Water Footprint Calculator — Showers, Laundry, Taps, Toilets & Diet
Inputs
🚿 Household water
Outdoor watering (optional)
If you water seasonally, enter the amount per active week and number of weeks.
🍽️ Diet (virtual water)
Diet values are broad averages and vary by region and sourcing. Everything is editable.
Advanced options (optional)
These example values don’t change the math directly; they’re just handy references while adjusting your own numbers.
Awareness-level estimator only. Local fixtures, habits, appliances, and food sourcing vary widely.
Results
What’s Being Calculated?
- Showers & taps: flow × time × frequency.
- Toilets: litres per flush × flushes per person.
- Dishwasher & laundry: litres per cycle/load × cycles per week (household).
- Outdoor watering (optional): weekly amount × seasonal weeks.
- Diet (virtual water): daily litres per person × days/year. This is a coarse average; actual values depend on what and where foods are sourced.
Tips
- Try low-flow showerheads (e.g., 6–7 L/min), efficient washers (≈50 L/load), and dual-flush toilets.
- Switch perspective between per-person and per-household to see both angles.
Understanding Your Water Footprint
Your water footprint combines direct household use (what flows through your taps at home) and indirect or “virtual” water (the water used to grow, process, and transport the food you eat and the products you use). This calculator focuses on everyday activities—showers, taps, toilets, dishwasher, laundry, and optional outdoor watering—plus a simple dietary component that you can customize. The goal is awareness, not judgment: seeing the big picture often reveals easy wins.
Direct vs. Indirect (Virtual) Water
- Direct water is what you can measure or estimate from fixtures and habits: shower flow × time, toilet litres per flush × daily flushes, laundry litres per load × loads per week, and so on.
- Virtual water is embedded in goods—especially food. Animal products typically carry higher averages due to feed, processing, and land requirements; plant-forward patterns tend to be lower on average. Because sourcing varies widely by region and season, the calculator lets you edit the diet value.
How Estimates Are Built
The calculator multiplies simple inputs to create a daily baseline, then scales to an annual view if desired. For example, a shower’s use is flow (L/min) × minutes × showers per day. Dishwasher and laundry entries are entered per household per week and divided by seven to make a daily average. Outdoor watering can be seasonal: enter litres per active week and the number of active weeks per year. If you select a per-person perspective, shared household uses (like laundry) are divided by household size.
Units and Transparency
Results can be displayed in litres (L) or US gallons (gal). Switch units at any time—the inputs convert in place for clarity. All assumptions are visible and editable, so you can align the numbers with your appliances (e.g., a high-efficiency washer), fixtures (e.g., low-flow showerheads), or local data.
What These Numbers Mean
The output is an estimate, not a certification. Real-world results vary with fixture performance, local pressure and temperature, water reuse practices, and specific food sourcing. Treat the totals as a directional guide and focus on the relative breakdown by category to spot practical changes.
Practical Ideas to Try
- Showers: Consider a low-flow showerhead and try shorter sessions. Small changes add up quickly.
- Toilets: Dual-flush or low-flush models reduce daily use without changing habits.
- Laundry: Run full loads, use an efficient machine if available, and choose eco cycles when appropriate.
- Dishwasher: Modern machines often beat hand-washing—use eco modes and only run full loads.
- Outdoor watering: Water early or late, mulch to retain moisture, and choose climate-appropriate plants.
- Diet presets: Explore different dietary averages to understand the scale of virtual water. Adjust to match your actual pattern.
Limitations
This is an awareness tool. It doesn’t account for local water scarcity, watershed stress, or seasonal shifts in food production. For project-level or policy decisions, consult regional water data, appliance specifications, and agricultural sourcing information.
Tip: Save a shareable link after adjusting assumptions—handy for comparing scenarios (e.g., new showerhead, different diet preset, or a bigger household).