Boiler DHW Calculator

TS 2164DIN 1988
System Parameters
Enter your system requirements to calculate boiler capacity and storage needs

Select the type of boiler system

Select the fuel type for the boiler

L/min

Maximum flow rate during peak demand

L/min

Average flow rate throughout the day

L/day

Total daily hot water consumption

°C

Incoming cold water temperature

°C

Desired hot water temperature

min

Duration of peak demand period

min

Time to recover full storage capacity (for storage systems)

ratio

Thermal efficiency of the boiler

ratio

Heat losses in distribution system

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this calculator

DHW boiler sizing depends on peak demand, not average usage. Calculate based on: number of fixtures × flow rate × diversity factor, or storage recovery method (tank size ÷ recovery time). A typical home needs 20-40 kW for DHW. Consider simultaneous shower/dishwasher/laundry usage for peak load.

Combi boilers heat water on-demand with no storage tank—compact but limited flow rate (10-15 L/min). System boilers heat a hot water cylinder for higher flow rates and multiple simultaneous draws. Choose combi for small homes (1-2 bathrooms), system for larger homes or high DHW demand.

Store DHW at 60°C minimum to prevent Legionella bacteria growth (which thrives at 20-45°C). Deliver at 50-55°C maximum to prevent scalding (mix with thermostatic mixing valves). Weekly thermal disinfection at 70°C for 2 minutes kills bacteria in distribution pipes.

Use ASHRAE hot water demand tables: residential ~150-230 L/day per person, hotels ~100-150 L/day per room, offices ~20-40 L/day per person. Peak hour demand is typically 25-35% of daily total. Apply diversity factor (0.3-0.7) for simultaneous usage in large buildings.

Recovery rate is gallons (or liters) of water a heater can raise through the temperature rise per hour. Calculate: Recovery = Boiler output (kW) × 860 / ΔT. A 25 kW boiler with 40°C rise provides ~538 L/h recovery. Higher recovery allows smaller storage tanks.

Instantaneous (tankless): lower standby losses, unlimited supply, but limited flow rate and higher peak demand on boiler. Storage: consistent supply, lower peak load, but standby losses and legionella risk. Solar thermal and heat pumps work better with storage. Consider hybrid systems for best efficiency.

Learn More

Domestic hot water (DHW) systems integrated with heating boilers provide efficient water heating through indirect storage tanks, tankless coils, and combination systems. Proper sizing ensures adequate hot water delivery during peak demand while maintaining efficiency and preventing Legionella bacteria growth. ASHRAE 90.1 and EN 12828 establish requirements for system capacity, storage volume, recovery rates, and temperature control. Residential demand typically requires 40-60 liters per person per day with morning peak loads, while commercial applications (hotels, offices, restaurants) exhibit different patterns requiring accurate demand estimation using fixture unit methods.

Storage Tank Sizing and Recovery: Storage tank sizing balances peak demand capacity against boiler recovery rate. Optimal size stores 30-60 minutes of peak flow, calculated as tank volume = peak hourly demand - (boiler recovery rate × peak duration). Example: 1,000 L/hr peak with 800 L/hr boiler recovery needs minimum 200L storage plus safety margin, typically sizing to 300-400L total. Indirect tanks separate potable water from boiler water through heat exchangers—residential units recover at 100-200 L/hr while commercial units achieve 1,000+ L/hr through larger coil surfaces and higher boiler water temperatures.

Temperature Control and Legionella Prevention: Temperature control balances Legionella prevention (storage ≥60°C per ASHRAE 188 and WHO) against scald protection (delivered ≤49°C per IPC 607.1.1). Thermostatic mixing valves blend stored hot water with cold water to safe delivery temperatures. Storage below 55°C risks Legionella proliferation while above 70°C accelerates corrosion and scaling. Weekly pasteurization cycles raising tank to 70°C for 30 minutes provide additional control in high-risk facilities like hospitals and nursing homes, ensuring pathogen elimination throughout distribution systems.

Recirculation Systems and Distribution: Recirculation systems maintain hot water throughout distribution piping eliminating waiting time, critical for large buildings and hotels. Pumps sized for 5-15% of peak DHW demand circulate water through supply mains and return lines. Insulation on all hot water piping (25-50mm per ASHRAE 90.1) minimizes heat loss—uninsulated pipes lose 3-10 W/m. Temperature-controlled or time-clock-operated pumps reduce operating hours during low-demand periods achieving 20-40% energy savings with minimal impact on user experience and comfort.

Combination Boiler Sizing and Priority Controls: Boiler sizing for combination heating and DHW requires the greater of space heating load or DHW recovery load, not the sum (peak demands rarely coincide). Modulating condensing boilers efficiently serve both loads by adjusting firing rates. Priority controls allocate full boiler capacity to DHW during calls, temporarily suspending space heating—acceptable since building thermal mass maintains temperature during brief DHW priorities. Combination systems reduce installation cost and space while achieving higher annual efficiency through condensing operation on DHW loads.

Energy Efficiency Optimization: High-efficiency condensing boilers achieve 95%+ AFUE versus standard atmospheric units at 80-85%. Solar thermal preheat reduces fossil fuel demand by 40-70% in sunny climates. Heat pump water heaters achieve 200-300% effective efficiency through refrigeration cycles. ASHRAE 90.1 mandates minimum insulation R-values, limits standby losses, and requires efficient controls—compliance achieved through indirect tanks, outdoor reset controls reducing boiler temperature during mild weather, and modulation reducing cycling losses and improving seasonal performance.

Standards Reference: Design per ASHRAE 90.1 (energy efficiency), ASHRAE 188 (Legionella prevention), EN 12828 (heating systems), and IPC Chapter 6 (DHW systems). Storage ≥60°C for Legionella control, delivery ≤49°C for scald protection. Thermal expansion tanks accommodate 2-4% volume increase. Recirculation insulation 25-50mm thickness. Annual energy typical: 40-60 kWh per person for residential DHW.

Residential Boiler and DHW System Design

Size boiler and domestic hot water storage system for residential home

1
Number of Occupants: 4
2
Daily DHW Demand: 200 L/day
3
Peak Demand: 1,200 L/hr
4
Temperature Rise: 50°C

Result

Storage Tank:
200 L capacity

Calculations

  • Storage capacity: 200 L (1 day supply)
  • Boiler capacity: 24 kW (200 L × 4.18 × 50°C / 3600 s = 11.6 kW + 50% safety = 24 kW)
  • Recovery time: 45 minutes (200 L from 10°C to 60°C)

Equipment

  • Indirect tank with heat exchanger
  • Storage at 60°C
  • Circulation to maintain 50°C for Legionella prevention

Additional Notes

Per EN 806 and plumbing codes, size DHW storage for peak demand and recovery rate. Typical demand: residential 40-60L/person/day, commercial varies by use. Recovery time: boiler kW / (volume L × 4.18 × ΔT). Indirect tanks: heat exchanger area determines recovery rate. For Legionella prevention: store at 60°C, circulate to maintain 50°C. Consider solar preheat for efficiency.
Notes: Per EN 806 and plumbing codes, size DHW storage for peak demand and recovery rate. Typical demand: residential 40-60L/person/day, commercial varies by use. Recovery time: boiler kW / (volume L × 4.18 × ΔT). Indirect tanks: heat exchanger area determines recovery rate. For Legionella prevention: store at 60°C, circulate to maintain 50°C. Consider solar preheat for efficiency.

Multi-Family Building - Peak Demand Sizing with Storage

Size DHW system for 24-unit apartment building with indirect storage tanks

1
Number of Units: 24
2
Fixture Units: 180 FU
3
Peak Demand: 12 L/s
4
Temperature Rise: 50°C
5
Storage Temperature: 60°C
6
Delivery Temperature: 50°C

Result

Peak Hour Demand:
921 L/hour

Calculations

  • Peak demand: 48 showers × 8 min × 8 L/min = 3,072 L total over 2 hours = 1,536 L/hour peak
  • Simultaneous factor: Not all shower at exact same time, apply 0.6 diversity = 921 L/hour actual
  • Heating load: 921 L/hr × (50°C - 10°C) × 1.163 Wh/L/°C = 42.9 kW continuous during peak

Boiler Recovery

  • 300 kW boiler × 0.85 efficiency / (1.163 Wh/L/°C × 40°C) = 5,470 L/hour recovery rate (far exceeds demand)

Storage Sizing

  • 1-hour peak demand = 921 L, but boiler recovers 5,470 L/hr, so smaller tank adequate
  • Install: 2× 500 L indirect tanks (1,000 L total) provides 65-minute buffer at peak demand without recovery
  • With recovery: effectively unlimited

Temperature Drop Analysis

  • Starting at 100% charge (60°C, 1,000 L), peak draw 921 L/hr mixed with incoming cold
  • First hour: (1,000 L × 60°C + 921 L × 10°C recovery) / 1,921 L = 36°C average in tank
  • Delivered temp maintained via mixing valve and continuous boiler firing
  • System maintains 50°C delivery throughout 2-hour peak

Daily Consumption

  • 60 people × 50 L/person/day = 3,000 L/day (includes showers, washing, cooking)
  • Energy: 3,000 L × 40°C rise × 1.163 Wh/L/°C = 140 kWh/day = 51,000 kWh/year

Legionella Prevention

  • Maintain 60°C storage
  • Circulate to maintain 50°C throughout distribution (ASHRAE 188)
  • Weekly 70°C pasteurization cycle

System Components

  • Indirect tanks (no direct flame contact with DHW = longer life, cleaner water)
  • Bronze circulating pumps
  • Mixing valves
  • Expansion tank
  • Aquastat controls

Additional Notes

Per EN 806 and plumbing codes, size DHW storage for peak demand and recovery rate. Typical demand: residential 40-60L/person/day, commercial varies by use. Recovery time: boiler kW / (volume L × 4.18 × ΔT). Indirect tanks: heat exchanger area determines recovery rate. For Legionella prevention: store at 60°C, circulate to maintain 50°C. Consider solar preheat for efficiency.