My sister recently called me for some insight on a discussion she was having with her roommates on how they could save money on their heating bills in their house in WY. She was trying to convince them that when they left the house, they needed to lower the thermostat from 64° F (which is already a pretty good setting) to 60°; basically, to follow my advice here.

Her roommates' contention was that by lowering the thermostat when they are away, the heating system will use more energy to get back up to 64 when they turn it back on. Therefore, they just want to leave the system at 64 all the time.

Unfortunately, this is a common misconception.  In order to clear things up completely, I am going to take a direct quote from the government (EERE) and we all know they are never wrong:

A common misconception associated with thermostats is that a furnace works harder than normal to warm the space back to a comfortable temperature after the thermostat has been set back, resulting in little or no savings. This misconception has been dispelled by years of research and numerous studies. The fuel required to reheat a building to a comfortable temperature is roughly equal to the fuel saved as the building drops to the lower temperature. You save fuel between the time that the temperature stabilizes at the lower level and the next time heat is needed. So, the longer your house remains at the lower temperature, the more energy you save.

Still don't believe me?  Think of it this way:  Instead of being gone just a few hours, you decide you are tired of the cold and go to Hawaii for the rest of the winter.  Do you honestly think you would be saving more energy by leaving your thermostat at 64º as opposed to lowering it (or turning it off) for the the amount of time you are sipping Mai Tai's and getting sun burned on the beach?   I'm just re-iterating the above statement: "... the longer your house remains at the lower temperature, the more energy you save."  It doesn't matter if this time period is a few hours, days, or years!

These facts don't change depending on if you live in a moderate, hot, or extremely cold climate.  As long as your location follows the Laws of Thermodynamics (which unless you are in some other Universe, it does) this applies to you!

Happy Energy Saving!

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Comments

More important to your comfort when you return is the temperature of your surroundings rather than air temperature itself. When you first return, make sure you keep your body covered as much as practicable. It can take significantly longer to warm furniture and walls than air. This results in radiant heat loss from your body to these surfaces and feeling chilly after the air has warmed but the walls and furniture temperatures lag. Often if you do not feel warm although the thermostat indicates the air hss reached what was previously a comfortable temperature. You may feel tempted to turn up the thermostat using more heat to get warm, resist this, put on a jacket until surroundings warm up, and you start to feel warm. Resist raising temperature. Cover yourself and your windows unless the sun is shining in which case you can sit in front of it and lower the thermostat. Programmable thermostats can be great but a thinking individual can do better. Thermostats do not know the sun is warming that window which is normally such a cold surface causing our bodies to cool as we radiate energy to it. Turning a thermostat down 4 degrees may save a little but why not turn it down to 55 degrees or so set to return to 68 before you return. This is where programmable thermostats work well.
The problem with lowering the thermostat when you leave is that it is colder than you like when you return. It takes time for the furnace to get the temperature back to where you want, so it seems like an eternity - like "are we there yet?" One has the perception that the furnace is really struggling (uphill?) to get the house warmed-up. when we know it is just taking its time. Your advice for the programmable thermostat is right-on. If the eternal delay in re-warming the house is unbearable, just program it to come on early enough to have the house nice and toasty by the time you get home.

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