Solar Generator vs Gas Generator for Hurricane Backup
Battery + solar or gas? An honest comparison on runtime, safety, noise, fuel, and cost, so you pick the right backup for your home before the next storm.
Both keep your lights on when the grid fails, but a "solar generator" (a battery power station, often bundled with solar panels) and a traditional gas generator solve the problem in very different ways. Here's the honest trade-off.
Where the battery + solar option wins
- Safe indoors. No carbon monoxide, so you can run it in the garage or a closet. Every hurricane season brings tragic CO deaths from gas generators run too close to the house; a battery has none of that risk.
- Silent. No engine. You can sleep next to it. In a neighborhood full of roaring gas generators after a storm, this is a bigger deal than people expect.
- No fuel runs. No gas cans, no stabilizer, no waiting in a two-hour fuel line during an evacuation. Recharge from the wall before the storm and from solar panels during the outage.
- Doubles as everyday gear. The same EcoFlow Delta Pro 3 that backs up your fridge also powers a campsite, a tailgate, or a job site.
Where gas still wins
- Indefinite runtime. As long as you can get fuel, a gas generator runs. A battery is capped at its capacity until the sun (or grid) recharges it. For outages measured in weeks, fuel still has an edge.
- Raw output for the money. A $900 gas generator can put out 7,500W; matching that with batteries costs more. For powering a whole house with heavy 240V loads on a budget, gas is cheaper per watt.
The honest recommendation
For most homeowners riding out a typical 1-4 day hurricane outage, a 2,000-4,000Wh battery station, ideally a solar generator bundle so it recharges off-grid, is the better buy: safer, quieter, lower-hassle, and useful the other 360 days a year. Something like the Jackery Explorer 2000 Plus or the expandable Anker SOLIX F3800 covers the essentials (fridge, phones, fans, CPAP, router) comfortably.
Choose gas only if you need to run heavy 240V loads (well pump, central AC, electric range) for many days on a tight budget and accept the fuel, noise, and CO trade-offs.
Plenty of households end up with both: a battery for the quiet, safe, everyday 90% and a gas generator in reserve for the rare long outage.
Compare the power-station bundles side by side, and set a price alert so you buy before storm-season prices spike.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size power station runs a refrigerator during an outage?+
A typical full-size fridge draws ~100–200W while running, with a brief startup surge. A station with at least 300W of continuous output (and headroom on its surge rating) handles it; for overnight runtime aim for 1,000Wh or more of battery capacity, which keeps a fridge cold for the better part of a day.
How do I calculate runtime for my devices?+
Divide the station's battery capacity in watt-hours by your device's running watts. A 1,000Wh station running a 100W appliance lasts roughly 8–9 hours after inverter losses. Add up the running watts of everything you'll plug in at once and keep that under the station's continuous output rating.
Can portable power stations be recharged with solar?+
Most modern stations accept solar input and recharge off-grid with compatible panels, while also charging from a wall outlet or a car 12V port. Check the model's maximum solar input in watts to size your panels.