One of the most common — and costly — mistakes homeowners make when buying a battery backup system is choosing the wrong size. Buy too small and you’ll run out of power when you need it most. Buy too large and you’ve spent thousands of dollars on capacity you’ll never use.
Sizing a home battery backup system correctly requires understanding your actual energy consumption, what you want to power during an outage, and how long you need it to last. This guide walks you through the entire process step by step.
Step 1 — Define Your Backup Goal
Before running any numbers, you need to define what “backup power” means for your home. This is the most important decision in the sizing process and it determines everything else.
There are three common backup goals:
Goal A — Essential Circuits Only
Keep the basics running: refrigerator, some lighting, phone and laptop charging, Wi-Fi router. This is the most affordable approach and handles most typical outages comfortably.
Typical load: 0.4–0.8 kW continuous
Battery needed: 5–15 kWh for overnight coverage
Goal B — Comfortable Living (No HVAC)
Everything in Goal A plus televisions, desktop computers, small appliances, and most normal household activity — excluding central heating and cooling.
Typical load: 1.0–2.0 kW continuous
Battery needed: 10–20 kWh for overnight coverage
Goal C — Whole-Home Including HVAC
Full whole-home backup including central air conditioning or heat pump, electric appliances, and everything else. The most expensive goal but provides complete comfort during extended outages.
Typical load: 3.0–6.0 kW when AC is running
Battery needed: 20–40+ kWh for overnight coverage
Step 2 — Calculate Your Critical Loads
Make a list of every device or appliance you want to power during an outage. For each item, note its wattage (usually on a label or in the owner’s manual) and how many hours per day it runs.
Use this formula: Watts × Hours Per Day ÷ 1,000 = Daily kWh
Sample Critical Load Calculation
| Appliance | Watts | Hours/Day | Daily kWh |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator | 150W average | 24 (cycles) | 1.0 kWh |
| LED lighting (10 fixtures) | 100W | 6 | 0.6 kWh |
| Wi-Fi router + modem | 30W | 24 | 0.7 kWh |
| Phone charging (4 phones) | 60W | 4 | 0.2 kWh |
| Laptop (2) | 100W | 8 | 0.8 kWh |
| Television | 120W | 5 | 0.6 kWh |
| Essential Total | 3.9 kWh/day | ||
| Central AC (3-ton, cycling) | 3,500W average when running | 8 | 7.0 kWh |
| With AC Total | 10.9 kWh/day |
This example home needs approximately 4 kWh per day for essentials, or 11 kWh per day with central AC running 8 hours.
Step 3 — Determine Your Target Runtime
How long do you need your battery to last without recharging? This depends on your local outage history and your risk tolerance.
- Urban/suburban areas with underground utilities: Most outages resolve in 4–8 hours. Overnight coverage (12–16 hours) is usually sufficient.
- Areas with overhead lines or storms: Outages can last 24–48 hours. Two-day coverage is a prudent target.
- Hurricane zones, wildfire-prone areas, rural locations: Multi-day outages are common. Three to seven days of coverage — requiring solar recharging — is the appropriate target.
Step 4 — Calculate Required Battery Capacity
Now apply the formula:
Required kWh = Daily Load (kWh) × Target Runtime (days)
But there are two important adjustments to make:
Adjustment 1 — Depth of Discharge (DoD): Most battery manufacturers recommend not discharging below 10–20% to preserve battery health. To account for this, divide your calculated need by 0.9 (if planning to use 90% of capacity).
Adjustment 2 — Round-Trip Efficiency: Batteries aren’t 100% efficient — some energy is lost in conversion. Most home batteries operate at 85–96% round-trip efficiency. To account for this, divide by 0.90 as a conservative estimate.
Full formula:
Required Battery kWh = (Daily Load × Runtime Days) ÷ DoD ÷ Efficiency
Example Calculations
Scenario 1 — Essential loads, 1.5 day coverage:
- Daily essential load: 3.9 kWh
- Runtime: 1.5 days
- Raw need: 3.9 × 1.5 = 5.85 kWh
- Adjusted for DoD and efficiency: 5.85 ÷ 0.9 ÷ 0.9 = 7.2 kWh minimum
- Recommended system: 10 kWh (one Tesla Powerwall or two Enphase 5P units)
Scenario 2 — Whole home with AC, 1 day coverage:
- Daily load with AC: 10.9 kWh
- Runtime: 1 day
- Raw need: 10.9 kWh
- Adjusted: 10.9 ÷ 0.9 ÷ 0.9 = 13.5 kWh minimum
- Recommended system: 13.5–20 kWh (one to two Tesla Powerwalls or Generac PWRcell)
Scenario 3 — Essential loads, 3 day coverage (hurricane zone):
- Daily essential load: 3.9 kWh
- Runtime: 3 days
- Raw need: 3.9 × 3 = 11.7 kWh
- Adjusted: 11.7 ÷ 0.9 ÷ 0.9 = 14.4 kWh minimum
- Recommended system: 15–20 kWh plus solar for recharging
Step 5 — Check Power Output Requirements
Capacity (kWh) tells you how long the battery lasts. Power output (kW) tells you how much it can run at once. Both matter.
Add up the wattage of everything you’d run simultaneously at peak — this is your peak power demand. Your battery’s continuous power output must exceed this number.
Example peak simultaneous loads:
- Central AC startup surge: 6,000–8,000W peak (important: startup surge is higher than running watts)
- Refrigerator running: 150W
- Lights and devices: 500W
- Total peak: ~8,650W = 8.65 kW
For this scenario, you need a battery with at least 8.65 kW of peak power output. The Tesla Powerwall 3 (11.5 kW continuous) handles this easily. Two Enphase IQ Battery 5P units (7.68 kW combined continuous, 15.36 kW peak) also handle it. A single Enphase unit (3.84 kW) would not.
Sizing Guidelines by Home Type
Apartment or Small Home (Under 1,200 sq ft)
- Essential backup: 5–10 kWh
- Whole-home: 10–15 kWh
- Best options: Single Tesla Powerwall 3, Two Enphase IQ Battery 5P units
Medium Home (1,200–2,500 sq ft)
- Essential backup: 10–15 kWh
- Whole-home: 15–27 kWh
- Best options: Single or double Tesla Powerwall 3, Generac PWRcell 12–18 kWh
Large Home (2,500+ sq ft)
- Essential backup: 15–20 kWh
- Whole-home: 27–54 kWh
- Best options: Two to four Tesla Powerwall 3 units, Generac PWRcell 18 kWh, multi-unit Enphase
Homes with Special Loads
Add extra capacity for:
- Electric vehicle charging: +10–20 kWh if you want to charge your EV during an outage
- Well pump (1 HP): +3–5 kWh daily usage, requires high startup surge capacity
- Medical equipment: Size to ensure 2–3 days of continuous operation as a minimum
- Home office: +2–3 kWh for full work-from-home capability
The Role of Solar in Sizing
If you have or plan to add solar, sizing changes significantly. Solar recharging during the day means you don’t need to store multiple days of energy — you just need to cover overnight consumption between sunset and the next morning’s solar production.
For solar homes in most climates, a single 13.5 kWh battery (like the Tesla Powerwall 3) is sufficient for essential overnight coverage with daily solar recharging. Two units provide whole-home coverage overnight with comfortable reserves.
Get a Professional Load Assessment
While this guide gives you the framework to understand battery sizing, the most accurate approach is a professional load assessment from a licensed installer. They will:
- Review your actual utility bills for real consumption data
- Assess your electrical panel and critical circuits
- Calculate startup surge requirements for motors and compressors
- Recommend specific systems sized for your actual home
Most reputable installers provide load assessments for free as part of the quoting process. Getting two or three assessments gives you confidence in the recommended sizing.
The Bottom Line
Sizing a home battery backup system correctly comes down to three decisions: what you want to power, how long you need it to last, and whether you have solar to recharge during extended outages. For most homeowners seeking essential-to-moderate backup coverage for typical overnight outages, a single 13.5 kWh battery handles the job. For whole-home coverage or multi-day resilience, two or more units — ideally paired with solar — is the right approach.
Take the time to calculate your actual critical loads before talking to installers. An informed buyer gets a better-sized system at a better price.