Many people notice their electricity bills rising even when they try to reduce energy use. Often, they assume the problem comes from devices like televisions, computers, or kitchen appliances that run daily. However, in many homes the real cause is an appliance that receives little attention. As the article explains, **“the real source of the problem sits quietly in the laundry room.”**
The electric clothes dryer is one of the most energy-intensive appliances in a house. Because it is used only occasionally, people may underestimate its impact. But every time it runs, it consumes a large amount of electricity in a short period. For families that do frequent laundry, this appliance alone can significantly increase monthly energy costs.
The main reason for this high consumption is simple: **“heat.”** Unlike many household devices that rely mainly on small motors or electronics, a dryer must produce strong heat and maintain it long enough to remove moisture from clothes. Generating and sustaining that heat requires a large amount of electricity.
Electric dryers typically use between **2,000 and 5,000 watts per hour**, which is far more than most everyday devices. For comparison, a refrigerator usually uses around 150–300 watts, a laptop about 50–100 watts, and many modern televisions less than 150 watts. Even washing machines that do not heat water often consume less electricity than dryers.
Because of this difference, even short periods of dryer use can have a noticeable effect on energy consumption. In fact, **“just ten minutes of dryer use can consume as much electricity as several hours of operation from smaller devices.”** Over time, these short but powerful bursts of energy use can significantly increase a household’s electricity bill.