How Long Battery Lasts

One of the first questions homeowners ask when researching battery backup systems is: how long will it actually last during a power outage? The honest answer is — it depends. Battery runtime varies significantly based on how much capacity you have, what you’re running, and whether you have solar to recharge during the day.

This guide gives you a practical framework for calculating how long your battery backup will last, what typical homes can expect, and how to extend your runtime when it matters most.

The Basic Formula

Battery runtime comes down to one simple relationship:

Runtime (hours) = Battery Capacity (kWh) ÷ Power Consumption (kW)

If you have a 13.5 kWh battery and your home is drawing 1.5 kW, your battery will last approximately 9 hours. If you reduce consumption to 0.75 kW, it lasts 18 hours. The math is straightforward — the challenge is knowing what your home actually draws.

How Much Power Does Your Home Use?

Most American homes average between 1–3 kW of continuous draw during normal operation, but this varies enormously based on what’s running. Here’s a practical reference for common appliances:

ApplianceApproximate Wattage
Refrigerator100–400W (cycles on/off)
LED lighting (whole home)200–500W
Wi-Fi router and modem20–50W
Laptop computer45–100W
Desktop computer150–400W
Television (55″)70–150W
Phone charging (multiple)50–100W
Central air conditioning (3 ton)3,000–5,000W
Window AC unit500–1,500W
Electric water heater4,000–5,500W
Electric range/stove1,000–5,000W (when in use)
Microwave600–1,200W (when in use)
Dishwasher1,200–2,400W (when running)
Washing machine500–1,000W
Clothes dryer (electric)4,000–6,000W
Well pump (1 HP)750–1,500W
Sump pump250–800W
Medical equipment (CPAP)30–60W

Real-World Runtime Scenarios

Let’s look at practical runtime for a single Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5 kWh) across different usage scenarios:

Scenario 1: Essential Loads Only (Low Consumption)

Running: Refrigerator + LED lighting + Wi-Fi + phones and laptops

Estimated consumption: 0.4–0.6 kW continuous

Estimated runtime: 22–34 hours

This is the “keep the essentials running” scenario. You’re comfortable, connected, and your food stays cold. This is achievable for most homes with a single battery unit.

Scenario 2: Comfortable Living (Moderate Consumption)

Running: Everything above + TV + desktop computer + limited appliance use

Estimated consumption: 0.8–1.2 kW continuous

Estimated runtime: 11–17 hours

You can work from home, watch TV, and live relatively normally — just avoiding high-draw appliances like the electric dryer and oven.

Scenario 3: Central Air Conditioning Included

Running: Everything in Scenario 2 + central AC (3-ton unit)

Estimated consumption: 2.5–4 kW when AC is running

Estimated runtime: 3–5 hours

This is where a single battery unit shows its limitations. Central AC is the biggest power draw in most homes. A single 13.5 kWh battery won’t carry central AC for long. This is why homeowners in hot climates often install two or more battery units — or pair with solar for daytime recharging.

Scenario 4: Two Battery Units (27 kWh) With AC

Running: Full home including central AC

Estimated consumption: 2.5–4 kW

Estimated runtime: 7–11 hours

Two battery units significantly extends whole-home runtime including AC — enough to get through a typical overnight outage with reserves remaining.

How Solar Changes Everything

Without solar, battery backup has a hard ceiling — when it’s depleted, it’s depleted. With solar, the equation changes fundamentally.

A typical 8 kW residential solar array generates 30–50 kWh on a sunny day. That’s enough to fully recharge a 13.5 kWh battery and still power your home through the day. In theory, a solar + battery system can run indefinitely during a multi-day outage as long as the sun is generating power each day.

In practice, extended cloudy weather reduces solar generation significantly. That’s why many solar + battery homeowners also keep a generator as a backup-to-the-backup for extended weather events.

How to Extend Your Battery Runtime

When an outage hits and you’re managing a finite battery charge, these strategies extend your runtime significantly:

  • Raise your AC thermostat — setting it to 78–80°F instead of 72°F dramatically reduces runtime. Better yet, pre-cool your home before the outage if you have warning.
  • Turn off unused rooms — close doors and vents to concentrate cooling or heating in the rooms you’re using
  • Avoid the electric dryer — at 4,000–6,000W, it’s one of the biggest battery killers. Air dry during outages.
  • Use the microwave instead of the oven — microwaves use 600–1,200W; ovens use 2,000–5,000W
  • Charge devices during the day — if you have solar, charge phones, laptops, and devices when solar is generating
  • Run the dishwasher strategically — run it when solar is generating or skip it during extended outages
  • Use battery-powered LED lanterns — reduces whole-home lighting load

What Size Battery Do You Need for Your Home?

Use this as a starting point based on your goals:

  • Essential backup only (overnight outages): 10–15 kWh — one standard battery unit
  • Comfortable living without AC: 15–20 kWh — one to two units
  • Whole-home including AC (overnight): 20–30 kWh — two units
  • Multi-day whole-home backup: 30–54 kWh + solar — three or four units with solar array

The most accurate sizing comes from a licensed installer who performs a load calculation based on your actual electrical panel and utility bills. Most offer this assessment for free.

The Bottom Line

How long your home battery lasts during an outage depends entirely on what you’re running. A single 13.5 kWh unit running essential loads will comfortably last 24+ hours. Running central AC drops that to 3–5 hours. Two units extends whole-home runtime to a full night.

For most homeowners, one quality battery unit handles typical short-to-medium outages when managed sensibly. For whole-home backup through extended events, pair two or more units with solar. That combination gives you the closest thing to true energy independence available to residential customers today.

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