ApplianceRanked

Summit LBF249

Bottom Freezer · 10.6

Summary

The Summit LBF249 is a bottom freezer with 10.6 capacity that uses 370 kWh per year, costing approximately $59.20annually to run at the US average electricity rate. Over 10 years, that's $592.00 in energy costs alone. It uses 15% less energy than the federal minimum standard. This is a solidly efficient choice.

Ranked #2559 out of 4363 refrigerators by annual running cost, it costs $2.80 less per year than the category average of $62. At 23.4" wide, it is a standard size for its category.

$59.20
per year to run
65
efficiency score /100
$592.00
10-year energy cost

How This Compares to Other Refrigerators

Ranked #2559 out of 4363 in the refrigerators category (by lowest annual cost).

Annual Cost
$59.20 vs avg $62
$2.80/yr cheaper
Energy Use
370 kWh vs avg 385
15 kWh less
Efficiency Score
65 vs avg 63
Above average

Energy Details

Annual Energy Use370 kWh/year
Federal Standard434 kWh/year
Better Than Standard15%
Annual Cost (at $0.16/kWh)$59.20
Monthly Cost (estimated)$4.93
Capacity10.6
Width23.4"
Height71.3"
BrandSummit
TypeBottom Freezer
Date Certified2021-10-13

Running Cost Breakdown

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

Monthly
$4.93
1 Year
$59.20
5 Years
$296.00
10 Years
$592.00

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 Summit LBF249 is cheaper to run than the average refrigerator in its category. At $59.20/year, you'll save approximately $28.00 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.