
Low prices and high efficiency make room air conditioners an inexpensive alternative to central air for cooling one or two rooms. Many 5,000- to 6,000-Btu units now cost less than $150. Our air-conditioner guide will help you choose what's right for you.
All the models we tested meet the 9.7 Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER) now required for small and medium-sized models below 8,000 British thermal units (Btu) per hour, and the 9.8 EER required for larger, 8,000- to 13,999-Btu models. Most also meet or exceed the 10.7 EER needed to qualify for the yellow Energy Star label. Many new air conditioners are also quieter, lighter, and smaller. And all now have electrical plugs that help prevent fires by shutting down if the power cord is damaged.
Find out whether replacing your air conditioner makes sense by using the savings calculator on the room air conditioners page at www.energystar.gov. (Every 0.1 increase in EER translates into about a 1 percent drop in electricity use.) Also keep the following in mind: