures. (3) Switch to low-flow showerheads. (4) Water lawn only as needed. (5) Run dishwasher and laundry only with full loads. These five actions can reduce household water use by 30–50%.
How does drip irrigation save water? +
Drip irrigation delivers water directly to plant roots, reducing evaporation losses by 30–50% compared to sprinklers. It also prevents runoff and reduces weed growth by keeping soil surface dry.
How does climate change affect water availability? +
Climate change is altering precipitation patterns, reducing snowpack, increasing evaporation rates, and intensifying both droughts and floods. In the US, the Colorado River (supplying 40 million people) has been in a prolonged drought, with Lake Mead at historic lows. Efficient water use is not just about bills — it is increasingly about regional water security.

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