Power Vent Calculator
Calculate powered attic ventilator (PAV) CFM requirements
sq ft
ft
ACH
CFM Required
1,875
Fans Needed (1,500 CFM each)2
Attic Volume9,000
Intake NFA Required (sq in)1,875
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How to Use the Power Vent Calculator
Balanced attic ventilation prevents heat buildup in summer and moisture damage in winter. The Power Vent Calculator calculates the Net Free Area (NFA) of vents required for your attic.
- Measure your attic floor area (length × width of the attic floor).
- Determine whether you have a vapor barrier — this affects the 1/150 vs 1/300 rule.
- Enter the attic area and your local climate type.
- Split the result 50/50 between intake (soffit) vents and exhaust (ridge) vents.
- Convert NFA to the number of specific vents using the NFA per vent on the product label.
Formula & Methodology
The Power Vent Calculator uses the following established formulas:
1/150 Rule: NFA (sq in) = Attic Area (sq ft) × 144 / 150
1/300 Rule: NFA (sq in) = Attic Area (sq ft) × 144 / 300
Use 1/300 when ≥50% of required vents are at ridge + ≥40% at soffit
Balanced: 50% intake (soffit) + 50% exhaust (ridge/gable)
Most building codes default to the 1/150 rule unless balanced ventilation conditions are met.
Frequently Asked Questions
The 1/150 rule requires 1 square foot of Net Free Vent Area for every 150 square feet of attic floor space. This applies when vents are not evenly distributed between intake and exhaust. The less-restrictive 1/300 rule applies when balanced ventilation conditions are met.
Excess ventilation is rarely a problem in a balanced system. However, too many exhaust vents without adequate intake can actually pull conditioned air from the living space into the attic. Balance is key: match intake NFA to exhaust NFA.
Ridge vents combined with continuous soffit vents create a more uniform airflow across the entire attic and are generally preferred. Gable vents can work, but they only ventilate the middle third of the attic effectively. Ridge + soffit is the modern standard.