Skip to main content
Home
  • About Us
    • Annual Report
  • Powering the Future
    • Our Energy Mix
  • Electrify and Save®
    • On-Bill Repayment
    • Programs
    • Quality Install
  • Media
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Features
    • News
    • Newsletter
    • Podcast
  • Cooperative Benefits
  • Operations
  • Search
Menu

Search form

6 Energy-Saving Tips for Your Home in Summer

May 26, 2020

6 Energy-Saving Tips to Get Your Home Ready for Summer

Temperatures are on the rise, and summer 2020 is predicted to be hotter than average, according to both the National Weather Service and Old Farmer’s Almanac Guide. Here are 6 energy-saving tips you can take to ensure your home is ready for the heat, without spending a lot of money or energy. 

Not to worry if your home doesn’t have a cooling system – you don’t have to be stuck inside a toasty house. With a little planning, you can lower the temperature inside, even if the heat may set records outside. Using room fans or your furnace fan to move air will also help to make you feel cooler. 

If your home has a central air conditioning unit or another cooling method, it may not be running as efficiently or cooling your house as well as it could. Taking a few minutes to evaluate your equipment helps avoid issues when you really need that system up and running. 

1. Optimize Your Thermostat Settings

By setting your thermostat at the recommended 78 degrees your home will be cool without straining your system or draining your wallet. Turn the temps up when you are away to avoid cooling an empty home. This is easy with a programmable thermostat. With a smart home thermostat, you can verify your efficient settings from your phone while you’re out enjoying summertime fun. 

2. Seal Cracks and Insulate

For as long as air conditioning has been around, there have been parents badgering children about how they’re not paying to cool the outdoors. A worse offender is all of the cracks and holes in your home. You can inspect all doors and windows and make sure the caulking around them is in good shape. If not, remove the old caulking and replace it.  Also inspect the doors and windows seals to ensure they are not torn, missing, or in bad shape.  Have your home insulation checked as well. Many homes are not insulated to the recommended levels. These items can not only keep your home cooler, but it can also help your cooling method work more efficiently.

3. Use Grills More Often

Running the stove and oven during the summer months can defeat even a fierce AC in the kitchen, making your whole system work harder. If you’re able to cook your meals outside with your grill or by using heat-free or heat-limited appliances like a slow cooker, or pressure cooker, you can help keep your indoor environment more pleasant. 

4. Run Dishwashers, Dryers and Washing Machines After Dark

Waiting until after dark to run major appliances like dishwashers, washing machines, and dryers can reduce heat generated in your home during the day. An additional benefit is that you’ll use the electricity necessary to power these big appliances when our power supply is in less demand. 

5. Swap Out Lights to LED or CFL

Add this to all the other reasons you should finally swap out all your incandescent bulbs to LED or CFL ones: Traditional light bulbs give off a lot of heat. While the change may not make a huge difference in degrees in your home by itself, eliminating this inefficiency can contribute to a cooler, more efficient home overall. 

6. Ventilate Your Home Naturally

Here in the West, we get a lot of warm days and cool nights. Take advantage of this by opening your windows in the evening and turning off your cooling unit overnight. In the morning, shut your windows and dark or solar-blocking drapes to trap that cooler air inside. It will reduce the amount of time you need to run your cooling units, increase your energy efficiency, and lower your utility bill. 

Your electric co-op or utility company may offer additional programs to help you further increase your energy savings. 

 

Electrify and Save™ 

 

--

About Tri-State

Tri-State is a power supply cooperative, operating on a not-for-profit basis, serving electric distribution cooperatives and public power district member-owners in four states. Together with our members, we deliver reliable, affordable and responsible power to more than a million electricity consumers across nearly 200,000 square miles of the West. Visit www.tristate.coop.    

 

Myles Jensen

Contributor:

Myles Jensen, Senior Manager Member Relations

Blog Posts

17 Electrical Safety For Spring Cleaning and Summer Projects

Include Electrical Safety in Your Spring Cleaning and Summer Projects

May is Electrical Safety Month! Here are 17 important electrical safety tips for spring cleaning and summer projects around your yard and home
Kent Mahanna, MPH, CSP Senior Manager Safety & Security
Read more >
Co-op-Powered Broadband Keeps People Connected

Co-op-Powered Broadband Keeps People Connected When it Counts

How electrical co-ops provide essential broadband services to keep communities connected in 2020
Monroe Johnson, Ciello Chief Technology Office
Read more >
How Electricity is Keeping Food Supply Available

How Electricity is Keeping Food Supply Available

Many consumers may not know much about the increasingly critical role this power source plays in getting that food from the farm to your table. And now, as many Americans stock up and social distance, it’s a good time to contemplate the essential role electricity -- and its providers -- play in keeping all of us fed.
Sander Blackburn, Member Relations Manager
Read more >
5 powerful all-electric gardening tools

Take Advantage of These 5 Powerful Electric Gardening Tools

Garden tools powered by electricity can support your green thumb. These electric-powered tools can last longer and are emissions-free, meaning you’ll smell the scents of summer, not the smell of exhaust.
Matt Fitzgibbon, Beneficial Electrification Manager
Read more >
Stay at Home STEM Activity Sites for Kids

18 Stay at Home STEM Activity Sites for Learning and Fun

While we all stay at home and social distance, parents and teachers are searching to find the best resources to bring STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) activities to students. Here are 18 websites to check out
Michelle Pastor, Senior Education Program Advisor
Read more >
Tri-State’s wholesale rates are stable, and forecasted to remain so to 2050

Tri-State’s wholesale rates are stable, and forecasted to remain so to 2050

Our goal with the REP is stable to lower rates. Over the longer term to 2050, with a more low-cost renewables and a focus on cost management, our rates, adjusted for inflation, are forecast to be lower than they are today.
Pat Bridges, Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Read more >
What is the Benefit of Being a Member of an Electric Co-op?

What is the Benefit of Being a Member of an Electric Co-op?

Today’s consumers increasingly want to buy products and services from purpose-driven organizations that contribute to the greater good. That’s one of the benefits some 42 million Americans receive as members of electric cooperatives.
Jennifer Goss, Senior Vice President, Member Relations
Read more >
earth day energy saving tips

Earth Day Energy Tips

The 50th Earth Day is coming up on Wednesday, April 22nd. Even while we’re doing our parts to stay home and stay safe, we can plan to make a difference this Earth Day with these 10 Simple Energy-Saving Tips
Myles Jensen, Senior Manager Member Relations
Read more >
Virtual Story Behind The Switch

Teachers Re-Energized as Students Learn About Electricity Online

'The Story Behind the Switch' is an interactive classroom session on electricity and science led by Michelle Pastor, Senior Education Program Advisor at Tri-State. Michelle shares her personal story and experience and brings the classroom to the kids at home.
Michelle Pastor, Senior Education Program Advisor
Read more >

Pagination

  • First page« First
  • Previous page‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page   3
  • Page   4
  • Page   5
  • Page   6
  • Page   7
  • Page   8
  • Page   9
  • Currently on page   10
  • Page   11
  • Next pageNext ›
  • Last pageLast »

Subscribe

* indicates required
Join our mailing list for
updates and member news.
 
 

Quick links

  • Leadership Team
  • Dark Fiber
  • Financials
  • Board Meetings
  • Member Tools
  • The Cooperative Difference
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Careers
  • Employee login

Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association
Office: 303-452-6111
1100 West 116th Avenue
Westminster, CO 80234

Mailing address:
PO Box 33695
Denver, CO 80233-0695

©2025 Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, Inc. Power supplier to the rural west.

  • About Us
    • Annual Report
  • Powering the Future
    • Our Energy Mix
  • Electrify and Save®
    • On-Bill Repayment
    • Programs
    • Quality Install
  • Media
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Features
    • News
    • Newsletter
    • Podcast
  • Cooperative Benefits
  • Operations
  • Search