What temperature do you keep your house at during winter?
26°C for me. I live with my son & he enjoys wearing as little as possible at home. Cold also makes him feel depressed. I’m alright with both hot and cold.
Bro, what the hell... some people are recreating the Caribbean in their houses while some others try to contribute the least amount possible to climate change. This is why we can't have nice things.
Maybe OP isn't properly informed of the energy usage and climate impact of his lifestyle. Some countries do very little to teach this unfortunately.
In France, a few years ago, there was a very large campaign for this exact topic to prevent energy usage spikes that could have brought the grid down. It also served as a way to teach people that 19 is just fine in the winter.
Right? That's what I'd set my AC to. It's a balmy 18 in my place now and -4 outside. Problem the lack of daylight leasing to the depression. Pop some vitamin d and put a sweater on. Cozy warm clothes are the best clothes.
I was thinking the exact same. I feel wasteful in the summer for keeping it at 23 (73 F). I don't think I could survive 26 in the winter. Maybe if I had never left Florida, but I doubt it.
Damn 26 is toasty. I get hot if it's 21 in my home. I warm rooms individually but mostly it's 19 or 20 degrees. I don't like to go outside and have too much of a difference.
19.5 on the thermostat, which I'm not sure is accurate. In my opinion comfortable indoor clothes include a sweater or a hoodie, so 26C isn't just wasteful, it's very uncomfortable.
During the day usually at 66°F (19°C), maybe bump it up to 68°F (20°C) if we’re feeling unusually chilly still. At night we usually drop it down to 62/63°F (around 17°C).
I'm like your grandparents today. Grew up in DDR, had one heated room: the kitchen. It was also our living room, and on the coldest nights our bedroom. Not heated like an oven though.
It makes me physically uncomfortable to be in a >18C room in the winter, even today. I know it's just a psychological thing, probably.
Exact opposite from my grandparents. They keep it at least 27 in the winter. It makes it very unappealing to visit, and I have to take frequent breaks outside in the snow.
I assumed that was all old people, since my spouse's grandparents are the same. Now I'm hoping they're the exception and most older people aren't living like lizards in terrariums.
That's very warm! Don't think I could deal with those kind of temperatures, not to mention I'd probably go bankrupt trying to keep my 1920s house at 26°C. Right now, my main living areas where I spent a lot of time (work room, living room, dining room) are at 19.7°C, other lesser used rooms are at 16.5°C.
Yeah, 26 is on the hot side of warm indoors for me too. It’s underwear only temperature. But for son it’s super comfortable. Even at this temperature he sleeps with a blanket. Maybe it’s cause he’s very skinny…
I don't really have a choice as heat is provided by my building, and they just keep it on at all times. So in winter it's pretty much always around 26/27C except when it gets really cold outside and it "drops" a bit. I do like the heat but it's a bit too much. Sometimes I have to open a window. 24C would suffice.
They even keep the heat on in summer so it can rise up to 35C during sunny days, but I have a portable AC to fight the building's system and bring it back down to a "cool" 24/25C.
26-27°C is already at the edge of becoming unbearably warm in summer. But 35? Where I live that’s a "hottest week of the year" kind of temperature. I‘d cook to death in my own sweat.
The same here but my heat pump sucks all of the moisture out of the air, so the number on the dial does not equal the comfort of the house.
I bought a humidification system and will install it soon and hopefully I'll be able to drop the number once there's a little bit more moisture to convey the heat to my body in the air.
74F (23C) I grew up in Florida, which is a very warm state. Now I live a good bit farther north, but my body never adjusted to the cold weather. Nice in the summer, as I don't need the A/C, but the bills in the winter are rough.
I would like to keep it at 21°C, but since I live in one of the top floors of a multi-story building, along with some apparently reptilian downstair neighbours, I can't get below 26°C...
I used to have downstairs neighbours like that and I loved it, free underfloor heating, I just opened the windows when I felt it got too warm. Saved me a good bit of money because I basically didn't have to heat at all.
16°C during the day, ~20ish in the evenings.
Still running an oldfashioned boiler setup. Would love to eventually move to a heatpump. Diesel ain't cheap.
Might be smart to check your son's iodine, T4-hormone, and maybe T3 levels, as iodine affects the thyroid (body's thermostat valve) and T4 is produced by it to be partly converted into T3 elsewhere. T4 and T3 activate heating. If not low, try some tyrosine or iodine anyway.
I have some gut illness with malabsorption, so the above over-the-counter tricks don't help much. I'm also skinny and can't gain weight. If suspecting bad gut, test for food intolerances by mediator release test or immunoglobulin G (expect false positives and negatives), or try an elimination diet (like rice and meat only for a month).
I wish I could tell you but our 1960s thermostat not only has wild up to 5°c temperature swings but does it's own thing once we go to bed And just sweats us out at 27-28 (even though I set it around 20) until I turn it down to 18 at which point it goes down to 15 or below. I'd prefer 18-20 while I sleep. But apparently that's not an option in our house.
And SET at 26c? I'm sorry, but you're the responsible adult in that relationship. He can put on a t-shirt and pants.
60 degrees Fahrenheit. The lowest I can go as part of my lease so the pipes don't freeze. I supplement with a portable heater and a heated blanket. Trying to keep the bill low. 👍🏾
Currently around 0 outside, we're running with the heat off at the moment, because it's not strictly speaking necessary yet. In practice it lands at around 20 C inside right now, and the lower bound I accept is 18, after which I turn on heating. Let's see whether it becomes necessary this winter.
Even if it means sleeping with multiple blankets, it’s much more cozy.
There is something to be said for having a giant pile of blankets on top of you. Growing up I would round up spare blankets and crack the window open in the winter until a balance was achieved between however many blankets I scrounged and the room temperature.
Also means you can dynamically trade blankets for a hoodie, then move a blanket more down, because you're wearing a cute skirt (mainly during the day, when you're just a bit tired or want to binge watch something), and remove a blanket because you're cuddling sharks.
The heating thermostat is now set at 16°C (~61°F) year round. It doesn't come on if the ambient temperature is higher. No AC. I would set it lower due to the expense but my feet are like ice most days as it is. For nights it's set to 14°C (~57°F).
16 is actually the minimum allowed in workplaces here. I'm fairly sure it used to be 17, but I guess financial pressures might have caused employers to demand it be lowered.
As to where I'd prefer it to be, around 19°C (~66°F) would be nice.
I have 19°C for daytime, 17°C at night and I admit it's quite comfortable overall. But me and my partner's feet still feel cold though, so it might be partly due to the actual temperature, partly due to a psychological bias that makes them feel really cold since they are way colder than the rest of the body.
The usual temperature around me (center of France), at work and as default on devices, is 20-21. I never thought about what it was in other climates, I guess you are in a colder region than me, or that energy is too expensive. Maybe I'll lower a bit more my actual temperature target
Combination of factors: The UK, so climate is colder. The UK again, so energy prices are ridiculous even when a homeowner can support themselves. I'm no longer able to support myself and am reliant on government assistance. Result: Cold.
17.5C typically, but we have blankets to hide under. I lit the fire tonight though so it's toasty. Drying the air with either the fire or a dehumidifier makes a huge difference.