Small Wind Turbine Calculator — Home & Farm Output 2026

Calculate annual output, savings and payback for a small wind turbine in 2026. Enter your wind speed and turbine size to see if wind energy makes sense.

 ·  Free  ·  No signup required

Enter your details
12 mph
5 kW
$
$
Your results
Annual production
Annual savings
Net cost after 30% ITC
Payback period

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter your average annual wind speed in mph. This is the single most important factor — wind power scales as the cube of wind speed.
  2. Select your turbine rated power in kW. Residential turbines range from 1kW (small rooftop) to 100kW (large farm turbines).
  3. Enter your electricity rate to calculate annual dollar savings from wind production.
  4. Enter the total installed system cost from your contractor quote.
  5. Annual production, savings, net cost after 30% ITC and payback period appear instantly.

Understanding your results

Wind power scales as the cube of wind speed: This is the most critical factor in wind economics. Doubling your wind speed multiplies power output by 8 (2³ = 8). A site averaging 12 mph produces roughly 3.4× more energy than a similar site at 8 mph. Before purchasing any wind turbine, measure actual wind speed at your site with an anemometer for at least 3–6 months — never rely on regional weather data alone.

Minimum viable wind speed: Most small wind turbines require an average annual wind speed of 10–12 mph (4.5–5.4 m/s) to produce economically meaningful output. Below 8 mph annual average, wind turbines rarely pay back within the system lifespan. NREL’s Wind Energy Resource Atlas provides free wind speed maps for all US states.

Capacity factor: The capacity factor is the ratio of actual annual production to theoretical maximum production if running at rated power 24/7. Small wind turbines typically have capacity factors of 15–35% depending on site wind. The calculator uses a cubic wind speed correlation to estimate capacity factor. Good sites (12+ mph) achieve 25–35%; marginal sites (8–10 mph) achieve 10–20%.

Federal and state incentives: Small wind turbines (≤100 kW) qualify for the federal 30% ITC under Section 48E through 2032. Some states also offer additional production incentives, property tax exemptions, and net metering credits for small wind. DSIRE.org lists all state-level wind incentives.

Zoning and setback requirements: Small wind turbines are subject to local zoning ordinances and setback requirements (typically 1.1× tower height from property boundaries). Turbines over 65 feet tall often require building permits. Homeowners associations frequently prohibit wind turbines outright. Verify local rules before investing.

Frequently asked questions

4.8 out of 5 47 ratings

Was this calculator helpful?