ApplianceRanked

ABL AREF18**

Top Freezer · 17.6

Summary

The ABL AREF18** is a top freezer with 17.6 capacity that uses 360 kWh per year, costing approximately $57.60annually to run at the US average electricity rate. Over 10 years, that's $576.00 in energy costs alone. It uses 4% less energy than the federal minimum standard. It meets ENERGY STAR certification but isn't among the top performers.

Ranked #2365 out of 4363 refrigerators by annual running cost, it costs $4.40 less per year than the category average of $62. At 28" wide, it is a standard size for its category.

$57.60
per year to run
54
efficiency score /100
$576.00
10-year energy cost

How This Compares to Other Refrigerators

Ranked #2365 out of 4363 in the refrigerators category (by lowest annual cost).

Annual Cost
$57.60 vs avg $62
$4.40/yr cheaper
Energy Use
360 kWh vs avg 385
25 kWh less
Efficiency Score
54 vs avg 63
Below average

Energy Details

Annual Energy Use360 kWh/year
Federal Standard376 kWh/year
Better Than Standard4%
Annual Cost (at $0.16/kWh)$57.60
Monthly Cost (estimated)$4.80
Capacity17.6
Width28"
Height66.9"
BrandABL
TypeTop Freezer
Date Certified2025-04-15

Running Cost Breakdown

Estimated electricity costs at different time horizons (based on $0.16/kWh US average rate):

Monthly
$4.80
1 Year
$57.60
5 Years
$288.00
10 Years
$576.00

Actual costs vary by location. States like Hawaii ($0.43/kWh) pay significantly more while Idaho ($0.11/kWh) pays less. Use our energy calculator to estimate costs at your local rate.

What This Means for You

The ABL AREF18** is cheaper to run than the average refrigerator in its category. At $57.60/year, you'll save approximately $44.00 over 10 years compared to a typical model in this category.

Its efficiency score is moderate — solid but not top-tier. It balances upfront cost with reasonable energy savings.

Energy costs are just one factor in choosing a refrigerator. Consider the purchase price, features, reliability, and how the total cost of ownership (purchase price + energy costs over its expected lifespan) compares to alternatives.

Energy cost estimated at $0.16/kWh (US national average). Your actual cost depends on your local electricity rate and usage patterns. Data from ENERGY STAR certified product database.