If you’ve ever opened your July electric bill in New Jersey and felt your stomach drop, you’re not alone. Cooling typically accounts for the largest single chunk of summer energy use in our region, sometimes more than half of the total bill, and it doesn’t take much for those numbers to spiral out of control. The good news is that meaningful savings are within reach for most households, and you don’t need to gut your home or buy expensive new equipment to see results.
Below are five strategies that consistently deliver real, measurable savings on summer cooling costs. Some take five minutes. Others take a weekend. All of them work.
1. Set Your Thermostat Strategically
The single most impactful change most homeowners can make is also the simplest. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) recommends setting your thermostat to 78 degrees Fahrenheit when you’re home and awake during cooling season, and raising it 7 to 10 degrees when you’re away or asleep. According to the DOE, this strategy alone can save you up to 10 percent annually on cooling costs.
Every degree below 78 increases energy use by about 3 percent, so even small adjustments add up over a long New Jersey summer. If 78 feels too warm at first, try ceiling fans, they make a room feel about four degrees cooler when you’re in it, at a fraction of the energy cost. Just remember to turn fans off when you leave the room, since they cool people, not air.
2. Upgrade to a Smart or Programmable Thermostat
Manually adjusting your thermostat throughout the day isn’t realistic for most people. That’s where programmable and smart thermostats earn their keep. ENERGY STAR-certified smart thermostats can save the average household around $50 per year, and in homes with high cooling loads or inconsistent schedules, savings often exceed $150 per cooling season.
Smart models go a step further by learning your routines, adjusting automatically based on whether anyone’s home, and giving you visibility into exactly how much cooling you’re using and when. Geofencing features can automatically raise the temperature when the last person leaves the house and bring it back down before they return. The behavioral data alone often surprises homeowners and leads to smarter cooling habits without any sacrifice in comfort.
3. Seal Air Leaks and Improve Insulation
This one is less glamorous than smart thermostats but produces some of the biggest long-term savings. Most New Jersey homes, particularly those built before 1990, have significant air leaks around windows, doors, electrical outlets, plumbing penetrations, attic hatches, and where the foundation meets the framing. The DOE estimates that air leaks can account for 25 to 40 percent of the energy used to heat and cool a typical home.
Even more impactful is attic insulation. Hot air rises, and heat from a sun-baked attic radiates downward into your living space all day long. Bringing your attic insulation up to ENERGY STAR’s recommended levels for our climate zone (R-49 to R-60) can dramatically reduce the workload on your AC system and stabilize indoor temperatures floor to floor.
4. Use Window Treatments and Block the Sun
Direct sunlight pouring through south- and west-facing windows is an enormous source of unwanted summer heat. According to the DOE, about 76 percent of sunlight that hits standard double-pane windows enters the home as heat. Closing blinds, drawing curtains, or installing reflective films during the hottest part of the day can reduce solar heat gain by 33 to 45 percent, depending on the treatment.
Cellular shades, often called honeycomb shades, are particularly effective because they trap a layer of insulating air between the window and the room. Outdoor solutions like awnings or strategically placed trees and shrubs are even better, blocking the heat before it ever reaches the glass. Combine smart window treatments with simple habits, opening windows at night when temperatures drop, then closing everything up in the morning, and you’ll noticeably reduce how hard your AC has to work.
5. Maintain Your AC System
An air conditioner that hasn’t been serviced is like a car that hasn’t had its oil changed. It still runs, but it works harder, costs more to operate, and breaks down sooner than it should. Annual professional tune-ups, combined with regular filter changes (every 1 to 3 months during cooling season), can keep your system operating at 95 percent or more of its rated efficiency.
Pay particular attention to the outdoor condenser unit. Make sure there’s at least two feet of clearance on all sides, gently rinse it with a garden hose to remove pollen and dirt, and trim back any vegetation. Indoors, keep supply and return registers clear of furniture, rugs, and curtains so air can circulate properly.
If your system is more than 12 to 15 years old and your bills keep climbing despite good maintenance, it may be time to consider a replacement. Modern high-efficiency units with SEER ratings of 16 or higher can use 30 to 50 percent less energy than older models, and rebates available through New Jersey energy programs can offset much of the upfront cost.
Putting It All Together
The biggest savings come from combining multiple strategies rather than relying on any single fix. A homeowner who upgrades to a smart thermostat, seals the obvious air leaks, adds attic insulation, uses window treatments smartly, and stays on top of HVAC maintenance can realistically cut their summer cooling costs by 25 to 40 percent, often without any noticeable reduction in comfort.
How GreenLife Energy Solutions Can Help
If your air conditioning system is showing its age, struggling to keep up, or driving up your summer energy bills, GreenLife Energy Solutions can help you understand what’s really going on inside your home, and what to do about it. Our New Jersey team specializes in identifying the root causes of cooling problems and matching homeowners and renters with the right energy efficiency solutions for their situation.
Through our partnership with New Jersey’s flagship efficiency programs, we help residents access services that can dramatically improve home comfort:
- Comfort Partners (CP), Completely free energy efficiency upgrades for income-qualified New Jersey residents, including HVAC repairs, replacements, insulation, and air sealing. Both homeowners and renters are eligible.
- Income-Qualified (IQ) Program, Another completely free option for qualifying residents that covers comprehensive home energy improvements.
- Whole Home Energy Solutions (WHES), A free comprehensive home energy assessment plus significant rebates on insulation, air sealing, and high-efficiency HVAC equipment for residents who don’t qualify for the income-based programs.
No matter which program is the right fit, the first step is always the same: a professional assessment of your home so we know exactly what’s working, what isn’t, and where targeted improvements will make the biggest impact on your comfort and energy bills.
Schedule your free home assessment today. Call 609-869-8909 or visit our contact page to get started. Don’t wait until a heat wave catches your AC off guard, get ahead of summer and let GreenLife help you keep your home cool, healthy, and efficient all season long.
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