What Does It Cost to Run a Pool Pump in Florida?

Running a pool pump in Florida costs about $55.37 a month — $673.64 a year — at the state's average rate of 15.38 ¢/kWh. That's roughly $172.57 a year less than a household paying the national average pays for the exact same pool pump. The estimate assumes a typical 1,500-watt pool pump running 8 hours/day, at the all-in average rate (before separately billed taxes and fixed fees).

Average wattage assumption
1,500 W
Typical usage assumption
8 hours/day
Estimated monthly electricity use
360.0 kWh
Estimated monthly cost
$55.37
Estimated yearly cost
$673.64

Key metrics

MetricValue
Average wattage assumption1,500 W
Typical usage assumption8 hours/day
Estimated monthly electricity use360.0 kWh
Estimated monthly cost$55.37
Estimated yearly cost$673.64

Pool Pump cost vs U.S. average

Florida average rate
15.38 ¢/kWh
Florida monthly cost
$55.37
U.S. monthly cost
$69.55
Monthly difference
-$14.18

At the state average rate, a pool pump in Florida costs $14.18 less a month than it would at the U.S. average rate.

How much electricity does a pool pump use?

A pool pump draws roughly 500-2,500 W; we use 1,500 watts running 8 hours/day. That comes to 12.0 kWh a day — 360.0 kWh a month, or 4380.0 kWh over a year — using kWh = watts × hours ÷ 1000.

Pool pumps are among the highest-consumption household appliances because they run for many hours daily during the swimming season. Variable-speed pumps can significantly reduce cost. Florida prices that energy at 15.38 ¢/kWh, against a 19.32 ¢/kWh national average.

Pool Pump operating cost estimate in Florida

Time periodEnergy useCost
Per hour1.50 kWh$0.23
Per day12.0 kWh$1.85
Per month360.0 kWh$55.37
Per year4380.0 kWh$673.64

These figures use the all-in average rate. Your actual bill can run higher when separately billed taxes, seasonal pricing, and fixed monthly fees apply.

What changes the cost the most?

Two things move this number: your state's rate, which you can't change, and how hard the appliance works, which you often can. For a pool pump, that mostly comes down to single-speed vs variable-speed, pool volume, daily runtime hours.

Using yours more lightly or heavily than our assumption? The state calculator and usage-cost pages below model your exact scenario at the same rate.

For calculator-style comparisons, use the Pool Pump calculator in Florida to compare light, typical, and heavy usage profiles.

Comparison entry points

Browse related comparisons from the energy comparison hub:

City pages for selected metros in Florida

These city pages add local rate context for the same appliance assumptions. City values are estimates.

CityCity rateMonthly estimateYearly estimateMore detail
Jacksonville15.69 ¢/kWh$56.48$677.70City appliance page
Miami15.53 ¢/kWh$55.92$671.06City appliance page
Tampa15.53 ¢/kWh$55.92$671.06City electricity context
Orlando15.53 ¢/kWh$55.92$671.06City appliance page
St. Petersburg15.53 ¢/kWh$55.92$671.06City electricity context
Hialeah15.38 ¢/kWh$55.37$664.42City electricity context

City electricity pages focus on local rate context. The table above uses the statewide average rate.

Related appliance cost pages for Florida

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Source & Method

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Retail Sales of Electricity. Updated: April 2026. Estimates use the EIA average all-in residential rate (delivery included); they don't add separately billed taxes, fixed charges, or other utility fees, which vary by utility. For how rates and estimates are defined, see the methodology hub.

Disclaimers

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