Whole House Fan vs Attic Exhaust Fan

They sound similar but do completely different things. Here is how to know which one you actually need.

One of the most common questions we get is about the difference between a whole house fan and an attic exhaust fan. The names sound similar, and both involve fans and attics, so the confusion is understandable. But they do very different things, and choosing the wrong one means your cooling problem will not get solved.

The Short Answer

A whole house fan cools your living space. It pulls cool outside air through your home, creating a breeze and pushing hot air out.

An attic exhaust fan only cools your attic. It does not create airflow through your home and does not directly cool your living space.

If you want to feel cooler, reduce AC usage, or create airflow through your home, you need a whole house fan. If you just want to reduce attic temperature to help your AC work slightly more efficiently, an attic exhaust fan might be enough.

Whole House Fan: The Details

Attic Exhaust Fan: The Details

What It Is

An attic exhaust fan (also called a powered attic vent or PAV) is a small fan mounted on your roof or in a gable vent. It turns on automatically via a thermostat when the attic gets hot and blows hot attic air outside. It pulls replacement air through existing attic vents.

Location: Mounted on roof or in gable vent, inside attic

Airflow: 800-1,400 cubic feet per minute

Power use: 50-75 watts

Effect: Reduces attic temperature only

Operation: Automatic via thermostat

What It Does

What It Does NOT Do

Limited Benefits

In a single-story home with standard 8-foot ceilings and good insulation, an attic exhaust fan might reduce room temperature by about 5 degrees Fahrenheit by reducing the heat load radiating through the ceiling. However, with modern insulation levels (8-16 inches), very little attic heat actually penetrates to affect room temperature. The benefit is often minimal.

Quick Decision Guide

Choose a Whole House Fan If:

  • You want to cool your entire house
  • You want to reduce or eliminate AC usage
  • Your upstairs stays hot even with AC
  • You have high ceilings or open floor plan
  • You want fresh air circulation
  • Evening temperatures drop below 80 degrees
  • You want a long-term cooling solution

An Attic Exhaust Fan Might Work If:

  • You only want to help AC work slightly better
  • You have a single-story ranch with low ceilings
  • You already have AC and want minor improvement
  • You have AC ducts running through the attic
  • You want automatic, hands-off operation
  • Budget is the primary concern

The Hot Upstairs Problem

If your upstairs stays hot even with AC running all day, a whole house fan is probably the only economical solution. Hot air rises and pools at the top of your home where AC cannot effectively reach it. A whole house fan pulls that trapped hot air up and out, doing what AC physically cannot do. An attic exhaust fan will not solve this problem because it does not remove air from your living space.

Can You Use Both?

Yes, but it is usually unnecessary. If you have a whole house fan, you can use it to blow hot air out of the attic anytime. Just open one window near the fan and run it briefly. Some customers install both for automatic attic venting during the day when they do not want to run the whole house fan, but this is optional.

An attic exhaust fan also provides about 1 square foot of additional attic ventilation, which can help your whole house fan run more efficiently.

Cost Comparison

Attic exhaust fan: $90-500 for the unit, relatively simple installation. Operating cost is about 5-10 cents per day.

Whole house fan: $1,500-2,500 installed for a quality system. Operating cost is about the same as 2-4 light bulbs. However, the potential savings from reduced AC usage can be substantial, often paying for the fan within a few summers.

The Bottom Line

Despite the similar names, these are fundamentally different products that solve different problems:

If you are trying to cool your home and reduce AC costs, you need a whole house fan. An attic exhaust fan simply cannot do that job.

Not Sure Which You Need?

We have been helping Colorado homeowners make this decision since 1976. Tell us about your situation and we will give you an honest recommendation.

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