I Unplugged My Microwave Between Uses for 2 Weeks to See If It Would Cut My Electric Bill—Here’s What Actually Happened (And Why It Changed How I Think About Energy Costs Entirely

For two weeks in April, I unplugged my microwave every single time I finished using it.

Not occasionally. Not when I remembered. Consistently. Plug it in, use it, unplug it again. Reset the clock. Repeat.

And very quickly, reality became less about electricity—and more about annoyance.

The first thing I noticed wasn’t my energy bill.

It was my patience.

Every time I unplugged it, I lost the clock settings. Every time I plugged it back in, I had to reset it. Not a big task, but just inconvenient enough to become noticeable. The microwave, which I had never thought about before, suddenly demanded attention multiple times a day for no meaningful reason.

Still, I stuck with it.

Because I wanted to see the impact.

After a few days, I started paying closer attention to what I was actually trying to achieve. I assumed I would see at least a small drop in energy usage—something measurable that would justify the inconvenience.

But when I finally looked at the data, the truth was underwhelming.

Yes, the microwave uses standby power. That part is real. The clock, the internal electronics, the always-on display—it all draws electricity even when it’s not actively heating food.

But the amount is tiny.

We’re talking a few watts at most. Over a year, that adds up to only a few dollars in total cost. Not tens. Not hundreds. Just a small amount that barely registers compared to the rest of a household bill.

And suddenly, the entire experiment shifted in meaning.

Because what I had been trying to optimize—this one device sitting on my counter—wasn’t actually where my money was going.

It was a distraction.

The real energy costs in my home weren’t hiding in the microwave’s clock. They were sitting in plain sight the entire time.

Heating and cooling systems that run for hours every day. Water heaters quietly maintaining temperature. Refrigerators cycling constantly. Lighting that stays on longer than it needs to. Electronics that never fully power down.

Those were the real drivers of my bill.

Not the microwave.

So while the financial impact of unplugging it was almost nonexistent, something else did change.

My attention.

I stopped thinking in terms of isolated devices and started thinking in systems. I began noticing patterns instead of objects. Why was the thermostat set the way it was? How often was the AC running unnecessarily? Which habits were silently adding cost without adding value?

I started swapping out light bulbs for LEDs. I looked into smarter thermostat settings. I paid attention to standby power across everything, not just the microwave. And I began to understand that energy savings aren’t found in one dramatic trick—they’re found in dozens of small, sensible adjustments applied where they actually matter.

The microwave experiment didn’t save me money in any meaningful way.

But it did something arguably more useful.

It corrected my assumptions.

Because it turns out, the easiest things to notice are rarely the things that cost you the most. And the most visible “waste” is often not the most expensive one.

By the end of those two weeks, I stopped unplugging the microwave.

Not because I gave up.

But because I finally understood where to actually look.