
Solar Battery Discharge Calculator
A solar battery discharge calculator helps estimate how quickly a battery bank will drain while powering appliances or an off-grid system. By comparing battery capacity with total electrical load, you can determine how long stored solar energy will last before the battery needs to recharge.
This tool calculates estimated discharge time based on battery capacity, appliance power consumption, and system efficiency. Understanding discharge rates is critical for off-grid solar systems, RV solar setups, cabin solar installations, and backup battery systems.
- How long a battery can power connected loads
- Estimated battery discharge time under different loads
- Realistic runtime after inverter and efficiency losses
- Whether your battery capacity is sufficient for daily usage
How Solar Battery Discharge Is Calculated
Solar battery discharge time is calculated by comparing the total stored energy in the battery with the electrical load being powered. As appliances consume electricity, the stored energy inside the battery gradually decreases until the battery reaches its usable discharge limit.
The key variables that determine discharge time include battery capacity, appliance power consumption, inverter efficiency, and the allowable depth of discharge. These factors determine how long a battery bank can realistically supply power before it needs to recharge.
Battery Discharge Formula
Battery Runtime (hours) = Usable Battery Capacity (Wh) ÷ Total Load Power (W)
Usable battery capacity accounts for inverter losses and depth-of-discharge limits. These adjustments provide a more realistic estimate of how long the battery can power connected devices.
Main Factors That Affect Battery Discharge
- Total battery capacity in watt-hours
- Combined wattage of all connected appliances
- Inverter efficiency losses
- Battery chemistry and allowable depth of discharge
- Temperature and real-world system performance
Solar Battery Discharge Calculator
Model estimated runtime before your battery hits the low-voltage cutoff. Accounts for chemistry, depth-of-discharge, inverter losses, Peukert effect on lead-acid, cold-weather derating, battery health, starting charge level, and parasitic standby drain. Use this as a planning estimate, not a guaranteed runtime.
Continue Planning After Discharge Analysis
After understanding how your battery discharges under load, the next step is validating total runtime, confirming battery capacity, checking recharge time, and ensuring your full system remains balanced.
Solar Battery Runtime Calculator
Estimate how long your battery will last under real-world usage conditions.
Battery Bank Size Calculator
Ensure your battery capacity matches your usage and discharge profile.
Solar Battery Charge Time Calculator
Calculate how long it takes to recharge your battery after discharge.
Complete Solar System Calculator
Validate discharge performance within your full off-grid system design.
How to Use the Solar Battery Charge Time Calculator
This calculator helps you estimate how long it will take to recharge a battery bank using solar power. For the most realistic result, use practical numbers instead of ideal panel ratings or perfect sunlight assumptions.
Enter Battery Capacity
Start with your battery size in watt-hours. This is the total amount of energy the battery can store and is the foundation of the charge time estimate.
Add Solar Charging Power
In simple mode, enter your solar panel wattage. In advanced mode, also account for system efficiency and peak sun hours to get a more realistic estimate of actual charging performance.
Use Advanced Mode for Real Conditions
Advanced mode is better for real planning because it includes system efficiency and daily peak sun hours. This helps show whether your battery can realistically recharge in one day or may need more time.
Review Hours and Days Needed
The calculator will show the estimated solar charging hours and, in advanced mode, the approximate number of sun days needed. Use that result to judge whether your array size is practical for daily battery recovery.
Did You Know?
High Loads Drain Batteries Much Faster
A battery powering a 1,000W appliance will discharge far more quickly than the same battery running a 100W load. Even a short burst from a high-wattage device can consume a surprising amount of stored energy.
Not All Battery Capacity Is Usable
Most solar batteries are not designed to be fully drained. Lithium batteries often allow 80% to 90% usable capacity, while lead-acid batteries usually use much less to protect battery life.
Inverter Losses Reduce Real Runtime
When battery DC power is converted into AC power for household devices, some energy is lost. This means actual battery discharge often happens faster than a simple capacity-only estimate suggests.
Battery Age Affects Discharge Performance
Older batteries usually store less energy than when they were new. As battery capacity declines over time, discharge time becomes shorter even if appliance loads stay the same.
Understanding Your Battery Discharge Results
The Solar Battery Discharge Calculator estimates how long your battery can power connected devices before reaching its usable discharge limit. This result helps determine whether your battery bank is properly sized for your energy demand.
Estimated Runtime
This value shows how long the battery can power the specified load. The runtime assumes constant power usage and does not include additional energy input from solar panels during operation.
Usable Battery Energy
Not all battery capacity is usable. Advanced calculations account for inverter efficiency and depth-of-discharge limits to estimate realistic usable energy.
Load Sensitivity
Battery runtime changes dramatically depending on load size. Doubling the wattage of the connected devices cuts runtime roughly in half.
Typical Battery Runtime Examples
- 2,000Wh battery running 100W load: ~20 hours
- 2,000Wh battery running 500W load: ~4 hours
- 5,000Wh battery running 300W load: ~16 hours
- 10,000Wh battery running 1,000W load: ~10 hours
Example Solar Battery Discharge Calculation
The following example demonstrates how battery runtime can be estimated when powering a set of appliances from a solar battery bank. Understanding this process helps you determine whether your battery capacity is sufficient for your energy needs.
Example Solar Battery System
- Battery capacity: 2,000 Wh
- Total appliance load: 200 watts
- Inverter efficiency: 90%
- Depth of discharge limit: 80%
Step-by-Step Calculation
1. Determine usable battery energy:
2,000Wh × 90% inverter efficiency × 80% usable capacity
Usable energy ≈ 1,440Wh
2. Calculate runtime:
1,440Wh ÷ 200W ≈ 7.2 hours
Estimated Result
- Usable battery energy: 1,440Wh
- Power demand: 200W
- Estimated runtime: about 7 hours
This example shows how inverter efficiency and battery depth-of-discharge significantly influence how long a battery can power a system.
Expert Tips for Managing Solar Battery Discharge
Managing battery discharge is one of the most important aspects of a reliable solar power system. Efficient energy use and proper system design can significantly extend battery runtime and protect battery lifespan.
Reduce High-Wattage Loads
Large appliances such as microwaves, air conditioners, and electric heaters drain batteries very quickly. Limiting high-wattage devices dramatically extends battery runtime.
Monitor Total System Load
Many systems run several devices at once. Even moderate appliances can drain a battery quickly when combined. Tracking total system wattage helps avoid unexpected battery depletion.
Avoid Deep Discharges
Repeatedly draining batteries to extremely low levels shortens their lifespan. Most solar systems operate best when only a portion of the battery capacity is used each cycle.
Combine Battery Storage With Solar Production
When solar panels produce energy during the day, they can power appliances directly while also slowing battery discharge. This can extend overall system runtime significantly.
Practical System Tip
A well-balanced solar system typically includes enough battery capacity to handle nighttime loads while solar panels replenish energy during the day. Oversizing loads or undersizing the battery bank can lead to frequent power shortages.
Solar Battery Discharge Comparison Guide
Battery runtime changes significantly depending on the size of the electrical load. The same battery bank can last many hours when powering small devices but may discharge quickly when running large appliances.
| Battery Capacity | Load Power | Estimated Runtime | Typical Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000Wh | 100W | ≈ 10 hours | Small electronics |
| 2,000Wh | 200W | ≈ 10 hours | Lighting and electronics |
| 2,000Wh | 500W | ≈ 4 hours | Kitchen appliances |
| 5,000Wh | 300W | ≈ 16 hours | Cabin solar systems |
| 10,000Wh | 1,000W | ≈ 10 hours | Whole-home backup systems |
Why Load Size Matters
The higher the electrical load, the faster a battery will discharge. Doubling the load roughly cuts runtime in half. Efficient appliances and energy management play a major role in maximizing battery runtime.
Visual Insight: How Load Size Affects Battery Runtime
Battery runtime changes dramatically depending on how much power your appliances consume. Small loads allow batteries to run for many hours, while large appliances drain stored energy much faster.
What This Example Shows
This example assumes a 2,000Wh battery. As appliance power increases, runtime drops rapidly. Large appliances such as heaters, air conditioners, or cooking equipment can drain batteries very quickly.
Managing appliance load is one of the most effective ways to extend battery runtime in off-grid solar systems, RV setups, and backup power installations.
Planning Advice for Solar Battery Discharge
Battery discharge planning is not just about how long the battery lasts on paper. The real goal is making sure your solar system can support your loads without draining the battery too quickly or forcing you into frequent deep discharge cycles. A battery bank that empties too fast is usually a sign that loads are too high, storage is too small, or both.
Size the Battery Around Real Loads
Start with the appliances you actually need to run, not every possible device. A battery bank should be sized around realistic simultaneous usage, especially for overnight loads and outage scenarios.
Avoid Systems That Depend on Deep Daily Discharge
A battery that regularly drops too low will usually wear out faster and give you less flexibility during cloudy weather or higher-than-normal usage days. Leaving buffer capacity is usually the smarter design choice.
Pair Runtime Planning With Solar Recovery
Battery runtime only tells half the story. You also need enough solar production to recharge what the battery used. A system that lasts overnight but cannot recover the next day is not balanced.
Reduce Demand Before Adding More Storage
In many cases, lowering appliance demand is cheaper and more effective than buying a much larger battery bank. Efficient lights, refrigerators, fans, and electronics can dramatically improve discharge time.
Smart Next Steps
After estimating battery discharge time, the next step is to confirm whether your battery size, daily energy demand, and solar charging capacity all work together. These related tools help complete the system plan:
- Solar Battery Runtime Calculator to estimate total usable runtime under load
- Solar Battery Charge Time Calculator to see how long recharge will take
- Solar Battery Size Calculator to estimate how much storage capacity you actually need
Solar Battery Discharge Questions Answered
Everything you need to know about how long a solar battery actually runs your loads — from depth-of-discharge limits and inverter losses to Peukert’s law, cold-weather derating, parasitic standby, and chemistry-specific runtime differences.
Discharge Basics 4 questions
Q1How long will a solar battery last when powering appliances?+
The baseline formula is battery capacity divided by continuous load — but real runtime is always lower after applying DoD limits, inverter efficiency, and temperature penalties:
runtime_hrs = (battery_Wh × DoD × inverter_eff) ÷ load_W
A 2,000 Wh LiFePO4 battery running a 200 W load with 90% DoD and 92% inverter efficiency:
(2,000 × 0.90 × 0.92) ÷ 200 = 8.3 hours of real runtime, not the 10 hours simple math would give.
Q2What is Depth of Discharge (DoD) and why does it matter?+
Depth of Discharge is the percentage of a battery’s rated capacity that’s safely usable before you hit a chemistry-specific cutoff. Going past it damages cells and shortens lifespan dramatically.
| Chemistry | Safe DoD | Cycle life at safe DoD |
|---|---|---|
| LiFePO4 | 90% | 5,000+ cycles |
| NMC Lithium | 85% | 1,500 cycles |
| AGM | 50% | 700 cycles |
| Flooded Lead-Acid | 50% | 1,200 cycles |
| Gel | 50% | 900 cycles |
A 5 kWh AGM battery only delivers 2,500 Wh before you hit the 50% DoD cutoff. A 5 kWh LiFePO4 delivers 4,500 Wh — 80% more usable energy from the same nominal capacity.
Q3What’s the difference between battery capacity and usable energy?+
Rated capacity is the theoretical maximum a manufacturer prints on the label (e.g. “100 Ah @ 12 V = 1,200 Wh”). Usable energy is what actually reaches your loads after four stacking losses:
- DoD cutoff — you can’t touch the bottom slice (50% for lead-acid, 10% for lithium).
- Inverter efficiency — DC→AC conversion costs 8–15% depending on inverter quality and load.
- Cable/busbar losses — typically 2–4% at full load.
- Temperature derating — cold reduces delivered capacity; lead-acid is worst.
usable = rated × DoD × inv_eff × temp_factor
// 5 kWh AGM at 35°F
5000 × 0.50 × 0.90 × 0.85 = 1,912 Wh // 38% of label
Q4Do solar batteries discharge overnight?+
Yes — that’s their primary job in an off-grid or hybrid system. Panels produce from roughly sunrise to sunset; the battery carries everything through the night plus any daytime consumption above what panels deliver.
A well-sized system follows this daily rhythm:
- Sunrise → late morning: panels recharge battery from overnight draw while also powering morning loads.
- Midday → late afternoon: battery sits at or near 100%; excess solar is curtailed or fed to grid.
- Sunset → next sunrise: battery discharges through evening loads, fridge cycles, parasitic standby, then any early-morning appliances.
Appliance Loads 5 questions
Q5What drains a solar battery the fastest?+
Anything that turns electricity into heat — resistive heating loads have the worst battery-runtime economics:
| Appliance | Typical watts | Runtime on 2 kWh |
|---|---|---|
| Electric space heater | 1,500 W | ~1.2 hrs |
| Microwave | 1,000–1,500 W | ~1.3 hrs |
| Electric kettle | 1,500 W | ~1.2 hrs |
| Hair dryer | 1,200 W | ~1.5 hrs |
| Window AC unit | 500–1,500 W | 1.2–3.6 hrs |
| Coffee maker | 900 W | ~2 hrs |
Q6How do I calculate how long my fridge will run on a battery?+
Fridges cycle on and off, so use their daily energy use (not peak wattage) for accurate estimates. Look at the yellow EnergyGuide label or read it from a Kill-A-Watt meter.
daily_Wh = compressor_W × duty_cycle × 24
// Typical fridge: 150 W × 40% duty × 24h = 1,440 Wh/day
A 5 kWh usable battery runs a typical full-size fridge for roughly 3 days with no solar input. A 12 V DC compressor fridge (Dometic, SunDanzer) uses 30–60% less and can run 5–7 days on the same battery.
Q7Can a solar battery run an air conditioner?+
Yes, but AC units are one of the most demanding loads and need careful battery sizing. Real-world runtime estimates:
| AC type | Running watts | Hours on 5 kWh usable |
|---|---|---|
| 8,000 BTU window (inverter) | 500 W | ~10 hrs |
| 8,000 BTU window (standard) | 800 W | ~6.3 hrs |
| 12,000 BTU mini-split | 900 W | ~5.5 hrs |
| 15,000 BTU RV rooftop | 1,500 W | ~3.3 hrs |
Tips for running AC on battery:
- Choose inverter-compressor AC — variable-speed units use 30–40% less than on/off compressors.
- Use a soft-start device to cut startup surge from 3–5× to ~1.5× running watts.
- Pre-cool during the day while panels are producing, so the battery only handles overnight maintenance cooling.
Q8Why do motors and compressors drain batteries faster than their rated wattage?+
Three reasons — all of which stack on top of each other:
- Startup surge (locked rotor amps). Motors draw 3–7× running watts for 1–3 seconds every time they start. A fridge that cycles on 20 times a day has 20 surge events.
- Power factor. Motors draw reactive power that doesn’t do useful work but still loads the inverter. Cheap inverters can lose 15–25% efficiency driving motors vs. pure resistive loads.
- Duty-cycle penalty. A rated 150 W compressor might pull 250 W while actually running and 0 W while off — the instantaneous load bounces around your inverter’s efficiency curve.
Q9How much parasitic standby power does a typical system draw?+
More than most people realize. “Standby” draws add up over 24 hours even when nothing appears to be in use:
| Source | Standby watts | Daily drain |
|---|---|---|
| Inverter (no load) | 10–30 W | 240–720 Wh |
| WiFi router + modem | 10–15 W | 240–360 Wh |
| Smart TV (off) | 2–8 W | 48–190 Wh |
| Phone chargers idle | 1–3 W each | 24–72 Wh |
| Cable box / streaming device | 15–30 W | 360–720 Wh |
| Instant water heater pilot | 5–10 W | 120–240 Wh |
A typical home runs 40–60 W of parasitic draw 24/7, which eats 1–1.5 kWh per day — often more than the fridge. Use a master kill switch for unused electronics and put the inverter into eco/standby mode overnight if your loads allow.
Hidden Losses 4 questions
Q10Does inverter efficiency affect battery runtime?+
Yes — and the effect compounds. A 92% inverter delivers 92 Wh of AC for every 100 Wh of DC pulled from the battery. The missing 8 Wh becomes heat in the inverter. Over a full battery discharge, you lose:
88% inverter = 600 Wh lost // (~1 hr fridge)
92% inverter = 400 Wh lost
95% inverter = 250 Wh lost // quality pure-sine
Inverter efficiency is not flat. Most inverters hit peak efficiency at 30–70% of rated output and drop sharply at very light loads:
- 2% of rated load (e.g. 40 W on a 2,000 W inverter): efficiency 55–70%.
- 30–70% of rated load: peak efficiency 90–95%.
- Over 90% of rated load: efficiency drops 2–3 points from peak.
Q11What is Peukert’s law and how does it reduce lead-acid runtime?+
Peukert’s law says that lead-acid batteries deliver less usable capacity at higher discharge currents — the faster you drain them, the less total energy you get out. Lithium batteries are not affected.
at C/20 (10 A load): 200 Ah delivered // nameplate
at C/10 (20 A load): 180 Ah // -10%
at C/5 (40 A load): 150 Ah // -25%
at C/2 (100 A load): 110 Ah // -45%
If you routinely pull more than 0.2C from flooded or more than 0.3C from AGM, Peukert will cost you 15–30% of rated capacity in real runtime. The fix is either (a) bigger battery bank to keep C-rate low, or (b) switch to lithium where Peukert doesn’t apply.
Q12How does cold weather affect discharge time?+
Cold reduces both delivered capacity and maximum sustainable current across all chemistries, but the penalty varies:
| Chemistry | At 77°F | At 32°F | At 0°F |
|---|---|---|---|
| LiFePO4 | 100% | ~90% | ~80% |
| NMC Lithium | 100% | ~80% | ~65% |
| AGM | 100% | ~80% | ~60% |
| Flooded | 100% | ~75% | ~50% |
| Gel | 100% | ~70% | ~50% |
Most lithium batteries discharge fine in cold — the damage risk is during charging below freezing, not discharging. Lead-acid gets hit on both sides: reduced discharge capacity and slower absorb/float during charge.
Q13Why is my actual runtime shorter than calculated?+
Simple capacity-÷-load math ignores at least six real-world deductions. Walk through this stack for a 5 kWh AGM battery running a 500 W load:
5,000 Wh rated
× 0.50 DoD = 2,500 Wh
× 0.88 Peukert at 0.1C = 2,200 Wh
× 0.90 cold (40°F) = 1,980 Wh
× 0.92 inverter = 1,822 Wh
× 0.97 cables/busbar = 1,767 Wh
÷ 500 W load = 3.5 hours // not 10!
The honest answer is that a battery label tells you less than 40% of the story. Use the discharge calculator above to get an estimate that includes all these factors.
Chemistry & Safety 4 questions
Q14What happens if I discharge a battery below the DoD limit?+
Going past safe DoD causes permanent damage — the severity depends on chemistry:
- LiFePO4: the BMS usually disconnects at about 10% SoC to protect cells. Repeated near-zero cycles still shorten life but the cells survive.
- NMC Lithium: over-discharge below 2.5 V per cell can cause copper shunt formation — cells become unsafe to re-charge and must be retired.
- AGM / Flooded / Gel: discharging below 50% SoC causes plate sulfation, where sulfate crystals grow and don’t re-dissolve. Each over-discharge cycle permanently reduces capacity. A single 100% discharge can cost 20–30% of rated capacity.
Q15How does chemistry affect discharge — LiFePO4 vs lead-acid?+
LiFePO4 has 4 major discharge advantages over lead-acid:
| Metric | LiFePO4 | Flooded Lead-Acid |
|---|---|---|
| Usable DoD | 90% | 50% |
| Peukert effect | None | -15 to -30% |
| Voltage sag under load | Minimal | Significant |
| Cold penalty at 32°F | -10% | -25% |
| Cycle life | 5,000+ | 1,200 |
| Weight per usable kWh | ~25 lbs | ~140 lbs |
The combined effect: a 5 kWh LiFePO4 delivers roughly the same real-world runtime as a 10 kWh flooded lead-acid bank, at a quarter of the weight and 4× the cycle life. The higher upfront cost pays off within 3–5 years of daily cycling.
Q16Can I damage a battery by deep discharging it?+
Yes — and the damage is cumulative and mostly irreversible. Each over-discharge cycle:
- Lead-acid: grows sulfate crystals that don’t fully dissolve during normal charging. Three or four deep discharges can cut capacity in half permanently.
- Lithium: copper corrosion at the anode creates internal micro-shorts. The cell eventually fails open-circuit or, rarely, thermally.
Modern batteries include a BMS (Battery Management System) that disconnects the pack before damage occurs. Older lead-acid systems rely on the inverter’s low-voltage cutoff — always verify it’s set correctly. Default 10.5 V cutoffs are dangerous for 12 V lead-acid banks; raise to 11.8 V.
Q17Why does my lead-acid battery lose capacity faster than rated?+
Lead-acid batteries almost never deliver their published cycle life in real off-grid use. Common reasons:
- Chronic undercharge. Solar systems that don’t reach 100% SoC daily build sulfate crystals on the plates. Need proper 3-stage charging with regular absorb completion.
- Heat. Every 15°F above 77°F roughly halves battery life. A battery at 95°F ambient may last 40% as long as one at 77°F.
- High C-rate discharging. Regularly pulling more than 0.2C dramatically accelerates plate wear via Peukert stress.
- Mixed-age banks. Adding a new battery to an old bank drags the new one down — all cells average to the weakest.
- Not equalizing flooded cells. Monthly equalization charge is required to prevent stratification; skipping it costs 30–50% of cycle life.
Cycle-life ratings are measured in lab conditions at 77°F, C/20 discharge, and perfect charging. Real systems usually deliver 50–70% of lab-rated cycle life.
Extending Runtime 3 questions
Q18Can solar panels power appliances while the battery is discharging?+
Yes — and in a properly configured hybrid system, this is how daytime loads get priority over battery draw. The charge controller and inverter negotiate where power flows:
- Load less than solar input: panels power the load directly, excess charges the battery.
- Load equal to solar input: battery sees zero charge/discharge current — “neutral zone.”
- Load greater than solar input: panels supply what they can, battery fills the gap.
Q19What’s the fastest way to extend battery runtime?+
In order of cost-per-hour-gained:
- Eliminate parasitic draws — kill switches on unused electronics can save 500–1,500 Wh/day for free.
- Swap resistive loads for alternatives — propane cooking, solar water heating, LED lights. Highest ROI single change.
- Move heavy loads to daytime — run off direct solar instead of battery. No hardware cost.
- Upgrade inverter — a 95% pure-sine vs 85% modified-sine gains ~10% on every Wh. Usually $200–500.
- Switch lead-acid → LiFePO4 — 80% more usable capacity from the same nameplate. Expensive upfront but permanent fix.
- Add battery capacity — last resort. Most expensive per additional hour. Consider all the above first.
Q20Should I use a higher-capacity battery or more batteries in parallel?+
For the same total capacity, both give similar runtime — but the tradeoffs differ:
| Approach | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Single large battery | Fewer connections, simpler wiring, lighter wiring loss | Single point of failure, heavier to handle |
| Multiple parallel batteries | Redundancy, easier to handle, expandable later | Need identical age/chemistry, balance current draw, more cable |
Key rules for parallel banks:
- Use identical make, model, age, and state of charge. Mixing old with new kills the new ones within months.
- Wire with equal-length cables from each battery to a common busbar, not daisy-chained — this balances current draw across the pack.
- Add fuses at each battery positive terminal, sized for the battery’s individual C-rate.
- For lithium, many brands support parallel communication between BMS units — use it where available.
Ready to model your exact runtime?
Plug in your battery, chemistry, appliances, temperature, and inverter — get real hours and a wall-clock cutoff time.
Related Tools for Battery and System Optimization
These tools help refine appliance usage, battery configuration, wiring safety, and solar input without repeating the main next-step links above.
Appliance Runtime Calculator
Estimate how long individual appliances will run on your battery system.
Battery Series Parallel Calculator
Configure your battery bank for proper voltage and capacity.
Solar Wire Size Calculator
Ensure safe and efficient wiring for your battery system.
Solar Panel Output Calculator
Verify your solar system can support battery recharge after discharge cycles.
