Best Portable Power Stations for Plug-In Solar (2026)
Five power stations we’d actually pair with a balcony solar kit in 2026 — one for each common use case, from cheapest backup to multi-day off-grid.
How to choose (the only two numbers that matter)
Skip the spec-sheet trivia — you really only need two numbers. Wh (watt-hours) is how long it keeps running — bigger = more hours. W (watts) is what it can power at once — bigger = bigger appliances. A 1,000Wh / 1,800W unit runs a fridge for ~12–18 hours; a 2,000Wh / 2,400W unit covers a full day including microwave + coffee maker. For pairing with a balcony solar kit, you also want a solar input port (most modern units have one).
Our 5 picks
1. Bluetti AC180
~$499
1,152Wh · 1,800W · LFP
- 1,152Wh / 1,800W — runs a fridge for ~12–15 hrs
- LiFePO4 (LFP) chemistry — safer, longer cycle life
- ~45 min to 80% from wall outlet
2. Anker SOLIX C1000
~$649
1,056Wh · 1,800W (2,400W surge)
- 1,056Wh / 1,800W with 2,400W SurgePad for high-startup appliances
- ~50 min full charge from wall — among the fastest in class
- Expandable battery slot for future capacity
3. Jackery Explorer 1000 v2
~$599–799
1,070Wh · 1,500W (3,000W surge) · 23.8 lbs
- 1,070Wh / 1,500W — the lightest 1kWh-class unit at 23.8 lbs
- 3,000W surge for tools and high-draw kettles
- Pairs naturally with a foldable Jackery panel for off-grid use
4. EcoFlow DELTA 3 Plus
~$829–899
1,024Wh · 1,800W (3,600W surge) · expandable
- 1,024Wh / 1,800W with 3,600W X-Boost for big surge loads
- ~43–56 min wall-to-full — class-leading speed
- Expandable to 5,120Wh with optional extra batteries
5. Anker SOLIX C2000
~$1,299
2,048Wh · 2,400W · expandable
- 2,048Wh / 2,400W — covers a full day’s essentials including microwave + coffee maker
- Expandable battery to ~4kWh for multi-day outages
- Same fast-charge tech as the C1000, scaled up
How a power station fits with plug-in solar
Standard grid-tie balcony solar feeds power back into your home circuit while the sun’s up. A portable power station gives you backup when the grid is down (grid-tie kits shut off during outages by design) and lets you use stored solar energy in the evening.
Three common setups:
- Daily savings + backup insurance. Run a balcony kit to lower the bill, keep a 1,000–2,000Wh station charged from the wall for storm season. Most cost-effective combo.
- Hurricane / outage focus. See our hurricane solar generators page if backup is the priority.
- Off-grid / camping. Pair a station with a foldable solar panel for trips. Jackery and EcoFlow above are the natural fits.
Want bigger than 2kWh for whole-home backup? See our whole-home backup guide (Anker X1 vs F3800).
Wondering whether you need a station at all vs. just balcony solar? Read our balcony solar vs power station breakdown.
Run your bill through our savings calculator to size everything against your actual usage.
FAQ
- What size power station do I need?
- For a fridge + lights + phones during a one-day outage: ~1,000Wh / 1,500–1,800W is the sweet spot. For a full-day backup including microwave and coffee: ~2,000Wh / 2,400W+. For multi-day or whole-home, look at expandable models above 4kWh.
- Can a balcony solar kit charge a power station?
- Not directly — grid-tie balcony solar feeds your home circuit, not the station. To recharge the station from solar, you need a separate foldable solar panel plugged into the station’s DC solar input. Most stations above accept 200–500W of solar input.
- LiFePO4 vs NMC battery — which is better?
- For home backup, LiFePO4 (LFP) is the better choice: longer cycle life (~3,000+ cycles to 80% capacity), safer thermal profile, and more tolerant of partial-state-of-charge storage. All five picks above use LFP except the Jackery which still uses NMC in this generation.