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How to Measure a Window for an AC Unit: Opening, Sash, and Support

A window air conditioner fits a window in a way furniture never does: it has to sit in the opening, fill it side to side, and lock under a raised sash. Get one measurement wrong and the unit either will not seat or leaves a gap that leaks air all summer. Before you buy, you need the opening width between the tracks, how far the lower sash actually raises, the sill depth, and the window type, because a casement or slider needs a different unit entirely than a double-hung. This guide walks each measurement and the support and power checks that go with them.

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Match the Unit to the Window Type First

Window air conditioners are built for the window they sit in. A standard unit needs a double-hung or single-hung window, where a lower sash lifts up and the unit fills the width with side panels (accordion curtains). A horizontal slider or a casement (crank-out) window cannot take a standard unit, because there is no sash to drop onto the top of the unit. Those windows need a vertical (tower-style) slider AC or a through-wall unit. Identify the window type before you measure, because it decides which dimension is the limiting one.

The Four Measurements You Need

  • Opening width: the inside width of the window opening between the left and right tracks, where the unit and its side panels have to span. This is the number unit listings quote as minimum and maximum window width.
  • Opening height: how far the lower sash raises, measured from the sill to the bottom of the raised sash. The unit body has to clear this height to seat.
  • Sill depth and slope: the front-to-back depth of the interior sill the unit rests on, and whether the exterior sill slopes (most do, for drainage), which affects the tilt and the support bracket.
  • Clear exterior space: nothing outside (storm window, security bars, awning) blocks the rear of the unit, which must hang outside.

Typical Window AC Fit Ranges

Unit class (cooling)Min window widthMax window widthMinimum sash opening height
Small (5,000 to 6,000 BTU)23 in36 in13 in
Medium (8,000 to 12,000 BTU)23 to 27 in36 to 39 in13 to 16 in
Large (14,000 to 18,000 BTU)27 to 29 in39 to 42 in16 to 20 in
Vertical slider / casement unit15.5 in (width)24 in (width)20 in (sash height varies)
These are typical ranges. Always confirm against the exact model spec, since the minimum and maximum window width are the hard limits, and the side curtains only stretch so far before they leak.

Support, Weight, and Power

  • Weight: small units run 40 to 60 lbs, large units 80 to 130 lbs. The sill and the lower sash carry that load, so a support bracket bolted outside is strongly recommended above the ground floor and required by many buildings.
  • Tilt: the unit must tilt slightly down toward the outside (about a quarter bubble) so condensate drains out, not onto your floor. Account for that slope when you measure the sill.
  • Electrical: small units use a standard 115V outlet; 14,000 BTU and up often need a dedicated 115V circuit or a 230V outlet. Check the plug type before buying.
  • Side panels: the accordion curtains fill the gap between the unit and the tracks. Confirm the opening width falls inside the unit minimum and maximum so the panels seal.

Measure smart

What to measure.

Four numbers decide nearly every fit check. Get these right and the rest follows.

  1. 01The clear opening of every doorway, stair, and hallway on the delivery path, not the nominal size
  2. 02The narrowest pinch along the whole route, since the smallest point is the real limit
  3. 03The item's smallest face and its diagonal, because many pieces pass tilted that will not pass square
  4. 04The walkways and clearances you want to keep around the piece once it is in place

Don't make these

Common mistakes.

Most “it didn't fit” stories trace back to one of these oversights.

  1. ⚠Measuring the slab, frame, or glass instead of the actual clear opening
  2. ⚠Forgetting the diagonal, so a tilt that would have worked never gets tried
  3. ⚠Skipping the delivery path and only measuring the room the piece never reaches
  4. ⚠Ignoring handles, feet, and trim that add an inch or two to the real footprint

Go deeper

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Frequently asked

Questions we keep getting.

  • How do I measure a window for a window air conditioner?

    Measure the opening width between the left and right tracks (this is the window width the unit specs quote), the height the lower sash raises from the sill, and the interior sill depth. Confirm the window is double-hung or single-hung. Compare the opening width to the unit minimum and maximum window width, and the unit body height to the sash opening.

    01
  • What size window do I need for an AC unit?

    Most standard units fit double-hung windows 23 to 36 inches wide that raise at least 13 to 16 inches. Larger units (14,000 BTU and up) often need 27 to 42 inches of width and 16 to 20 inches of sash height. The unit listing gives an exact minimum and maximum window width, and those are hard limits.

    02
  • Can I put a window AC in a casement or sliding window?

    Not a standard unit. Casement (crank-out) and horizontal slider windows have no sash to drop onto the top of the unit, so they need a vertical tower-style slider AC or a through-wall unit. Identify the window type first, because it changes which unit you can buy and which dimension limits the fit.

    03
  • Does the window AC need a support bracket?

    For anything above the ground floor or any unit over about 60 lbs, yes. The sill and raised sash alone are not rated for a heavy unit hanging out the window. A bracket bolted to the exterior wall carries the load and sets the slight downward tilt the unit needs to drain. Many buildings require one.

    04

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