How to size your aircon before comparing quotes, Singapore
Two contractors quoted different capacities for the same room. That gap is not a mistake — it is about what each one assumed.
Why BTU sizing goes wrong more often than people expect
The most common sizing mistake in Singapore homes is using floor area as the only input. Contractors who ask for room size and nothing else are working from a rough rule of thumb, not a real load estimate. The result is often an undersized unit that runs hard and still feels weak, or an oversized unit that short-cycles and leaves the room cold but still humid.
Sun direction alone can shift the cooling load of a bedroom by a lot in Singapore. A west-facing room in a 4-room HDB that gets full afternoon sun carries much higher heat gain than a north-facing room of the same size in the same flat. That gap does not show up in a simple area table. Neither does a condo living room with floor-to-ceiling glass, or a home office running multiple screens through the day.
Two contractors can quote different BTU figures for the same room without either being wrong — they may have made different assumptions about the actual heat load. The one who asked more questions is usually the one whose sizing will hold up once the unit is running.
What changes the cooling load in a Singapore room
Sun exposure and glass area are the two highest-impact variables after floor size. West-facing rooms in Singapore get direct afternoon sun for several hours. Rooms with large sliding glass doors let that heat in even when the glass is tinted. These rooms need more capacity than a room of the same floor area facing a sheltered corridor or a north wall.
Usage pattern matters more than most people expect. A bedroom that runs at night handles a different load than a study running through a work-from-home day with computers and natural light coming in from the side. Occupancy adds heat. Equipment adds heat. Both change the real demand on the unit even when the floor area is the same.
Ceiling height is a smaller factor but worth noting for landed homes and some older condos. A room with a higher ceiling has more air to cool. Standard HDB rooms are rarely a concern here, but a double-volume living room or a loft space in a landed home is a different calculation from a standard bedroom.
| Variable | Why it changes BTU | What to tell your contractor |
|---|---|---|
| West-facing wall with glass | Afternoon sun raises heat gain by a lot | Tell them which wall faces west and how much of it is glass |
| Floor-to-ceiling glass (condo) | Glass conducts heat faster than a solid wall | Note glass area and whether it has solar film |
| Usage pattern (hours per day) | Longer daily runtime means the unit needs more buffer | Tell them if the room runs all day or only at night |
| Home office or cooking heat nearby | Equipment and cooking raise the room load | Note if the room shares a wall with a kitchen |
| Ceiling above HDB standard | More air volume means a longer cooldown | Mention it for landed homes or older condo units |
How to read a quote that explains sizing
A good contractor will explain what they used to arrive at the BTU figure, not just state the number. If a quote lists a capacity with no reasoning behind it, ask what the contractor assumed about sun direction, room use, and heat sources. A contractor who works this properly will have a ready answer.
When two quotes suggest different capacities, compare the reasoning before choosing the bigger number. An oversized unit cools the air fast but shuts off before it has removed humidity, leaving the room feeling cold but sticky — a common complaint in Singapore condos with heavy glass. The right size is the one that matches the real load.
If a contractor is recommending a Daikin, Mitsubishi, or Panasonic model, ask how the rated capacity was matched to your room. The model tier matters, but capacity fit matters more for day-to-day comfort and for keeping the bill in check.
What to check if your current aircon cannot reach temperature
A unit that runs but cannot reach the set temperature is not always undersized. Technicians servicing HDB and condo units find that the more common causes are a dirty coil, low gas, or a blocked drain that forces the unit into a fault state. These faults look like sizing problems but are maintenance problems.
Before looking at upsizing, get the unit checked first. If a service and gas top-up bring cooling back to normal, the original sizing was fine. If the unit is serviced and still cannot keep up in peak afternoon heat, then a sizing review is worth having — but you need the clean baseline before that call is fair.
Common questions
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