What Does It Cost to Run a Refrigerator in Alaska?

Running a refrigerator in Alaska costs about $11.82 a month — $143.75 a year — at the state's average rate of 27.35 ¢/kWh. That's roughly $42.21 a year more than a household paying the national average pays for the exact same refrigerator. The estimate assumes a typical 60-watt refrigerator running 24 hours/day, at the all-in average rate (before separately billed taxes and fixed fees).

Average wattage assumption
60 W
Typical usage assumption
24 hours/day
Estimated monthly electricity use
43.2 kWh
Estimated monthly cost
$11.82
Estimated yearly cost
$143.75

Key metrics

MetricValue
Average wattage assumption60 W
Typical usage assumption24 hours/day
Estimated monthly electricity use43.2 kWh
Estimated monthly cost$11.82
Estimated yearly cost$143.75

Refrigerator cost vs U.S. average

Alaska average rate
27.35 ¢/kWh
Alaska monthly cost
$11.82
U.S. monthly cost
$8.35
Monthly difference
+$3.47

At the state average rate, a refrigerator in Alaska costs $3.47 more a month than it would at the U.S. average rate.

How much electricity does a refrigerator use?

A refrigerator draws roughly 40-100 W; we use 60 watts running 24 hours/day. That comes to 1.44 kWh a day — 43.2 kWh a month, or 525.6 kWh over a year — using kWh = watts × hours ÷ 1000.

Refrigerators are always plugged in. The compressor only runs part of the time and cycles on and off based on internal temperature, so the 24-hour average power draw is much lower than the peak running wattage. Modern refrigerators typically average about 40–100 watts over a full day. Alaska prices that energy at 27.35 ¢/kWh, against a 19.32 ¢/kWh national average.

Refrigerator operating cost estimate in Alaska

Time periodEnergy useCost
Per hour0.06 kWh$0.02
Per day1.44 kWh$0.39
Per month43.2 kWh$11.82
Per year525.6 kWh$143.75

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 refrigerator, that mostly comes down to appliance age, door-opening frequency, garage vs indoor placement.

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 Refrigerator calculator in Alaska to compare light, typical, and heavy usage profiles.

Comparison entry points

Browse related comparisons from the energy comparison hub:

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Consumer electricity drivers

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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