Smoking cost calculator
Enter your pack price and daily cigarettes to estimate what smoking costs per day, month, year, and five years. Then flip the number around: that is roughly what quitting can keep in your pocket.
Quick answer: what does smoking cost?
Smoking cost is your daily cigarette use multiplied by the price per cigarette. If a pack has 20 cigarettes, the calculator splits your pack price into a per-cigarette cost, then shows the daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, and five-year total.
If you are searching for a quit smoking calculator, use the same number as your rough savings target. Every cigarette you do not buy leaves that money on your side instead.
A note on the math
The calculator assumes you smoke the same number every day and uses the pack size you enter. Real life is messier, so the yearly and five-year numbers are rough. The annoying part is that even the rough number is usually high.
If you want to watch that number grow while you stay smoke-free, the app counts it from your last cigarette using your real pack price.
Make the money side concrete
Pair the calculator with practical guides that turn smoke-free time and avoided cigarettes into visible progress.
Smoking cost calculator FAQ
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How do I calculate the cost of smoking?
Multiply the number of cigarettes you smoke per day by the price per cigarette, then scale it to a week, month, year, or five years. This calculator does that math from your pack price and pack size. -
Is this a quit smoking calculator or a cigarette cost calculator?
Both. It shows the cost of smoking if you keep going and the money you can roughly keep if you stop buying cigarettes. -
Why do the numbers look approximate?
Real smoking habits change by day, and pack prices can change. Treat the result as a practical estimate, not an accounting record. -
Can I track money saved after I quit?
Yes. Smoke Free Tracker can count money saved from your last cigarette using the pack price and daily smoking habit you enter.