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How to Size a Portable Power Station for Your Needs

Written by Product Experts Published March 1, 2026 11 min read

How to Size a Portable Power Station for Your Needs

The biggest mistake people make when buying a portable power station is getting the wrong size. Buy too small and you run out of power halfway through a trip. Buy too big and you are hauling around expensive weight you do not need. This guide walks you through the exact math so you can size your power station with confidence.

Step 1: List Every Device You Plan to Power

Start by making a list of every device you want to run, along with its wattage and how many hours per day you plan to use it. You can usually find the wattage on the device label, charger brick, or in the product manual.

DeviceWattageHours/DayDaily Wh
Smartphone Charger15W230 Wh
Laptop60W4240 Wh
LED Lights (4x)40W6240 Wh
Portable Fan30W8240 Wh
12V Mini Fridge45W avg241,080 Wh
CPAP Machine40W8320 Wh
Total2,150 Wh/day

The "Daily Wh" column is the critical number. Multiply wattage by hours of use to get the watt-hours each device consumes per day.

Step 2: Account for Inverter Efficiency

Portable power stations lose 10-15% of their stored energy as heat during the DC-to-AC conversion process. This means a 1,000Wh battery delivers roughly 850-900Wh of usable AC power. To account for this, multiply your daily watt-hour total by 1.15:

2,150 Wh x 1.15 = 2,472 Wh needed

This adjusted number is your true daily energy requirement.

Step 3: Determine How Many Days Between Charges

If you plan to recharge daily via solar panels, your battery only needs to cover one day of use (2,472 Wh in our example). If you want two days of autonomy without recharging -- common for cloudy camping trips -- double it to 4,944 Wh.

For most car campers with solar panels, one day of capacity plus a 20% safety margin works well:

2,472 Wh x 1.2 = 2,967 Wh minimum battery capacity

Use our battery capacity calculator for a quick estimate.

Step 4: Check Your Peak Wattage (Inverter Sizing)

Battery capacity determines how long you can run devices. Inverter wattage determines which devices you can run at all. If your power station has an 800W inverter, it cannot start a device that draws 1,200W.

Add up the wattage of all devices you might run simultaneously:

  • Laptop (60W) + Mini Fridge Startup (120W) + Lights (40W) + Fan (30W) = 250W continuous
  • Fridge compressor startup surge: up to 360W momentary

In this case, a 600W inverter handles the load easily. But if you add a coffee maker (1,000W) or hair dryer (1,500W), you need a much larger inverter.

Rule of thumb: Your inverter should be rated at least 20% above your peak simultaneous load.

Our power requirement calculator helps you determine the right inverter size.

Step 5: Size Your Solar Input

If you plan to recharge via solar panels, the solar input rating of your power station and the wattage of your panels determine how fast you can recharge.

Recharge Time Formula:

Recharge Time (hours) = Battery Capacity (Wh) / (Solar Panel Wattage x 0.7)

The 0.7 factor accounts for real-world losses from panel angle, temperature, shading, and MPPT efficiency. A 2,000Wh battery with 400W of solar panels recharges in roughly:

2,000 / (400 x 0.7) = 7.1 hours of direct sunlight

In most locations, you get 4-6 peak sun hours per day, so plan accordingly. If full daily recharging is critical, size your panels to deliver your full daily usage within available sun hours.

Visit our solar panel size calculator to find the right panel wattage for your setup.

Common Sizing Scenarios

Weekend Car Camping (2-3 Days)

  • Devices: Phone, lights, fan, Bluetooth speaker
  • Daily usage: 150-300 Wh
  • Recommended capacity: 300-600 Wh
  • Solar panels: 100W portable panel
  • Budget: $200-$500

Extended Off-Grid Camping (5-7 Days)

  • Devices: Phone, laptop, lights, fan, mini fridge, CPAP
  • Daily usage: 800-1,500 Wh
  • Recommended capacity: 1,000-2,000 Wh
  • Solar panels: 200-400W
  • Budget: $800-$1,800

Emergency Home Backup (12-24 Hours)

  • Devices: Phone, router, lights, fridge, medical devices
  • Daily usage: 1,000-2,500 Wh
  • Recommended capacity: 1,500-3,000 Wh
  • Solar panels: 200-400W (for extended outages)
  • Budget: $1,000-$2,500

Van Life / Full-Time Off-Grid

  • Devices: Everything above plus induction cooktop, water pump
  • Daily usage: 2,000-4,000 Wh
  • Recommended capacity: 3,000-6,000 Wh (with expansion batteries)
  • Solar panels: 400-800W rooftop
  • Budget: $2,000-$5,000+

Browse our best overall rankings to see which units fit each scenario.

Common Sizing Mistakes

  • Ignoring inverter losses -- Always add 15% to your calculated needs
  • Forgetting startup surges -- Fridges, compressors, and motors draw 2-3x their rated wattage for a few seconds on startup
  • Not planning for growth -- If you might add devices later, buy 30% more capacity than you think you need
  • Overlooking temperature -- Lithium batteries lose 10-20% capacity in cold weather (below 32F / 0C)
  • Confusing watts and watt-hours -- Watts measure instantaneous power draw. Watt-hours measure total energy consumed over time

Quick Reference: Device Wattages

DeviceTypical Wattage
Smartphone Charger10-20W
Tablet Charger15-30W
Laptop45-100W
LED Light Strip10-20W
Portable Fan20-50W
12V Mini Fridge40-60W avg
CPAP Machine30-60W
Drone Charger60-100W
Electric Blanket50-200W
Coffee Maker600-1,200W
Microwave600-1,200W
Hair Dryer1,000-1,800W
Portable Heater750-1,500W

FAQ

What size power station do I need for a CPAP machine?

Most CPAP machines draw 30-60W. For an 8-hour night, you need 240-480Wh. A 500Wh power station covers one night comfortably with margin. For a weekend trip, 1,000Wh gives you two nights without recharging. Use our runtime calculator for exact estimates based on your CPAP model.

Can I use a power station to run a full-size refrigerator?

A standard household fridge draws 100-400W with an average of about 150W. A 2,000Wh power station runs it for roughly 11 hours. This is practical for short outages but not for days-long backup without significant solar recharging.

Should I buy one large power station or two smaller ones?

One large unit is generally more efficient and cost-effective per watt-hour. However, two smaller units offer redundancy -- if one fails, you still have backup power. For home emergency use, redundancy matters. For camping, a single unit simplifies your setup.

Next Steps

Once you know your capacity needs, compare power stations side by side to find the right match. Filter by capacity, weight, price, and features to narrow your options. Our cost-per-Wh calculator helps you identify the best value at your target capacity.

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