Daily Deals from a Nerd Mom

Navigating Life ๐ŸŽฎ One Nerdy Adventure at a Time

Why Your Guest Room is Costing You Money

2โ€“4 minutes
Why Your Guest Room is Costing You Money

Every homeโ€™s got that room. You know the one, itโ€™s barely used, mostly just there to hold spare bedding, off-season clothes, or that weird decorative lamp your aunt gave you. Most of the time, it just sits in peace, untouched and forgotten. Well, until your electricity bill shows up looking a little rude.

Oh yeah, definitely a rude awakening, right? Well, it turns out, even rooms that arenโ€™t getting any love can quietly rack up costs without you realizing it. And yep, your guest room might be sneakily dragging up your bill just by existing. So, of course, you want to do what you can to boost your eco-credentials at home, and yeah, when it comes to the house, you might want to keep an extra close eye on that spare room.

The Room is Still Active

Okay, so hereโ€™s the thing that you really need to remember: if your heating or AC is running in there, then that room is living like royalty, climate-controlled and all, while youโ€™re paying the tab. So most houses arenโ€™t zoned to treat each room differently, so unless youโ€™ve manually closed the vents or turned something off, itโ€™s just soaking up that sweet, sweet HVAC power. 

Besides, add in a lamp or two you never unplug, maybe an old TV thatโ€™s still blinking from 2009, and youโ€™ve got a bunch of energy use for a room no oneโ€™s even in. In that case, whatโ€™s even the point, right? Well, in this case, when it comes to your average electric bill, you should try and cut it. Usually, closing the vents and unplugging everything is a smart way to go about it (and thatโ€™s pretty quick and easy to do, right?).

Itโ€™s the Little Stuff that Adds Up

Even if nothingโ€™s technically turned on, loads of things still draw energy when theyโ€™re plugged in. So, that mini fridge for guest snacks? Well, itโ€™s still humming. How about the electric blanket from last winter? Itโ€™s probably on standby. 

Oh, and chargers, clocks, old tech, it all adds up, too. And if you’re using that room for storage (and thatโ€™s what most people use spare rooms for), well, it’s easy to forget whatโ€™s plugged in behind all those boxes. But overall, energy gets wasted silently, like a ghost bill you didnโ€™t ask for.

You Should Give that Room a Mini-Reset

So you donโ€™t have to lock the door and banish the guest room forever. But a few easy tweaks could stop it from being such a budget vampire. Instead, you should just close the vents when theyโ€™re not in use. Unplug anything that doesnโ€™t actually need power 24/7. Maybe put lamps and devices on a switchable power strip so you can actually shut everything down in one go.

But you could even consider something like a smart thermostat with room sensors can help make sure your heating and cooling arenโ€™t throwing money at an empty room.

Give the Room a Real Job

If the guest roomโ€™s just sitting there looking pretty (and expensive), maybe itโ€™s time to give it a proper job. Really, whatโ€™s the point of having a room that never gets used, right? Well, why not a low-energy hobby room? A nap zone with blackout curtains? A home office that actually gets used? Basically, the goal isnโ€™t to turn it into a utility closet, but if youโ€™re paying for it, it might as well pull its weight a bit.

Image credit


By submitting your information, you’re giving us permission to email you. You can unsubscribe at any time.

7 responses to “Why Your Guest Room is Costing You Money”

  1. I wish I had a guest room. But all of this makes lots of sense for the people lucky enough to have one.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I have the opposite problem, not enough rooms. But we’re planning an edition next year that will be my youngest’s room, which will also be the guest room (should we have any).

    Liked by 1 person

  3. This is such a great point! Instead of having the room be a waste of space, it is good to focus on how to best use the room.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I’m trying to save money everywhere I can these days. A smart thermostat sounds like a great idea.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. while we don’t have a guest room in our home, i am going to use these tips to ensure every room in our home is used well and doesn’t cost us money ๐Ÿ™‚ so thank you

    Liked by 1 person

  6. This is such a cool post and got me to thinking as I never really thought about the fact that you are losing money with a ‘usually empty’ guest room due to heating and cooling costs. I love a smart thermostat and a huge money saver in the winter for us as we let it get cooler in the night. Great tips!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. thepurplesecretary Avatar
    thepurplesecretary


    Yes, we unplug everything in the guest room. Not only does it help in saving energy but it’s also for safety reasons.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a Reply to Sharla Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

As an Amazon Associate I earn a small amount from qualifying purchases through links on this site at no cost to you. See our Disclosure policy here.