The correct AC size depends primarily on your climate. Use the Hot row for India, Gulf and South-East Asia. Use Very Hot for regions with peak temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius.
| Climate zone | Peak temperature | BTU needed | Recommended size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very Hot | >40°C | 12,000 BTU | 1 ton |
| Hot | 33-40°C | 9,000 BTU | 0.75 ton |
| Warm | 27-33°C | 6,000 BTU | 0.5 ton |
| Temperate | 20-27°C | 4,200 BTU | 0.5 ton |
| Cool | <20°C | 3,000 BTU | 0.5 ton |
The figures above assume standard conditions: average insulation, 2 occupants, 9-foot ceiling. Add to the baseline for:
A 12x10 room covers 120 square feet and is typically a small single bedroom. Getting the AC size right matters in both directions: too small and it runs continuously without cooling the room; too large and it short-cycles with poor dehumidification.
Why the old "25 BTU per square foot" rule is wrong for hot climates. Most BTU calculators online use 25 BTU/sq ft, the US temperate-climate standard. For 120 sq ft that gives 3,000 BTU (0.5 ton). In India or the Gulf the correct figure is 75 BTU/sq ft, giving 9,000 BTU (0.75 ton). Using the US rule undersizes the AC by roughly three times.
For a 12x10 room (120 sq ft) in a hot climate (India, Gulf, South-East Asia), you need 9,000 BTU which is 0.75 ton. In a very hot climate above 40 degrees Celsius, you need 12,000 BTU (1 ton). In a cool temperate climate, 3,000 BTU (0.5 ton) is sufficient.
A 120 sq ft room needs between 3,000 BTU (cool climate) and 12,000 BTU (very hot climate). For India and Gulf states, use 9,000 BTU (0.75 ton) as your baseline, then add 10 percent for kitchens, west-facing windows or poor insulation.
0.75 ton is the correct size for a 12x10 room (120 sq ft) in a hot climate. If your climate peaks above 40 degrees, or the room is on the top floor, faces west or has poor insulation, increase to 1 ton.
The biggest factor is climate zone: the same 120 sq ft room needs 0.75 ton in a hot climate but only 0.5 ton in a cool one. Other factors: top-floor location (add 15 to 20 percent), kitchen (add 10 percent), west-facing windows (add 10 percent), poor insulation (add 15 to 20 percent), and more than 1 to 2 occupants (add 600 BTU per extra person).
Yes, if the window opening fits the required unit size. In a hot climate you need 9,000 BTU (0.75 ton). Check that a window AC is available in that capacity.
Recommendations use 100/75/50/35/25 BTU per sq ft for the five climate zones. Actual requirements vary with insulation, solar exposure, ceiling height and occupancy. Confirm sizing with a qualified HVAC technician for large or unusual spaces.