The correct AC size depends primarily on your climate, not just the room dimensions. The table below shows the right tonnage for every climate zone. If you are in India, the Gulf or South-East Asia, use the Hot or Very Hot row.
| Climate zone | Peak temperature | BTU needed | Recommended size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very Hot | >40°C | 10,000 BTU | 0.75 ton |
| Hot | 33-40°C | 7,500 BTU | 0.5 ton |
| Warm | 27-33°C | 5,000 BTU | 0.5 ton |
| Temperate | 20-27°C | 3,500 BTU | 0.5 ton |
| Cool | <20°C | 2,500 BTU | 0.5 ton |
The figures above assume a standard room with average insulation, 2 occupants and a 9-foot ceiling. Add to the baseline BTU figure for the following:
A 10x10 room covers 100 square feet and is typically a small single bedroom. At this size, correct AC selection matters because the consequences of getting it wrong are significant in both directions.
An undersized AC in a 100 sq ft room runs continuously at full load in hot weather without reaching the target temperature. This wastes electricity, increases wear on the compressor, and leaves the room uncomfortable. See what happens with an undersized AC.
An oversized AC short-cycles: it cools the air near the thermostat sensor quickly, shuts off, and then restarts before the whole room is uniformly cooled or properly dehumidified. This is especially uncomfortable in humid climates. See what happens with an oversized AC.
Why the old "25 BTU per square foot" rule is wrong for hot climates. Most BTU calculators you will find online use 25 BTU per square foot, which is the US temperate-climate standard. For a 100 sq ft room that gives 2,500 BTU (0.5 ton). In India or the Gulf, the correct figure is 75 BTU per square foot, giving 7,500 BTU (0.5 ton). Using the US rule in a hot climate undersizes the AC by roughly three times.
For a 10x10 room (100 sq ft) in a hot climate (India, Gulf, South-East Asia), you need 7,500 BTU which is 0.5 ton. In a very hot climate above 40 degrees Celsius, you need 10,000 BTU (0.75 ton). In a cool temperate climate, 2,500 BTU (0.5 ton) is sufficient. Always match the recommendation to your actual climate zone.
A 100 sq ft room needs between 2,500 BTU (cool climate, 25 BTU/sq ft) and 10,000 BTU (very hot climate, 100 BTU/sq ft). For India and Gulf states, use 7,500 BTU (0.5 ton) as your baseline, then add 10 percent for kitchens, west-facing windows, or poor insulation.
0.5 ton is the correct size for a 10x10 room (100 sq ft) in a hot climate (33 to 40 degrees Celsius). If your climate peaks above 40 degrees, or the room is on the top floor, faces west or has poor insulation, increase to 0.75 ton. Using a unit that is too small means it runs continuously without reaching your target temperature.
The single biggest factor is climate zone: the same 100 sq ft room needs 0.5 ton in a hot climate but only 0.5 ton in a cool one. Other factors that increase the required size: top-floor location (add 15 to 20 percent), kitchen heat load (add 10 percent), west-facing windows with direct afternoon sun (add 10 percent), poor insulation (add 15 to 20 percent), and more than 1 to 2 occupants (add 600 BTU per extra person).
Yes, a window AC can work in a 10x10 room (100 sq ft) if the window opening supports the required size. In a hot climate you need 7,500 BTU (0.5 ton). Check that the window AC unit you consider is available in that capacity, as window ACs have more limited size options than split ACs. For rooms above 200 sq ft in hot climates, a split AC is usually a better choice for efficiency and noise.
Recommendations are based on climate-aware BTU calculations using 100/75/50/35/25 BTU per sq ft for the five climate zones. Actual requirements vary with insulation quality, solar exposure, ceiling height and occupancy. Confirm sizing with a qualified HVAC technician for large or unusual spaces.