RunWatts
← All appliances

entertainment · 15W typical

Running a blu-ray player costs about $0.15/month.

That's the typical blu-ray player at 15W, run 2 hours a day at the US-average rate of 16.5¢/kWh. Change any of those and the number moves — use the calculator below to see yours.

Estimated cost

$0.15/month
$0.00 per day$1.81 per year900 Wh monthly
W

Full-power draw for 2 hours at 16.5¢/kWh.

How you use it

Cost shifts with how long it's on.

The same blu-ray player can cost very different amounts depending on usage patterns. Three common scenarios, at the US-average rate.

movie night

$0.15

per month

active playback

2 hrs/day·$1.81/yr

standby

$1.63

per month

standby draws 0.5-2W

22 hrs/day·$19.87/yr

Where you live

$0.27 spread between the cheapest and priciest states.

Same appliance, same hours of use, different zip code — the monthly cost varies this much.

StateRateMonthlyYearly
Hawaii41.2¢$0.37$4.51
California31.4¢$0.28$3.44
Massachusetts30.8¢$0.28$3.37
Connecticut28.7¢$0.26$3.14
Rhode Island27.9¢$0.25$3.06
New Hampshire24.6¢$0.22$2.69
Alaska24.3¢$0.22$2.66
New York22.3¢$0.20$2.44
Maine22.1¢$0.20$2.42
Vermont21.5¢$0.19$2.35
Michigan19.3¢$0.17$2.11
New Jersey19.1¢$0.17$2.09
Maryland18.4¢$0.17$2.01
Pennsylvania18.1¢$0.16$1.98
District of Columbia17.8¢$0.16$1.95
Wisconsin17.4¢$0.16$1.91
Delaware17.2¢$0.15$1.88
Illinois16.9¢$0.15$1.85
Ohio16.6¢$0.15$1.82
Nevada16.3¢$0.15$1.78
Indiana15.8¢$0.14$1.73
Virginia15.7¢$0.14$1.72
Minnesota15.6¢$0.14$1.71
Colorado15.4¢$0.14$1.69
Alabama15.2¢$0.14$1.66
West Virginia15.2¢$0.14$1.66
Florida15.1¢$0.14$1.65
New Mexico14.8¢$0.13$1.62
Texas14.8¢$0.13$1.62
Arizona14.7¢$0.13$1.61
South Carolina14.7¢$0.13$1.61
Kansas14.6¢$0.13$1.60
Georgia14.2¢$0.13$1.55
Iowa14.1¢$0.13$1.54
North Carolina13.9¢$0.13$1.52
Missouri13.6¢$0.12$1.49
Oregon13.4¢$0.12$1.47
Tennessee13.3¢$0.12$1.46
Kentucky13.2¢$0.12$1.45
Mississippi13.1¢$0.12$1.43
Oklahoma13.1¢$0.12$1.43
South Dakota12.7¢$0.11$1.39
Montana12.4¢$0.11$1.36
Nebraska12.2¢$0.11$1.34
Arkansas12.1¢$0.11$1.32
Washington12.1¢$0.11$1.32
Louisiana11.9¢$0.11$1.30
Wyoming11.6¢$0.10$1.27
North Dakota11.5¢$0.10$1.26
Utah11.4¢$0.10$1.25
Idaho11.3¢$0.10$1.24

Efficient vs. inefficient

A $2.65/year difference across the wattage range.

Swapping a high-draw model for an efficient one pays for itself. Here's what that looks like annually at typical usage.

Most efficient

8W

$0.08 per month

$0.96 per year

Typical

15W

$0.15 per month

$1.81 per year

High draw

30W

$0.30 per month

$3.61 per year

When it hits hardest

winter peak

Heavier winter movie-watching.

Ways to cut the cost

  • 1

    Kill standby via smart plug

    Saves 5-15 kWh/year

  • 2

    Use streaming for SD/HD content — 4K is where discs excel

    Streaming is lower watts overall

  • 3

    Power off manually after viewing — some players stay in 'ready' mode for hours

    Avoids 30-60 min of idle watts

Real-world wattages

Pulled from actual spec sheets.

BrandModelWatts
SonyUBP-X70016W
LGUBK9015W
PanasonicDP-UB15012W

Picks that actually move the needle

Three products worth comparing if you're thinking about upgrading or supplementing what you have.

Some links below are affiliate links. If you buy, we may earn a small commission — it never changes the price you pay, and we only recommend picks we would stand behind.

Sony UBP-X700 4K Blu-ray Player

16W playback, low standby draw

$180-230
Smart Plug with Energy Monitor

Eliminates even the small standby load

$18-25
Blu-ray Lens Cleaner

Prevents repeated read attempts that waste watts

$10-15

See also

Related appliances

Sources: www.energy.gov · www.energystar.gov

Last updated: 2026-04-13