How to Size a Mini-Split: BTU Guide for Colorado Homes
Correct mini-split sizing is critical for efficiency and comfort. This guide covers BTU calculations, Colorado altitude factors, and room-by-room sizing.
Choosing the right size mini-split is one of the most important — and most misunderstood — parts of the installation process. Too small and your system will run constantly without reaching your desired temperature. Too large and it will short-cycle, causing humidity problems, temperature swings, and accelerated wear. Here’s how to get it right for Colorado homes.
What Is BTU and Why Does It Matter?
BTU (British Thermal Unit) is the unit used to measure heating and cooling capacity. One BTU is the amount of energy needed to raise one pound of water by 1°F. Mini-split systems are rated in BTU/hour (sometimes also expressed as “tons” — 1 ton = 12,000 BTU/hr).
The goal of sizing is to match the system’s BTU output to your home’s heating/cooling load — the amount of energy needed to keep your home comfortable given its size, insulation, windows, orientation, and local climate.
The Colorado Altitude Factor
This is unique to Colorado: at higher elevations, the air is less dense, meaning your mini-split moves less air mass per unit of time. As a rule of thumb:
- Denver metro (5,280 ft): 5–10% larger than sea-level sizing tables suggest
- Foothills communities (6,000–8,000 ft): 10–20% larger
- Mountain communities (8,000–10,000 ft): 20–30% larger
- High altitude (10,000+ ft — Leadville): 30%+ larger
Most online BTU calculators don’t account for altitude. Our BTU calculator is built for Colorado and includes altitude adjustment.
Basic BTU Sizing Guide
| Room Size (sq ft) | Base BTU Needed | Colorado Adjustment (+15%) |
|---|---|---|
| 150–300 sq ft | 6,000–9,000 BTU | 7,000–10,500 BTU |
| 300–500 sq ft | 9,000–12,000 BTU | 10,500–14,000 BTU |
| 500–800 sq ft | 12,000–18,000 BTU | 14,000–21,000 BTU |
| 800–1,200 sq ft | 18,000–24,000 BTU | 21,000–28,000 BTU |
| 1,200–1,800 sq ft | 24,000–30,000 BTU | 28,000–35,000 BTU |
| 1,800–2,400 sq ft | 30,000–36,000 BTU | 35,000–42,000 BTU |
* These are starting points only. Actual sizing requires a Manual J load calculation that accounts for insulation, windows, ceiling height, sun exposure, occupancy, and local climate data.
Factors That Change the Calculation
Beyond square footage, these factors significantly affect BTU requirements:
- Ceiling height: 9-ft ceilings need 10–15% more BTU than standard 8-ft
- Window area: South-facing windows add solar gain; north-facing windows increase heat loss
- Insulation quality: Older Denver homes with original 1920s insulation need significantly more BTU
- Adjacent spaces: Rooms above garages or below attics have higher loads
- Occupancy: Each occupant adds approximately 600 BTU/hr of heat load
- Appliances: Kitchen and laundry rooms have higher cooling loads
Multi-Zone Sizing
For multi-zone systems, each indoor unit is sized individually based on the room it serves, and the outdoor compressor is sized to handle the total simultaneous load. A common mistake is sizing the outdoor unit for the sum of all indoor units’ maximum BTU — in practice, all zones rarely run at full capacity simultaneously, so most systems use a simultaneous demand factor of 70–80%.
Use Our BTU Calculator
Get a preliminary estimate using our BTU sizing calculator — it’s designed for Colorado homes and includes altitude adjustment. Then call us for a free in-home Manual J calculation to confirm the right system size.
For homes with existing ductwork, we also install Bosch IDS ducted heat pump systems — a whole-home solution rated to -22°F that replaces your furnace and AC in one system. Learn more about ducted heat pumps →
Service Areas We Serve
We install mini-splits and heat pumps throughout Colorado.
Cherry Creek
Congress Park
Washington Park
Park Hill
Highland
LoHi
RiNo
LoDo
Five Points
Uptown
Cheesman Park
City Park
Sloan’s Lake
Central Park
Lowry
Green Valley Ranch
Platt Park
Baker
Berkeley
Sunnyside
Hilltop
Bonnie Brae
Mayfair
Cory-Merrill
Montbello
Regis
Golden Triangle
Harvey Park
Virginia Village
University Hills
Globeville
Speer
Jefferson Park
Highlands Ranch
Ken Caryl
Applewood
Columbine
Roxborough
Bow Mar
Superior
Sedalia
Dacono
Firestone
Frederick
Berthoud
Timnath
Henderson
Larkspur
Foxfield
Acres Green
Stonegate
Denver
Aurora
Lakewood
Arvada
Westminster
Thornton
Centennial
Highlands Ranch