The three types of home backup power

Not all home batteries are the same thing. Before comparing prices or brands, you need to understand what each type actually does โ€” because choosing the wrong category means overspending or underpowering your home.

TypeCapacityMain useApprox. priceInstallation
UPS / battery backup50โ€“200 WhRouter, cameras, PCโ‚ฌ40โ€“150None โ€” plug in
Portable power station200โ€“3,000 WhPower cuts, camping, farmโ‚ฌ150โ€“2,000None โ€” plug in
Fixed solar battery5โ€“15 kWhSolar self-consumptionโ‚ฌ3,000โ€“8,000Electrician required

UPS: the easiest protection against power cuts

A UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) is the simplest and most affordable way to keep critical devices running during a power cut. It sits between the wall socket and your devices, and when power fails it switches to battery in zero milliseconds โ€” so fast that your router never even resets.

This is the right choice for most people who just want their internet, security cameras and laptop to keep working during a typical short power cut (under 4 hours). You don't need an electrician, you don't need to configure anything โ€” you just plug it in.

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What a 700VA UPS (about 400 Wh) typically powers

Router + modem: 8โ€“12 hours. 4 IP cameras: 6โ€“10 hours. Laptop: 3โ€“5 hours. Combination of all three: 3โ€“5 hours. For most power cuts in Europe (average 45 minutes), even a small 400 Wh UPS is more than enough.

What to look for in a UPS

  • VA rating: 650VA covers router + cameras comfortably. 1,000VA+ if you want to include a desktop PC or NAS server.
  • Pure sine wave vs simulated: For routers and electronics, simulated sine wave (cheaper) is fine. For sensitive equipment like medical devices or high-end audio, choose pure sine wave.
  • Battery replacement: Internal batteries last 3โ€“5 years. Choose a brand (APC, Eaton, CyberPower) that sells replacement batteries to avoid replacing the entire unit.

Portable power stations: flexibility for real autonomy

A portable power station is essentially a large rechargeable battery with multiple outputs (AC sockets, USB-A, USB-C, 12V car socket). Unlike a UPS, it's designed for extended use โ€” keeping your home running for hours or even days, not just minutes.

The biggest advantage is flexibility: the same unit works at home during a power cut, on a farm or rural property without mains electricity, and on camping trips. Brands like EcoFlow and BLUETTI have made these units reliable enough for daily use, with fast recharging via solar panels, car adapters or the grid.

๐Ÿ”‹ EcoFlow

  • Faster recharging (EcoFlow DELTA 2: 0โ€“80% in 50 min)
  • More modular โ€” expandable with extra batteries
  • Better app and smart home integration
  • Slightly higher price for equivalent capacity
VS

๐Ÿ”‹ BLUETTI

  • Better value per Wh at higher capacities
  • LiFePO4 chemistry standard on most models (3,500+ cycles)
  • AC200MAX and EP500 Pro best for semi-fixed home use
  • Slightly heavier and bulkier than EcoFlow equivalents

How to calculate the capacity you need

Add up the wattage of everything you want to run, then multiply by the hours you need. Here are the typical consumption figures for common devices:

DeviceTypical consumption500 Wh lasts2,000 Wh lasts
WiFi router8โ€“15W33โ€“60h130โ€“250h
IP camera (ร—4)20โ€“40W12โ€“25h50โ€“100h
Laptop40โ€“80W6โ€“12h25โ€“50h
Fridge (A+)80โ€“150W average3โ€“6h13โ€“25h
LED lights (ร—5)25โ€“50W10โ€“20h40โ€“80h
TV (40โ€“50 inch)60โ€“120W4โ€“8h16โ€“33h
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Real-world example: family of 4 during a 12-hour power cut

Fridge (100W avg) + router (12W) + 5 LED lights (30W) + 2 laptops (60W) + TV (80W) = 282W continuous. 282W ร— 12h = 3,384 Wh needed. You'd want an EcoFlow DELTA Pro (3,600 Wh) or BLUETTI AC300 + B300 (3,072 Wh) to cover this comfortably.

Fixed solar batteries: for energy independence

A fixed solar battery (also called a home energy storage system) stores electricity generated by rooftop solar panels for use when the sun isn't shining. This is a fundamentally different product from a UPS or portable station โ€” it's a long-term investment in reducing your energy bills, not just emergency backup.

The most common systems in Europe use LiFePO4 chemistry (lithium iron phosphate), which is safer and longer-lasting than standard lithium-ion โ€” typically 6,000โ€“10,000 charge cycles, or 15โ€“25 years of daily use. Popular options include the Pylontech US series, the BYD Battery-Box, and Tesla Powerwall.

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Important: this requires professional installation

Fixed solar batteries must be installed by a certified electrician and, in most countries, registered with the grid operator. Budget โ‚ฌ500โ€“1,500 for installation on top of the battery cost. The total investment typically takes 7โ€“12 years to recoup through energy savings, depending on your electricity tariff and solar generation.

Options by budget and situation

Budget

UPS for basics

โ‚ฌ40โ€“150

  • Instant switchover (0ms)
  • Router + cameras: 6โ€“12h
  • No configuration needed
  • APC, Eaton, CyberPower
โญ Most popularBalanced

500โ€“2,000 Wh station

โ‚ฌ400โ€“1,200

  • Full home: 4โ€“12h autonomy
  • Fridge, lights, devices
  • Chargeable with solar
  • Works at farm too
Investment

Fixed solar battery

โ‚ฌ3,000โ€“8,000+

  • Long-term bill reduction
  • 5โ€“15 kWh capacity
  • Pairs with rooftop solar
  • Electrician required

Recommended products

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APC Back-UPS 700VA

Best entry-level UPS for router and cameras. Instant switchover, silent, automatic voltage regulation. From โ‚ฌ70.

See price โ†’
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EcoFlow DELTA 2 Max

2,048 Wh, expandable to 6 kWh, 2,400W AC output. Best all-round portable station for home and farm. From โ‚ฌ1,100.

See price โ†’
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BLUETTI AC200MAX

2,048 Wh, LiFePO4, 2,200W output, 6 charging methods simultaneously. Excellent value for the capacity. From โ‚ฌ900.

See price โ†’
โ˜€๏ธ

EcoFlow DELTA Pro

3,600 Wh, expandable to 25 kWh with extra batteries. The closest thing to a fixed system without installation. From โ‚ฌ2,200.

See price โ†’

๐Ÿ† Quick decision guide

Short cuts, basics only

UPS (โ‚ฌ40โ€“150)

Router, cameras and laptop stay on. Zero configuration. Best option if cuts are under 4 hours.

Extended autonomy

Portable station (โ‚ฌ400โ€“1,200)

Fridge, lights, all devices for 8โ€“24h. Also useful for farm, camping, emergencies.

Have solar panels

Fixed battery (โ‚ฌ3,000+)

Store daytime solar generation, use it at night. Long-term investment with 7โ€“12 year payback.

Farm without mains

Station + solar panel

A 1,000 Wh station + 200W panel gives indefinite off-grid power for cameras, lights and router.

Frequently asked questions

For the basics (router, LED lights, phones, laptop): 500 Wh gives 8โ€“15 hours. To add the fridge: 1,500โ€“2,000 Wh for 12 hours. For a full home with TV, lights, fridge and devices: 3,000โ€“4,000 Wh for a 12-hour cut. Use the consumption table above to calculate your specific situation.
No. Portable stations (EcoFlow, BLUETTI, Jackery) need zero installation โ€” they plug into a standard wall socket to charge and have standard AC sockets on the output side. You can set one up in 5 minutes. Only fixed solar batteries for self-consumption require a certified electrician.
Yes, all major portable stations support solar charging via a dedicated MC4 or XT60 input. A 200W solar panel can fully recharge a 1,000 Wh station in 5โ€“7 hours of good sunlight. EcoFlow and BLUETTI also sell matching folding solar panels designed for their stations.
LiFePO4 (lithium iron phosphate) is safer (no thermal runaway risk), longer-lasting (3,500โ€“6,000 cycles vs 500โ€“1,000 for standard Li-ion) and retains capacity better over time. The downside is slightly lower energy density, meaning a LiFePO4 battery is a bit larger and heavier for the same capacity. For home use, LiFePO4 is clearly preferable if you can afford it.
Modern LiFePO4 stations (EcoFlow DELTA 2, BLUETTI AC200MAX) are designed for daily use with 3,500+ cycle ratings โ€” that's nearly 10 years of daily cycling. Many people use them to store cheap overnight electricity (off-peak tariff) and discharge during peak hours, reducing their electricity bill. They're not just for emergencies.
From a wall socket: EcoFlow DELTA 2 (2,048 Wh) charges in about 80 minutes with its fast charger. BLUETTI AC200MAX (2,048 Wh) takes about 3.5 hours on standard AC. Charging from solar is slower: a 200W panel needs 5โ€“8 hours for a full charge depending on sunlight. Car charging (12V) is the slowest option โ€” expect 12โ€“24 hours for large capacity units.
Not usually. Fixed batteries make financial sense paired with rooftop solar โ€” they let you use the electricity you generate instead of selling it back to the grid at a low rate. Without solar panels, you'd just be charging from the grid at full price. If you're planning to install panels in the next 1โ€“2 years, it can make sense to future-proof your installation with battery-ready hardware. Otherwise, a portable station offers far better value for emergency backup.