Frequently Asked Questions

How much energy is consumed in residential and commercial buildings in the United States?

In 2015, about 40% of total U.S. energy consumption was consumed in residential and commercial buildings, or about 39 quadrillion British thermal units.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) publishes estimates for monthly and annual energy consumption by the residential sector and the commercial sector, which is mostly building-related. These sectors account for nearly all of the energy consumption in U.S. buildings.

Energy consumption by the commercial sector also includes energy consumption for street and other outdoor lighting, and for water and sewage treatment. However, these energy uses are relatively small contributors to the commercial sector's total energy consumption.

EIA publishes detailed estimates for energy consumption in specific years in residential and commercial buildings.  EIA also publishes estimates for heating, ventilation, cooling, and lighting in manufacturing facilities in specific years. However, these data do not represent the total energy consumption for the residential sector, the commercial sector, and the industrial sector for those years.

Learn more:
Residential Energy Consumption Survey (RECS)
Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS)
Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey (MECS)

Last updated: April 6, 2016


Other FAQs about General Energy

On This Page:

Coal

Conversion & Equivalents

Crude Oil

Diesel

Electricity

Environment

Gasoline

General Energy

Natural Gas

Nuclear

Prices

Renewables

Full list of upcoming reports

Sign up for email notifications

Get the What's New RSS feed

Didn't find the answer to your question? Ask an energy expert.

(required)