Solar Battery Runtime Calculator

Solar Battery Runtime Calculator

The Solar Battery Runtime Calculator estimates how long a battery bank can power appliances before it needs to be recharged. This tool helps determine whether your solar battery capacity is sufficient to support your daily energy needs.

Battery runtime depends on several factors, including battery capacity, appliance power consumption, inverter efficiency, and allowable battery depth of discharge. Even small changes in load or battery size can significantly affect runtime.

This calculator estimates how long your solar battery system can run a specific appliance or a group of devices. It is useful for planning off-grid systems, backup power setups, RV solar installations, and battery-powered solar generators.

Quick Answer

How Long Will a Solar Battery Run Your Appliances?

The runtime of a solar battery depends on the battery capacity and the power consumption of the appliances being used. In simple terms, the larger the battery capacity and the lower the appliance wattage, the longer the system can run.

Basic runtime formula:
Battery Runtime (hours) ≈ Battery Watt-Hours ÷ Appliance Wattage

For example, a 2,000Wh battery powering a 200W appliance could theoretically run for about 10 hours. However, real-world runtime is slightly lower due to inverter efficiency losses and battery depth-of-discharge limits.

Factors that affect solar battery runtime

  • Total battery capacity (Wh or Ah)
  • Power consumption of connected appliances
  • Inverter efficiency losses
  • Battery depth of discharge limits
  • Simultaneous device usage

How Solar Battery Runtime Is Calculated

Solar battery runtime is calculated by comparing the usable energy stored in the battery with the power draw of the appliances connected to it. The more usable watt-hours a battery has, and the lower the electrical load, the longer the battery can keep supplying power.

In real systems, not all of the battery’s rated capacity is available for use. Battery depth of discharge limits how much energy can be safely used, and inverter efficiency reduces the amount of stored DC energy that becomes usable AC power for appliances. These factors must be included to estimate realistic runtime.

Solar Battery Runtime Formula

Battery Runtime (hours) = Battery Capacity (Wh) × Usable Capacity × Inverter Efficiency ÷ Appliance Load (W)

This gives a more realistic estimate than using the battery’s full rated capacity alone.

For example, a 2,000Wh battery with 80% usable capacity and 90% inverter efficiency provides about 1,440Wh of usable AC energy. If the connected load is 200 watts, the estimated runtime is about 7.2 hours.

Key Factors That Affect Battery Runtime

  • Total battery capacity in watt-hours
  • Battery depth of discharge
  • Inverter efficiency
  • Total appliance wattage running at the same time
  • Battery age, temperature, and real-world operating conditions
Battery Runtime Estimator

How long will your battery realistically last?

Enter your bank size, pick a chemistry, and add the appliances you plan to run. We apply real-world depth of discharge, inverter efficiency, temperature derating, and high-discharge losses — so you get a practical runtime estimate you can plan around, not a rosy spec-sheet number.

Bank size
100 Wh → 40 kWh
Runtime output
Hours · days · timeline
Chemistries
LiFePO4 · NMC · AGM · Flooded · Gel
Load modeling
Multi-appliance · duty cycle
+ RUNTIME

Configure your battery

Start with a preset or build your own setup

Presets:
Quick add: LED lights 60W Mini fridge 120W CPAP 45W Router 15W Laptop 65W Microwave 800W Coffee maker 1200W Space heater 1500W
Quick add: LED lights Fridge (duty) CPAP 8hr Router 24/7 Laptop 4hr TV 3hr Microwave 15min Heater 4hr

Your battery runtime

Based on your configuration and loads

Total runtime
0 hrs
real-world estimate
Usable energy
0 Wh
after DoD + efficiency
Total load
0 W
continuous draw

Battery drain timeline

— hrs remaining
Full25%50%75%Empty

Start powering loads to see your drain curve.

LiFePO4 specs

Flagship chemistry
DoD applied
90%
Cycle life
5000+
Peukert hit
None
Cold derating
Moderate

Runtime at different loads

ScenarioLoadRuntimeVisual
i
Why this runtime

Run the calculation to see the breakdown.

Next step to extend runtime

Live preview
Runtime estimate
hours
Capacity
— Wh
Usable
— Wh
Load
— W
DoD
—%
Battery Fill in values

Example Solar Battery Runtime Calculation

The following example demonstrates how battery runtime is estimated using battery capacity, allowable depth of discharge, inverter efficiency, and appliance power consumption.

Example Battery System

  • Battery capacity: 2,000 Wh
  • Depth of discharge: 80%
  • Inverter efficiency: 90%
  • Connected appliance load: 200 watts

Step-by-Step Calculation

1. Calculate usable battery capacity:

2,000 Wh × 80% = 1,600 Wh

2. Account for inverter efficiency:

1,600 Wh × 90% = 1,440 Wh usable AC power

3. Divide usable energy by appliance load to estimate runtime.

Estimated Battery Runtime

For this example setup:

  • Usable battery energy: 1,440 Wh
  • Appliance power: 200 watts
  • Estimated runtime: about 7.2 hours

This example shows why both battery size and appliance wattage strongly influence how long a solar battery system can supply power.

Understanding Your Solar Battery Runtime Results

The Solar Battery Runtime Calculator estimates how long your battery can power appliances before needing to recharge. The result is based on usable battery energy, appliance load, and inverter efficiency.

Battery Runtime

This value shows the estimated number of hours your battery can power the selected load before reaching the allowed discharge level.

Usable Energy

Usable energy represents the portion of battery capacity that can safely be used after considering depth of discharge limits and inverter efficiency.

Load Impact

The higher the appliance wattage, the faster the battery energy is consumed. Lower power devices allow the battery system to run for much longer periods.

Typical Solar Battery Runtime Examples

  • 100W appliance on 2,000Wh battery: about 14–16 hours
  • 300W appliance on 2,000Wh battery: about 5–6 hours
  • 1,000W appliance on 2,000Wh battery: about 1–1.5 hours
  • Small electronics often run many hours longer than high-power appliances

How to Use the Solar Battery Runtime Calculator

This calculator helps you estimate how long a solar battery can run one appliance or a group of devices. To get a realistic result, enter usable system values rather than ideal or advertised numbers.

1

Enter Battery Capacity

Start with the total battery capacity in watt-hours. This is the full amount of stored energy before accounting for depth of discharge and inverter losses.

2

Add Appliance Load

Enter the total wattage of the device or devices you want to power. If more than one appliance will run at the same time, add their wattage together first.

3

Include Real Usable Capacity

Enter your battery depth of discharge and inverter efficiency. These two numbers reduce the advertised battery capacity to a more realistic usable energy value.

4

Review Runtime Estimate

The calculator will show your estimated runtime in hours and the actual usable energy available. Use that result as a planning guide, not as a perfect guarantee under every real-world condition.

Expert Tips for Improving Solar Battery Runtime

Solar battery runtime depends on both battery capacity and how efficiently electricity is used. Small improvements in system design and appliance selection can significantly extend the amount of time your battery bank can power your home, cabin, RV, or off-grid system.

Reduce High-Wattage Loads

Appliances like electric heaters, microwaves, coffee makers, and air conditioners consume large amounts of power. Limiting these loads dramatically increases battery runtime.

Use Energy-Efficient Appliances

Energy-efficient refrigerators, LED lighting, laptops, and modern electronics use far less electricity than older devices, allowing solar batteries to last much longer.

Increase Battery Storage Capacity

Adding additional battery capacity increases total stored energy. Larger battery banks provide longer runtime and more stable backup power during cloudy days or overnight use.

Improve Solar Charging Capacity

Increasing solar panel output allows batteries to recharge faster during the day, helping maintain a higher state of charge and improving system reliability.

Practical Solar Battery Planning Tip

When designing a solar power system, it is usually better to reduce energy consumption first and then size the battery bank to support the remaining loads. Efficient systems require smaller battery banks, cost less to build, and are easier to maintain.

Solar Battery Runtime Comparison Guide

Solar battery runtime depends heavily on the appliance power demand. Small electronics can run for many hours, while high-power appliances can drain even large battery banks quickly. The comparison below shows approximate runtime for a typical 2,000Wh solar battery system.

Appliance Average Power Estimated Runtime (2000Wh Battery) Usage Example
LED Light 10 W 120+ hours Lighting for cabins or RVs
Laptop 50 W 20–25 hours Remote work and electronics
Television 100 W 10–12 hours Entertainment systems
Refrigerator 150–200 W 6–8 hours Food storage
Microwave 1,000 W 1–1.5 hours Short cooking tasks
Air Conditioner 1,500 W Less than 1 hour High power cooling loads

Why Appliance Power Matters

Even large solar battery banks can drain quickly when powering high-wattage appliances. Efficient energy planning focuses on minimizing heavy loads and prioritizing essential devices during battery-powered operation.

Solar Battery Runtime Comparison Guide

Solar battery runtime depends heavily on the appliance power demand. Small electronics can run for many hours, while high-power appliances can drain even large battery banks quickly. The comparison below shows approximate runtime for a typical 2,000Wh solar battery system.

Appliance Average Power Estimated Runtime (2000Wh Battery) Usage Example
LED Light 10 W 120+ hours Lighting for cabins or RVs
Laptop 50 W 20–25 hours Remote work and electronics
Television 100 W 10–12 hours Entertainment systems
Refrigerator 150–200 W 6–8 hours Food storage
Microwave 1,000 W 1–1.5 hours Short cooking tasks
Air Conditioner 1,500 W Less than 1 hour High power cooling loads

Why Appliance Power Matters

Even large solar battery banks can drain quickly when powering high-wattage appliances. Efficient energy planning focuses on minimizing heavy loads and prioritizing essential devices during battery-powered operation.

Visual Insight: How Appliance Load Changes Battery Runtime

Battery runtime drops quickly as appliance wattage increases. A small load can run for many hours, while a large load can drain the same battery in a short period. This simple visual shows why reducing appliance demand is one of the fastest ways to extend solar battery runtime.

50W Load
≈ 28.8 hrs
100W Load
≈ 14.4 hrs
200W Load
≈ 7.2 hrs
500W Load
≈ 2.9 hrs
1000W Load
≈ 1.4 hrs

What This Visual Shows

This example assumes a 2,000Wh battery, 80% depth of discharge, and 90% inverter efficiency, which gives about 1,440Wh of usable energy. As appliance load increases, runtime falls rapidly.

This is why low-power devices such as LED lights, laptops, routers, and fans are far easier to support on battery power than appliances like microwaves, heaters, and air conditioners.

Runtime FAQ

Solar battery runtime — explained with real numbers

How long will a 2kWh battery run a fridge? A CPAP? An AC unit? Here's the formula, the chemistry catch, the hidden losses, and 20 appliance-by-appliance runtime answers you can actually plan against.

20
Questions
with math + examples
5
Categories
formula → appliances
Wh
Real-world
numbers, not specs
+ 14.4 HOURS
1

The runtime formula

Start here — how to calculate real runtime, and why nameplate capacity is optimistic.

Q1What is the solar battery runtime formula?+

Runtime is usable watt-hours divided by load in watts. The trick is that "usable" is much less than the battery's nameplate capacity — you have to shave off depth of discharge and inverter efficiency first.

Formula
Runtime (hrs) = (Capacity Wh × DoD × Inverter Efficiency) ÷ Load Watts
Example
2000 Wh × 0.80 × 0.90 ÷ 100 W = 14.4 hrs

This is why advertised capacity can be misleading when planning backup power. Compare your numbers with the Solar Battery Size Calculator to see how much nameplate capacity you actually need.

Q2Why is "usable" capacity less than what the battery is rated for?+

Three reasons stack up between the sticker and real runtime:

  • Depth of discharge (DoD) — you should not drain most batteries to 0%. LiFePO4 is rated to 90%, AGM and flooded lead-acid to ~50% for reasonable cycle life.
  • Inverter efficiency — converting DC battery power to AC for your appliances loses 5–15% as heat. Typical quality inverters are 90–95% efficient.
  • Cold/high-load losses — lead-acid batteries lose additional capacity at low temperatures or high discharge rates (Peukert's law).

Together, these can turn a 2,000Wh nameplate into as little as 800–900Wh of real usable AC energy on older lead-acid chemistries.

Q3What is depth of discharge and why does it matter?+

Depth of discharge (DoD) is the percentage of a battery's capacity you can safely use without damaging it or shortening its life.

ChemistryRecommended DoDCycle life at that DoD
LiFePO480–90%3,000–6,000 cycles
NMC lithium80–85%1,500–2,500 cycles
AGM lead-acid50%500–800 cycles
Flooded lead-acid50%1,000–1,500 cycles
Gel lead-acid50%700–1,000 cycles

Pushing lead-acid past 50% DoD is possible but cycle life drops fast — a bank rated for 1,200 cycles at 50% DoD may only deliver 400 cycles at 80% DoD.

Q4Solar battery runtime example for a small backup system+

A 2,000Wh battery with 80% DoD and 90% inverter efficiency gives 2000 × 0.80 × 0.90 = 1,440 Wh of usable AC energy.

  • Powering a 100W load1440 ÷ 100 = 14.4 hours
  • Powering a 300W load1440 ÷ 300 = 4.8 hours
  • Powering a 600W load1440 ÷ 600 = 2.4 hours

This is why runtime planning should always start with realistic appliance loads. After estimating battery hours, use the Solar Panel Output Calculator to see how quickly panels can recharge the system.

2

Appliance runtime examples

Real numbers for fridges, CPAPs, heaters, AC, routers, and more.

Q5How long will a solar battery run a refrigerator?+

A fridge is a duty-cycle load — the compressor runs maybe 30–50% of the hour, averaging 80–150W for a typical full-size efficient unit. That means a 2,000Wh battery with ~1,440Wh usable can run a fridge for roughly 10–18 hours depending on ambient temperature, door openings, and compressor efficiency.

Smaller mini-fridges average 60–80W and can push runtime past 20 hours on the same battery. Older non-inverter fridges with 200W+ average draw cut runtime in half.

Startup surgeA fridge's compressor pulls 3–5× its running watts for a split second when it kicks on. Size your inverter for at least 3× the running wattage, and choose a battery with a high C-rate if yours is lead-acid.

For an appliance-specific breakdown, see Solar Battery Runtime for Refrigerator.

Q6How long will a solar battery run a CPAP machine?+

A CPAP runs on 30–60W without a humidifier, or 80–120W with one. That means a 500Wh portable battery (like a Jackery Explorer 500) delivers roughly:

  • 8–12 hours without humidifier (2 full nights)
  • 4–5 hours with humidifier (part of one night)

For a full 8-hour night with humidifier and heated hose, look for at least 800–1,000Wh. Many CPAPs have a 12V DC input that bypasses the inverter entirely — using that can add 30–40% more runtime.

Q7How long will a solar battery run a space heater?+

Short answer: not long. A 1,500W space heater running full-tilt pulls 1,500Wh every single hour. A 2,000Wh battery with ~1,440Wh usable gives you under an hour of heat.

Space heaters are battery killersResistive heating is one of the worst possible loads for a battery-backed system. For any kind of useful heating, you need a generator, a wood stove, or a 10+ kWh bank — or switch to a 12V DC heated blanket (~50W) which changes the math completely.
Q8How long will a solar battery run an air conditioner?+

Depends enormously on the AC unit type:

AC typeRunning wattsRuntime on 5kWh bank
5,000 BTU window unit400–500 W6–9 hours
8,000 BTU window unit650–800 W4–5.5 hours
12,000 BTU (1-ton) mini-split900–1,200 W3–4 hours
Portable AC (vented)1,000–1,400 W2.5–3.5 hours

Inverter-driven mini-splits are dramatically better than window units because they modulate compressor speed — actual draw averages 30–60% of rated after room is cool. Standard window ACs cycle on/off at full power.

AC also has a surge draw of 3× running watts. You want a soft-start kit on any AC if you're planning to run it off battery.

Q9How long will a solar battery run basic electronics (router, laptop, phone)?+

These are the easy, friendly loads — modern electronics sip power:

  • Router + modem (15W combined) — a 1kWh battery runs these for 60+ hours.
  • Laptop (45–65W when working) — same 1kWh battery runs a laptop for 13–20 hours.
  • Phone charger (5–10W) — effectively unlimited; a portable battery charges a phone 50+ times.
  • LED lighting (5–15W per bulb) — a 2kWh battery runs 6 LED bulbs for 20+ hours.

For connectivity and basic productivity during outages, even a small solar generator (~500Wh) is usually enough for a couple of days.

Q10How long will a solar battery power a whole house?+

Depends on what "whole house" means. Average US home uses ~30 kWh per day, but that includes HVAC, electric water heat, and oven — the heavy hitters.

  • Essentials-only (fridge, lights, wifi, fans, small electronics) → 3–6 kWh per day.
  • Normal use minus heat/AC/oven → 8–15 kWh per day.
  • Full home with HVAC → 25–40 kWh per day.

A typical 10–14 kWh home battery (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase IQ) covers essentials for roughly 24 hours. Full-home backup needs 20–30+ kWh of storage paired with solar recharge during daylight.

3

What affects runtime most

The hidden losses that silently eat your real-world runtime.

Q11What affects solar battery runtime the most?+

In order of impact, the four biggest factors are:

  • Battery size — largest lever; doubling capacity doubles runtime.
  • Appliance wattage — a 1,500W heater drains a bank 15× faster than a 100W TV.
  • Inverter efficiency — cheap modified-sine inverters can be 75–85% efficient; quality pure-sine is 92–95%.
  • Usable depth of discharge — LiFePO4 delivers 80–90% usable; lead-acid only 50%.

Temperature, battery age, and simultaneous appliance usage (especially surge currents) compound these losses. To understand how much power your devices use each day, check the Solar Power Consumption Calculator.

Q12How does temperature affect battery runtime?+

Lithium batteries lose about 10–15% capacity below 32°F (0°C), and LiFePO4 BMSes typically block charging below freezing to prevent permanent damage.

Lead-acid is worse — 30–50% capacity loss below freezing, and high internal resistance in the cold means surge currents drop sharply. An AGM bank that delivers 1,000W at 70°F may only deliver 500W at 20°F.

Winter rule of thumbSize your bank 25–30% larger than summer calculations call for if it will see freezing temperatures and you can't keep it in an insulated or heated enclosure.
Q13Does Peukert's law apply to my battery?+

Peukert's law says lead-acid capacity drops as discharge rate increases. A 100Ah AGM rated at the C/20 rate (5A for 20 hours) may only deliver 80Ah if you discharge it at 50A — that's 20% lost simply because you're drawing fast.

Lithium chemistries are essentially immune to Peukert losses at normal discharge rates — a 100Ah LiFePO4 delivers close to its full 100Ah whether you draw it at 10A or 100A.

Practical impactIf your lead-acid bank is being discharged faster than C/10 (10% of capacity per hour), expect to lose 10–25% of rated runtime. Another reason to lean toward LiFePO4 for any serious load.
Q14How much energy do parasitic loads eat?+

Parasitic or "phantom" loads are the devices drawing power 24/7 even when nothing is "on" — inverter idle, modem, router, DVR, smart-home hubs, wall warts. Typical parasitic draw is 10–30W continuous, which is 240–720Wh per day.

On a 2,000Wh battery, that's 12–36% of your total capacity going to standby before you turn anything on. Most inverters also have an idle current of 10–25W just for being energized — use the unit's "eco" or "search" mode if available.

Q15Does running multiple appliances at once reduce total runtime?+

Total energy consumed stays the same — running a 100W fan plus a 60W light for 10 hours uses the same Wh as running them one-at-a-time for 10 hours each. But concurrent loads reduce how long the battery lasts in real time and can trigger three secondary problems:

  • Your inverter must be sized for the peak simultaneous load, not the average.
  • Higher combined draw triggers Peukert losses on lead-acid banks.
  • Surge events (AC compressor plus microwave starting together) can trip inverter overload protection.
4

Chemistry & runtime differences

Why LiFePO4 runs almost twice as long as AGM at the same nameplate capacity.

Q16Why does LiFePO4 run so much longer than lead-acid at the same Wh?+

Take two "100Ah at 12V" batteries — both nameplate 1,200Wh. Actual usable AC runtime at a 100W load:

  • LiFePO4: 1,200 × 0.90 DoD × 0.92 inverter = ~994 Wh usable → 9.9 hours
  • AGM: 1,200 × 0.50 DoD × 0.92 inverter × 0.90 Peukert = ~497 Wh usable → 4.97 hours

Same sticker capacity, but LiFePO4 delivers roughly 2× the real runtime thanks to higher DoD and zero Peukert penalty. That's before counting the 5× longer cycle life.

Q17Does battery age affect runtime?+

Yes — all batteries lose capacity over time and cycles. Typical real-world degradation:

  • LiFePO4: ~80% of original capacity after 3,000 cycles (roughly 8–10 years at daily cycling).
  • NMC lithium: ~80% after 1,500 cycles (4–5 years).
  • AGM/flooded lead-acid: ~80% after 400–800 cycles (2–4 years at daily cycling).

A 5-year-old AGM bank may deliver only 60–70% of its original runtime. When runtime drops noticeably and resting voltage doesn't recover to spec, it's time to replace.

5

Extending your runtime

Practical ways to get more hours from the bank you already have.

Q18How do I extend my battery runtime without buying more batteries?+

Five levers, ranked by impact:

  • Cut peak loads — swap the 1,500W kettle for a 600W slow kettle; use a 45W laptop instead of a 250W desktop.
  • Run DC direct when possible — fans, CPAP, lights, fridges all come in 12V DC versions that skip the inverter entirely, gaining 10% efficiency.
  • Shift loads to solar daylight hours — run the dishwasher, power tools, or laundry while the sun is charging, not at night off the battery.
  • Kill parasitic loads — unplug wall warts, put the inverter in eco mode, disconnect when not actively using the system.
  • Upgrade inverter efficiency — moving from an 82% modified-sine to a 94% pure-sine adds 12–15% runtime to every single load.
Q19How many solar panels do I need to keep the battery charged indefinitely?+

Solar must replace what you use plus a buffer for poor weather and seasonal variation. Rule of thumb: your panel array in watts should equal your daily battery use (Wh) divided by 4–5 peak sun hours, then oversize 20–30%.

Quick sizing
Panel watts = (Daily Wh used ÷ 4.5 peak sun hours) × 1.25 buffer
Example — 3,000 Wh daily use
3000 ÷ 4.5 × 1.25 ≈ 833W of panels
Q20How do I calculate the battery size I actually need?+

Flip the runtime formula around to solve for capacity instead of hours:

Capacity sizing
Needed Wh = (Target hours × Load watts) ÷ (DoD × Inverter efficiency)
Example — run 400W for 12 hours on LiFePO4
(12 × 400) ÷ (0.90 × 0.92) = 5,797 Wh → ~6 kWh bank

Add 30% for winter, another 30% for a day of autonomy (cloudy days), and you're looking at roughly a 10 kWh bank for a true overnight 400W load. Run those numbers against the Solar Battery Size Calculator for a full spec.

See your exact runtime in 10 seconds

Skip the math — the Solar Battery Runtime Calculator applies DoD, inverter efficiency, Peukert, and cold derating automatically for your exact setup.

Open the calculator →
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