40 vs 50 gallon water heater: when the smaller tank is enough
Updated · Reviewed against the current HotWaterAtlas dataset
Short answer: the sticker gallons matter less than the first-hour rating. Certified 40-gallon-class models span 45–88 gallons first-hour; 50-gallon models span 50–187. The ranges overlap heavily — a strong 40 beats a weak 50. Pick the FHR band for your household first, then the smallest tank that clears it.
What the certified data shows
Two things drive the overlap. First, rated volume already differs from the sticker — a "50-gallon" tank typically holds 45–47 usable gallons. Second, recovery power varies enormously: a gas burner or a heat pump's backup elements can reheat fast enough to add 30+ gallons to the first hour, while a heat-pump-only unit adds little during the hour itself.
When 40 gallons is genuinely enough
- 1–3 people with staggered showers. DOE bands put a 2–3-person household at a 49–61 gallon FHR — the upper half of the 40-gallon class covers it.
- Tight spaces. A 40-gallon tank is shorter and narrower; in closets, check the height/diameter specs listed on each model page.
- Strong recovery. A gas 40 with a high input rating (check recovery efficiency and FHR together) behaves like a bigger tank in practice.
When to take the 50 (or larger)
- Family of four. The 62+ gallon FHR band sits mostly in the 50-gallon class and above — see best for a family of 4.
- Heat pump in efficiency mode. Heat-pump-only recovery is slow, so extra storage is the buffer; many households pick a 65-gallon HPWH to replace a gas 50 for this reason.
- Tub or soaking bath. A large tub can draw 30+ gallons of hot water in minutes — storage handles it, recovery doesn't.
Browse the classes directly — 159 certified 40-gallon models and 202 50-gallon models — or start from your household on the best-by-household pages.