I asked ChatGPT to cut my home energy use and these tips actually saved me money
Cutting my bill and energy usage all in one
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Opening my mailbox and finding nothing but bills is the ultimate good-vibes killer after coming home from work. I’m sure I’m not the only one who lets out a defeated sigh when that happens.
The bill that always makes me stare at it for far too long is my electricity bill. Every month it arrives, and I ask myself the same question: Why is this so high? The obvious answer is the number of electronics in my home. During the colder months, I can also see how constantly running my bedroom heater sends the total even higher than it is during warmer seasons.
After making some much-needed changes to my daily habits for Earth Day and hoping to lower my carbon footprint, I had another lightbulb moment. I turned to OpenAI’s ChatGPT to figure out the best ways to cut my monthly electric bill and adopt a more energy-efficient lifestyle.
Article continues belowLuckily, the chatbot analyzed my average bill, my regular habits and my household routines to create a list of practical tips that helped bring my electricity costs down to a much more manageable level.
Making changes to keep more money in my pocket
To kick off my whole “energy-saving, electric-bill downsizing” mission, I gave ChatGPT a simple prompt: I pay a $230+ monthly energy bill. What energy-saving tips can lower my bill and help me save money?
ChatGPT quickly pointed out that the biggest drivers of high electric bills are repeated heater or air-conditioning use, hot water consumption and electronics left running around the clock. With that in mind, and using what it already knew about my daily habits from previous chats, the chatbot explained that I didn’t need a drastic lifestyle overhaul. I just needed a few targeted changes to start bringing my bill down.
It then gave me a list of the biggest adjustments I could make to hit my goal, along with extra tips for each one.
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- Tackle heating & cooling first (this is the big one): Heating and AC can account for 40–60% of your bill. Adjust your thermostat by 2–3°F (aim for ~68°F in the winter and ~75–78°F in the summer) and use a programmable or smart thermostat (auto-adjust when you’re out).
- Cut down hot water usage (huge hidden cost): Hot showers + water heating = major energy drain. Shorten showers by 2–3 minutes, install a low-flow showerhead and only run the dishwasher when full.
- Reduce “always-on” energy (especially your gaming setup): With PS5, Xbox Series X, Switch, MacBook, and iPhone, you likely have a lot of standby power draw. Turn off consoles completely (not rest mode) when not in use, use a smart power strip to cut phantom power and lower your TV brightness + enable energy-saving mode.
- Upgrade lighting (quick win): If you’re not fully on LEDs yet, this is easy money. Swap all bulbs to LED.
- Food & cooking tweaks: Since you mentioned eating red meat and cooking at home, use an air fryer instead of the oven when possible. Also, batch cook to reduce repeated oven use and keep your fridge at ~37–40°F and freezer at 0°F.
ChatGPT also produced a rough breakdown of why my bill comes in at $230. It attached $100-$140 to the heating/cooling, $40-$60 to the water heating, $30-$50 to the appliances/electronics and $10-$20 to the lighting.
The takeaway
ChatGPT’s advice gave a solid game plan to tackle with the sole goal of keeping my pockets fuller in the coming months.
By adjusting my thermostat, shortening my morning showers, making sure my consoles are fully turned off, and installing LED lightbulbs, I noticed an immediate difference in my March bill compared to my April bill. Imagine the good mood I stayed in once I locked eyes with a Con Edison bill that only came out to $130+ instead of the $230+ bill it used to be.
From this point forward, I’ll also be sure to use fans instead of air conditioners in each room and try to inject cold showers into my morning schedule once the summer arrives. I can’t make any promises on that last mission, though—cold showers don’t sound all that appealing. Anyways, thank you, ChatGPT, for showing me what it takes to cut my home energy use and save a few extra bucks in the process.
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Elton Jones covers AI for Tom’s Guide, and tests all the latest models, from ChatGPT to Gemini to Claude to see which tools perform best — and how they can improve everyday productivity.
He is also an experienced tech writer who has covered video games, mobile devices, headsets, and now artificial intelligence for over a decade. Since 2011, his work has appeared in publications including The Christian Post, Complex, TechRadar, Heavy, and ONE37pm, with a focus on clear, practical analysis.
Today, Elton focuses on making AI more accessible by breaking down complex topics into useful, easy-to-understand insights for a wide range of readers.
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