Cost to run a heat-pump hot water system in New South Wales (2026–27)
NSW reference tariff · 33.1c/kWh
Typical use (2.5 kWh a day) ≈ $302/year on the Ausgrid rate.
Source: AER Default Market Offer 2026–27 (DMO 8), effective 1 July 2026
| Model band | Per hour | Per day | Per month | Per year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficient (900 W) | $0.30 | $1.19 | $36.27 | $435 |
| Typical (1,300 W) | $0.43 | $1.72 | $52.38 | $629 |
| High (1,900 W) | $0.63 | $2.52 | $76.56 | $919 |
The headline annual figure uses this appliance's measured energy per use (2.5 kWh per day (typical household)) rather than a constant draw — the table shows constant-draw costs at your chosen hours.
Appliance running-cost calculator
NSWHeat-pump hot water: 900–1,900 W typical range.
The compressor runs ~2–4 h/day, often timed to solar or off-peak.
- Per day (4 h)
- $1.72
- Per month
- $52.38
- Per year (365 days)
- $628.94
Tariff: 33.1c/kWh — AER Default Market Offer 2026–27 (DMO 8) for the Ausgrid network, effective 1 July 2026. Wattage basis: Hot Water Hub — heat pump running costs. Full heat-pump hot water costs in NSW →
The same appliance in other states
Cutting the cost
A heat-pump system pulls warmth from the surrounding air, so it uses a fraction of the power of a plain electric element. Give it clear airflow and keep it out of tight, cold enclosures. If you have solar or a cheaper daytime rate, timing the heating cycle for the middle of the day pairs it with warmer air and your own generation. Keep the air filter clean.
Frequently asked questions
- What does a heat-pump hot water cost per hour in NSW?
- $0.43 at the typical 1,300 W draw on NSW's reference rate of 33.1c/kWh (Ausgrid network). Efficient models run $0.30, high-draw models $0.63.
- How is this calculated?
- Watts ÷ 1,000 × the tariff = cost per hour, then × hours × days for the period figures. Every figure on this page uses NSW's 2026–27 reference rate — change the assumptions in the calculator above.
- Is the tariff here what I actually pay?
- It's the AER Default Market Offer 2026–27 (DMO 8) usage rate for the Ausgrid network — the government reference. Your market offer may be a little under it; your zone may differ. See NSW rates by zone.
Related
- NSW electricity prices
- Average bill NSW
- Ducted aircon in NSW
- Split-system aircon in NSW
- Portable aircon in NSW
- Ceiling fan in NSW
- Reverse-cycle heating in NSW
- Hot Water Hub — heat pump running costs
- Australian Energy Regulator — DMO 2026–27 final determinationverified
The compressor runs ~2–4 h/day, often timed to solar or off-peak.