How to Beat the Summer Heat With No Air Conditioning (How to Keep Cool)

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No air conditioning in your home or can’t afford to turn it on right now? It’s ok! Here are many different ways you can keep cool this summer without any air conditioning!

How to Keep Cool Without Air Conditioning

It’s over 90 degrees outside today and yet I’m feeling nice and cool inside the house, but I don’t have any air conditioning. When we were looking for a house, I thought air conditioning was a non-negotiable requirement for me. Didn’t think I could make it without it.

I’d still love a house with air someday but until that day comes I make the best with what I have. Here are some “hacks” on how I beat the summer heat and how we keep cool without air conditioning.

Leave the oven off.

No more being tempted to make cookies in the middle of the day, baking is reserved for when the sun goes down and the temps drop. It will require a little more planning ahead but at least your house won’t have to feel as warm as the inside of that oven!

Instead of the stove, you could also use a crockpot, grill, or a toaster oven instead of an oven, less electricity and you won’t heat up the house. And while you are at it, skip running the dryer or any other appliance that puts off heat during the day. Wait till it cools down in the evening. Also, plan to make “cooler” meals. When it’s 100 degrees outside no one wants to eat a bowl of chili. Stick to a big slice of watermelon and a salad with all the fixin’s. Here are some yummy no-cook meals to make in the summer.

Fudgesicles

Think cool treats.

Make homemade popsicles, freeze fruit, have plenty of ice on hand to make iced tea or ice water when you need it. If you need inspiration you can try these Strawberry Yogurt Frozen Pops or Homemade Fudgesicles.

I also like to freeze grapes when they are in season (just wash and freeze) and you can make frozen banana pops buy sticking a stick in a peeled banana, dipping in chocolate and freezing. Or you can just do the frozen juice. Anything cool works! Here is a big list of healthy Homemade Popsicle Recipes to check out too.

My personal favorite summertime snack is watermelon which has been chilling in the fridge. I can consume a ridiculous amount of it in one sitting I’m embarrassed to say!

Invest in dark shades or curtains.

Don’t have light or sheer curtains or blinds on your windows. They might look pretty but they won’t keep anything out!

We have heat-blocking curtains on every window on the south side of our home. They work great for my windows that face the south in the afternoon when the sun’s rays are beating in. Even a dark brown shade will work, anything to keep the amount of heat that the sun puts out outside and keep the inside dark and cool.

Don’t have money to buy new curtains? Use old dark colored sheets! Or you can sew your own curtains.

For the windows that I did not want heavy, blackout curtains, we are using blackout blinds instead. Not the most frugal option but still an option if you want a certain look in a room.

fan

Fans, fans, fans.

Fans are inexpensive to run and they provide relief from the sticky stiffness that summer brings. I have a ceiling fan in every single room in the house so that I can move the air around and keep it from being still.

If you don’t have a ceiling fan in a room, you could also put a box fan or a similar style fan in a window to either blow the cool air in or blow the hot air out.

Think about a window air.

We have a window air conditioner but it only fits in one bedroom window because of how the windows are in my house so it doesn’t really do alot of good but if you have a house where a window air will fit, try Craigslist or Freecycle to find a cheap or free window air conditioner.

Look for a window air that it is Energy Star approved and energy-efficient so you won’t rack up a huge electricity bill when you go through a heat wave.

kiddie pool

Get a pool.

No, you don’t have to spend a couple of hundred dollars on a pool that shoots glitter and fireworks. We’ve always loved having one of those little kiddie pools. Nothing beats the warmest days of the year like having a splash party with your little ones in the shade.

Two years ago we upgraded to a stock tank to have something that wouldn’t break. We have limited water so we only fill this about a foot deep but our kids absolutely love it and play in it every day in the summer.

Ice in a BOwl

Make your own air conditioner.

Put a bowl of ice in front of you and put it in front of a fan. Instant cool down while the ice melts away. Ice cubes are needed for this because you need the moisture + the cold. Ice packs won’t work the same.

spray bottle

Get a spray bottle or a water-spritzing fan.

Fill them with cold water and spray it on you to cool down. I love doing this with the garden hose when I’m working in the garden in the direct sunlight during the day.

You could also put a damp towel that you’ve soaked with cold water over your forehead or shoulders if you need to cool down quickly.

Tank Tops

Dress the part.

If you are staying home for the day, try and wear whatever will keep you cool. Go for loose, light fabrics. Also, try and stick with natural fabrics (like cotton or linen) instead of artificial (like polyester), as they are more breathable and will keep you cooler.

I find tank tops for $1 at rummage sales and stick to those most of the summer. If all else fails, pretend you are all the beach all day and hang out in a swimsuit.

ice water

Stay hydrated.

When your body is correctly hydrated you will stay cooler. Stay away from sugary summertime drinks and stick with good old ice water and plenty of it.

If you don’t have an ice maker at home, just buy a bag of ice the next time you are at the grocery store or gas station. Keeping that bag of ice in your chest freezer will help the freezer stay at it’s cold temperature easier and you will have a large supply of ice any time you need a drink.

Uncooked Rice

Wear a necklace.

No, not a regular fancy jewelry necklace. I’m sure you’ve seen those gel-feeling things you wrap around your neck to stay cool.

If you don’t want to buy one you can make one by sewing a long skinny tube, filling it with rice and freezing it until you need it. And old clean sock work really well for this too! Just place rice inside and tie the end shut.

Self Sufficiency Goals for 2014

Open up the doors.

I purposely designed our home with as many outside doors as I could. Why? Mostly because I love feeling like I live outside. But also to create the best cross breeze that I can.

Where we live we don’t tend to have much wind. But even in those weather conditions, I can usually still create a cross breeze throughout the house by opening up all the doors and using the ceiling fans. You can create similar airflow by opening up windows on opposing sides of your house or rooms as well.

Shower

Cool down in the shower.

If you have unlimited water, you can always utilize a cold shower as a way to cool your core temperature down. Even though we don’t have unlimited water, this is a nice way to end an evening of a hot day and cool down to be able to sleep.

Make your bedding cool.

This one will take a little time but might be worth it if you have a hard time sleeping in hot temps. When you need a new mattress look for a gel filled cooling mattress. You can also find gel filled pillows. We have both of these and they definitely help you sleep at a cooler temp than a regular mattress or a memory foam mattress. Just something to consider if bedtime is one of the most difficult times of day to beat the heat!

Of course, make sure that your bed linens are breathable too. Cotton is best. Skip the microfibers and polyester sheets.

sun1

Bonus Tip: Keep cool and stay frugal with some yummy Frugal Ice Cream! You don’t even need a special ice cream maker to make it, you can make your own Homemade Ice Cream Freezer!

How do you beat the summer heat? Share your tips on how to keep cool!

merissabio

This article on How to Beat the Summer Heat with No Air Conditioning was originally posted on Little House Living in July 2012. It has been updated as of July 2022 and no, I still don’t have air conditioning. 🙂

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49 Comments

  1. I keep cool by waking up extra early in the morning & opening all of the windows to the house & let in all of the early morning chill. I also turn on all of the ceiling fans to high. Once I feel the temperature start to climb, at all, I close up the windows & pull down the shades on the windows where the sun is hitting..for me, that would be my East facing windows. When the sun starts to hit the West side of my house, I go around & pull all of the shades down on that side. Believe it or not, I can keep my house about 20 degrees cooler than the outside temperature, by doing this. If it is humid, then I don’t open the windows that day. I have found that it is worse to let the humidity into the house than to cool it off. We have 3 small window air conditioners that we use when it is humid. It keeps this Old House surprisingly cool, all summer. I do live in a brick house, though. We also have deciduous trees planted on the West side of our house, to shade it from the hot afternoon sun. I think before air-conditioning, people used to know how to cool a house off better than we do, now. All houses had shade trees & a nice front porch to retreat to in the heat of the day, with a nice cold glass of either lemonade or iced tea..sounds good, huh?

    1. Oh that does sound nice! Taking a little cat nap in the shade of the porch in a comfy rocking chair with a big glass of sun tea…..

    2. I use block out curtains and open the windows wide open at night and close them in the morning before I go to work. Works surprisingly well. I also avoid the oven and use the BBQ or crockpot as much as possible (I keep the crockpot in the basement) . I also have a airfryer that also helps!

  2. I am cracking up about the hang out in your bathing suit thing! If I did that someone like our pastor would surely come to the door! But we do have central A/C so I’ll keep my clothes on!

    1. Haha, lucky! Well, I can mostly find something cool to wear but when it’s 100F and we head up to the river to fish you better believe I’ve got my swimsuit on to stay cool and in case I feel the need to jump in!

      1. You could of course hang your washing out to dry on the line like we do in the UK, it saves energy and is eco friendly and your washing smells nicer. But maybe that’s too radical

  3. We have good air conditioning but during peak hours (2-7 pm) electricity costs a ton more so I try to use as little electricity as possible…today I had my boys play out back with a shallow container of water and they were perfectly content for over an hour :).

    I wish we could take advantage of cooler weather at night, but once summer hits, many nights it doesn’t go below 90 here and we sweat no matter what time of day or night here :(.

    1. We have the same problem here in Tennessee. In the middle of the summer, we’re lucky if it gets below 89 at night, so we can’t even open the windows to let the cool air in because it doesn’t cool down! Air is kind of a must-have for night time at least. I sure wish it cooled down a bit more! I love spring and fall because we can have our windows open 24/7 and take advantage of the beautiful weather. 🙂

      1. I agree. I’m in SC and it doesn’t cool down enough to get comfortable at night. My AC unit can’t keep up. Even when it’s running nonstop at night I can’t get it below 85° inside.

  4. Great ideas, we do a lot of grilling outside so we don’t heat the house. It doesn’t get below 90 degrees where I live either, 60’s would be very refreshing :).

  5. This is a really great post and I might link to it on a similar post on the Amish Cook site (we REALLY should NOT have to be discussing this in March) in the near future. Quite relevant post because, as I’m sure you know, most Amish don’t have air-conditioning…So they actually employ a lot of tactics to stay cool…I’ve visited the most heat-soaked Amish settlements but have been amazed by their “stay cool” tactics. By the way, what part of the Dakotas are you in? There is an Amish settlement now – only one – in the Dakotas in the far SE part of the state.

    1. I agree, we shouldn’t have to be talking about this in March! That sounds like a good post…I’ll be interested to read it! And we are in the Black Hills:)

      1. I have not checked out the new settlement, just founded last year.let me know if you ever get to the SE part of the state…the community is near the town of Tripp, we might have to have a “Little House” goes on assignment project for amishcookonline if you are ever going to be near there!:)

  6. we live in the desert so there’s no getting around needing an a/c. even so, i don’t like to run the oven and run up our electric bill. last year, i set up a kitchen in the garage. i moved the toaster oven from the kitchen and used the camping stove.

    also, i hang my clothes. in the summer, my clothes dry faster on the rack outside than in the dryer inside!

  7. I was my towels early and pin them on hangers. Then, i hang them in a few doorways and on the shower rod. The cool moisture evaporating keeps the house cool and smaells wonderful.

  8. I have actually found that white or the lighter colored shades refelect the heat back outside, where the darker colors ABSORD the heat from the sun. Same goes for clothing.
    In a home that that has a North facing wall with windows, I put a fan in there that draws the cooler (shaded) air in and a fan on the South side to push the air out! On a two story home I put the South fan on the South or West window to push the air out!
    Works good!

  9. Just found your page & love it! This is great Beat-The-Heat stuff. Hope you’ll post it again when it’s closer to summer.
    And your tips for saving money, etc. (e.g. Homemade Cleaner) are invaluable! Hope to see many more of them.
    Gratefully
    Sharon

  10. HOT summer nights? We wet the sheets and wrap them around ourselves to at least get to sleep. WARM summer nights? I wet a washrag with cold water and ring it out then lay it on my chest to get the same cooling effect. BLISTERING summer nights? wet sheets, wet towels, ceiling fan, air conditioner, ice packs, whatever it takes.

    A nice thing not mentioned here is a whole house attic fan. If you live in a non-secure place this wouldn’t work for you as you have to have some windows open, but in a place where you could leave upstairs windows open or something? A great way to cool a house down.

    1. We live in a mobile home and put a box fan in the living room window and open some of the windows a little bit. If you open one all the way it will only suck in the air from that opening. We do this at night and in the morning the home is cool. Then we close the blinds and windows during the day to keep the home warm. When I was a kid we had a whole house fan and it was awesome. We bought one to put in the house we just sold, but it never got installed, sooo, we will sell it in our yard sale. It won’t work in our mobile home. shucks!

  11. We’ve also been known to hang lightweight wet sheets in front of shady windows or fans, too — makes the air a bit cooler as it evaporates (and the kids think it’s funny….good distraction). 😉

  12. @Kevin where is the Amish cook site I would love to check it out. We live in Iowa and have AMish about 20 miles from us we go shopping there once a month at there bulk food store. It is so cheap to get spices. I loved all the cooling ideas as we don;t have a/c either. And it is hot this summer Thanks

  13. lol,,,you guys talk about 90 degrees,,,,,,i just moved to a place called Show Low Arizona and right now at this exact moment it is…………….SNOWING,,,,,but we also dont have air conditioning ( we was told we probably wont need one , we will see,,,,90 degrees is oretty warm for me) so,,,will defantly remember some of thise tricks.

  14. I think I’d have to move. last year we had a record breaking number of days over 100. this summer has been much better, but still too hot to do without ac.

  15. Just found your site and reading some of the comments.
    We live in a regional part of South Australia, and at the moment it is in the middle of our summer, the temperature later this week will be hitting 43C (109.40) and although we have an air conditioner, trying to get the costs down on electricity is really priority.
    Hope you don’t mind messages from out of the USA. I like learning new hints and things, keeping cool is similar around the world.

    1. Love hearing from anywhere, belong to a site in Australia about cooking in little pie makers, as I am in a wheelchair and cook at the kitchen table. that type of cooker is great and doesn’t heat up the house. but there are only the two of us anymore.

  16. I spent a summer in El Paso, TX without AC. Oh, and I was pregnant, very pregnant! When it got so hot I couldn’t take it, I would step in the shower with all my clothes on. After a cold spray down, I toweled off enough so I wasn’t dripping and went about my day in wet clothes with wet hair, but plenty cool.

  17. When I use the crock pot in the summer, I put it out in the garage to cook. We do have central air but I still try to not stress it out in the heat of the summer. I too pull the shades on the sunny side of the house. I try to cook outside and I am even going to be water bath canning outside with the turkey fryer (filled with water and insulated with a towel) and propane this summer. Sometimes, when it is really humid, we will run the dehumidifier to take the water out of the air so that the A/C is less stressed and we spend less.

  18. We also try to stay cool without using high electric Air conditioning. We use fans and A friend gave me this video and I thought this was silly, but I tried one in my daughters room which is the hottest room in the house and we had to turn it off after a few hours because it was TOO COLD. and all it uses is the power from a small fan! i hope you like this idea too because I love the dark shades idea. blinds just keep the light out not the heat.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3YvF4eVQO0

  19. We in PA are blessed with normal temps in the evenings that drop in the mid-70s, or lower. My sister, who lives in FL and has all her life (I grew up there) visited one July and asked for a sweater — the temp was about 65 and she said, “you didn’t tell me it was going to be cold!” I was running around in shorts, Tshirt and flipflops!!

    But having this blessing lets you use God’s cooling — with the assistance of a whole-house fan. I have one from Tamarack, a company located on Cape Cod. These are probably twice as expensive to buy as a normal 24″ whole house fan, but the installing is much easier. It also has the benefit of motorised doors, which are insulated to R38 minimum. This fan fits between the joists (typically 16″ between) and the installation requires you cut a rectangular hole in the drywall ceiling, cut two pieces of lumber the same size as your joists to go crosswise to make a “plenum” to block in the area where the fan fits. And you would of course want to caulk the joints between the crosswise lumber and the joists. You place a whole-house fan in the upstairs hallway (of a 2 story home) or in the centre of a one-story. You close most of the windows except the one or two farthest away, typically downstairs, and you open them only about 5 to 6″. It starts bringing in the cooler air from outside through the entire house. When we retire for the evening, we leave the fan on, but close the downstairs windows and open the one in the bedrooms that are occupied, maintaining the flow of cool air. I think over the 10 summers we have lived in this house, we may have used the A/C for probably 20 to 30 24 hour days cumulatively. Pretty much if the A/C is on, it is only on for the few hours in the late afternoon. Once the outdoor temps are 78 or below, off it goes (because that’s the lowest setting we make on our thermostat for the A/C, and that only when my husband’s home, I have a higher heat tolerance and work from home, so generally it is set at 83).

  20. i don’t have air in my home or a pool . i drink lot’s of coconut water . and water, no soda or coffee . when i get to hot i use two wet rag one each under my arm it will cool you off . .tap water not warm .

  21. I keep several wet wash cloths in the fridge in a Ziplock bag. If I get too warm, I simply use one to wipe down my neck, face, and arms. I might even do so in front of a fan. That works very well to cool me down. Cold baby wipes are great also.

  22. In triple digits here in Texas and going to be over 100 deg. all next week and gets down in the lower 80’s in the evening but doesn’t take long the next day to get in middle 90’s before noon.
    Keeping cool; taking A lot of cool showers and keeping col ties in the fridge and ice cold wash cloths in ziplock bags and kept in freezer and not going outside in the heat of the day. Soaking feet in small wash tub in cool water also helps

  23. Freezing an empty, but clean, 2 liter bottle with clean water makes a HUG-able cooler with built in water source for trips in a non-AC vehicle, which is especially nice for little tikes.

  24. I once lived in an old house and had no air conditioning. I worked nights and slept days, but when summer came the house would warm up enough that it was hard to sleep. I took a beach towel, wet it down good, wrung it out and then laid it over me while I slept. I stayed cool and slept well.

  25. Hi Merissa! I just wanted to say thank you! My husband and I are buying our first house and with a little one (just turned 4 months old) we can use all the money saving tips we can get!