A good energy rating for a dishwasher starts with ENERGY STAR certification standard models at ≤240 kWh/year and ≤3.2 gallons/cycle, compact units at ≤155 kWh/year and ≤2.0 gallons/cycle representing 12% energy and 30% water savings over federal minimums (307 kWh standard) while delivering reliable cleaning on simulated 215-280 annual Normal Eco cycles. Excellent ratings push to ENERGY STAR Most Efficient (<200 kWh/year, like Miele G5892 at 200 kWh) or EU A-class (<54 kWh/100 cycles, <9.5L water), but good benchmarks prioritize balanced consumption without long cycles or weak performance, suiting most households running 3-5 loads weekly for $30-40 annual costs.
ENERGY STAR: Universal U.S. Efficiency Benchmark
ENERGY STAR verifies dishwashers use advanced tech like inverter motors and soil sensors to hit ≤240 kWh/year for standards (8+ place settings + serving pieces), equating to 1.0-1.2 kWh/cycle on eco modes $31/year at $0.13/kWh. Compact models tighten to 155 kWh, ideal apartments. Water caps at 3.2 gal/cycle (10L) standard, 2.0 gal compact, slashing handwashing equivalents by 8,000+ gallons yearly. Certification requires ≥70 Cleaning Index, ensuring efficiency doesn’t compromise spotless results.
These thresholds exceed minimum standards by 41% energy efficiency, rewarding full loads where per-setting kWh drops 20-30%.
Most Efficient: Elite Tier Beyond Good
ENERGY STAR Most Efficient demands <200-220 kWh/year Bosch 800 Series (199 kWh), Fisher & Paykel (202 kWh) via zeolite drying (moisture-to-heat conversion) and half-load options (30% less water). Annual costs dip to $25-27, saving $5-10 versus standard good ratings. These excel in hard water (limescale resistance) and high use (8+ cycles/week), but average homes see diminishing returns 3-hour eco cycles frustrate despite savings.
EU A-G Scale: Holistic Global Standard
Post-2021 EU labels rate A (best) to G on combined kWh/100 cycles (<54 A, 54-75 B good), liters/cycle (<9.5L A), drying (A-D), noise, and time. A-class brushless motors save 20-25% versus D (90+ kWh/100), costing €40-60 less yearly. Larger 14-setting As outperform small Bs per-load, emphasizing full runs.
A roughly matches U.S. Most Efficient; B-C good like standard ENERGY STAR.
Water Efficiency: Critical Companion Metric
Good ratings pair ≤3.2 gal/cycle with kWh 2.9 gal leaders (LG) save $20/year water bills. EU <9.5L A-class; pumps consume 30% energy, so targeted spraying optimizes both.
Regional Good Benchmarks
Australia WELS 4.5+ stars (<4.5L/cycle + energy); UK A+++ legacy = modern A; NZ 4 stars standard.
Per-Cycle and Annual Realities
1.0-1.2 kWh/cycle good (260 cycles = 260-312 kWh); full loads maximize—half wastes 25% per-setting.
Tech Driving Good Ratings
Inverters (20% savings), sensors (15% less water), condensation tubs (no heat dry).
Savings Calculations
Good (240 kWh): $31/year; Most Efficient (200 kWh): $26 ($5 save); non-certified (300 kWh): $39 ($8 penalty). 10-year: $50-80.
Capacity Impact on Ratings
14+ settings = better per-place efficiency; test full loads.
Good vs Acceptable Trade-Offs
240 kWh good (balanced); <200 excellent (long cycles possible).
FAQs
ENERGY STAR minimum good?
240 kWh standard, 155 compact.
EU A = US what?
Most Efficient equivalent.
kWh/year assume cycles?
215-280 Normal Eco.
Gal/cycle good?
≤3.2 standard.
Hard water affect rating?
Yes descaling maintains efficiency.