How much ice do you need for a cold plunge?
If you're using ice instead of a chiller (or as a backup), calculating the right amount is critical. Too little ice and your water won't reach target temperature. Too much and you're wasting money. This calculator gives you the exact amount.
The ice calculation
The math is based on thermodynamics: ice absorbs heat as it melts, cooling the surrounding water. The formula:
Ice needed (lbs) = (water_volume × temp_drop × 8.34) / 144
Where:
- Water volume = gallons of water in your tub
- Temp drop = difference between current water temp and target temp (°F)
- 8.34 = weight of 1 gallon of water (lbs)
- 144 = latent heat of fusion for ice (BTU per pound)
Interactive calculator
Ice Needed Calculator
Enter your values and click Calculate.
Quick reference table
Common scenarios (assuming 60°F starting water temp):
| Tub size | Target 55°F (5°F drop) | Target 50°F (10°F drop) | Target 45°F (15°F drop) | Target 39°F (21°F drop) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 gal | 7 lbs | 15 lbs | 22 lbs | 30 lbs |
| 50 gal | 15 lbs | 29 lbs | 43 lbs | 61 lbs |
| 75 gal | 22 lbs | 43 lbs | 65 lbs | 91 lbs |
| 100 gal | 29 lbs | 58 lbs | 87 lbs | 121 lbs |
| 150 gal | 43 lbs | 87 lbs | 130 lbs | 182 lbs |
Where to buy ice
Restaurant supply stores
Best price per pound. Sam's Club, Costco, Restaurant Depot sell 20 lb bags for $3-5 each. Best for regular plungers.
Grocery stores
Most convenient but most expensive. 7-11, grocery stores sell 10-20 lb bags for $4-6 each.
Gas stations
Available 24/7 but smallest bags (5-10 lbs) and highest price per pound.
Make your own
Use a chest freezer to make your own ice. Freeze water in gallon jugs or large containers. Takes 24-48 hours to freeze. Best for budget-conscious regular plungers.
Cost comparison: ice vs chiller
For a 50-gallon tub at 50°F target, 3×/week:
| Cost factor | Ice (3×/week) | Chiller (daily use) |
|---|---|---|
| Per session | $6-12 (15-30 lbs ice) | $0.30-0.60 (electricity) |
| Per month | $72-144 | $12-18 |
| Per year | $864-1,728 | $144-216 |
| 5-year cost | $4,320-8,640 | $720-1,080 + chiller cost ($650) |
| 5-year total | $4,320-8,640 | $1,370-1,730 |
Break-even: A $650 chiller pays for itself in 9-15 months at 3 sessions per week.
Tips for using ice efficiently
- Pre-chill the tub: Add ice the night before, cover, and let it slowly melt. Less ice needed than adding right before plunge.
- Use cold tap water: Fill with cold tap water (50-55°F winter, 65-70°F summer) rather than warm.
- Insulate your tub: An insulated tub holds cold longer, so each ice addition lasts more sessions.
- Stir the water: After adding ice, stir to distribute cold water evenly.
- Add ice gradually: Add half, wait 5 minutes, measure, then add more if needed.
- Use frozen water bottles: Refillable plastic bottles filled with water and frozen. Reusable, no melting mess.
Hybrid approach: chiller + ice
Some DIYers run a hybrid setup: chiller for daily cooling, ice as backup when chiller can't keep up (heat waves, parties, multiple users). A 20 lb bag of ice drops water temp 5-7°F within 15 minutes — useful for emergency cooling.
Recommended gear for ice-based plunge
- Rubbermaid 50-gal stock tank — Standard DIY plunge vessel
- Insulated cover — Holds cold longer between sessions
- Floating thermometer — Verify actual water temp
- Filter pump — Keeps water clean for reuse
- Ozone generator — Sanitize without chlorine
For the cheapest ice: get a used chest freezer on Facebook Marketplace ($50-100), fill it with 1-gallon water jugs, and rotate them. Each gallon = 8 lbs of ice. A 7 cu ft freezer holds about 30 gallons = 240 lbs of ice capacity. Costs $15-20/month in electricity but produces 'free' ice forever.
For chiller vs ice comparison, see our comparison page. For chiller sizing, see our chiller sizing calculator. For budget builds using ice, see our budget guide.