Assessing Your Power Needs
Power SystemsยทBeginnerยท8 minยทUpdated 2025-05-28T11:46:55.736ZยทAustralia edition

Assessing Your Power Needs

Get your load calculation wrong and every component you buy โ€” panels, batteries, inverter โ€” will be the wrong size. This guide gives you the exact method: how to measure what you actually consume, how to calculate daily kWh, how to size your battery bank with the right depth-of-discharge and autonomy, and two worked examples showing a 2 kWh/day cabin versus an 8 kWh/day homestead.

The Most Common Sizing Mistake

Most beginners guess appliance wattage from the nameplate rating โ€” which is peak draw, not average consumption. A refrigerator labeled 400W typically averages 100โ€“200W because it cycles. Using nameplate figures will oversize your battery bank by 30โ€“50% and cost you thousands in unnecessary capacity.

What Are You Sizing For?

Daily load targets and design priorities differ significantly by use case.

Van / Tiny Home

Target: 0.5โ€“1.5 kWh/day. 12V compressor fridge + LED lighting + device charging. Every watt matters โ€” start with efficiency upgrades before sizing anything.

Battery need: 1.25โ€“3.75 kWh (2-day autonomy)

Off-Grid Cabin / Homestead โ€” Most Readers

Target: 1.5โ€“10 kWh/day depending on well pump and HVAC choices. This guide covers this size in depth with worked examples at 2 kWh and 8 kWh.

Battery need: 3.75โ€“25 kWh (2-day autonomy)

Full Homestead with AC / Well Pump

Target: 10โ€“20+ kWh/day. AC and well pumps are the major load drivers. Propane heat and efficient mini-splits are critical to keeping this manageable.

Battery need: 25โ€“50+ kWh (2-day autonomy)

Why Load Analysis Must Come First

Every component in an off-grid system is sized from your daily energy consumption. Panels are sized to replenish what you use. Batteries are sized to store enough for 2โ€“3 days without sun. The charge controller and inverter are sized from peak load. If you start with panels or batteries before knowing your load, every number downstream will be wrong.

The correct sequence is: load audit โ†’ battery bank โ†’ charge controller โ†’ solar array. Not the other way around. Most beginner guides skip straight to "how many solar panels do I need?" โ€” which is the last question you should ask, not the first.

Step 1List & MeasureAll AppliancesStep 2CalculateDaily kWhStep 3Size BatteryBank + DoDStep 4Size InverterPeak + SurgeStep 5Size Solar ArraykWh รท PSH ร— 1.25

Steps 4 and 5 are covered in the Solar Sizing Guide and Power Conversion Guide. This guide covers Steps 1โ€“3.

Three Ways to Measure Your Load: Which to Use

MethodCostAccuracyBest For
Kill-A-Watt plug-in meter$20โ€“30Highest โ€” actual consumptionAny 120V appliance; the only reliable method for fridges, compressors, cycling loads
Nameplate rating (label)FreeLow โ€” nameplate = peak drawSimple resistive loads only (light bulbs, toasters, space heaters); unreliable for motors
Utility bill averageFreeMedium for totals; no breakdownGrid-connected homes planning to go off-grid; starting point, not a target
Community consensus (r/offgrid, DIY Solar Forum): Buy a Kill-A-Watt before you buy a single solar panel. At $20โ€“30, it will save you more money than any other single step in your design process. Measure every appliance that cycles or has a motor.

Step-by-Step Load Audit

Run through these seven steps for every device you plan to power off-grid.

1

List every device

Go room by room. Include lights, HVAC, kitchen appliances, entertainment, connectivity (router, Starlink), tools, medical equipment (CPAP), and anything with a power cord or battery charger. Don't forget phantom loads โ€” devices that draw power in standby.

2

Measure actual wattage

Use a Kill-A-Watt for variable-load devices. For simple resistive loads (light bulbs, toasters, space heaters), nameplate is reliable. For refrigerators, compressors, and motors, measure average draw over a full on/off cycle โ€” not just the peak.

3

Estimate realistic daily hours

Be honest. Refrigerators run 8โ€“12 hours/day in cycles, not 24. Lighting averages 4โ€“6 hours. A laptop might be 4 hours. Overestimating hours is safer than underestimating. For intermittent loads like well pumps, count actual daily run time.

4

Calculate Wh per device

Watts ร— Hours = Watt-hours (Wh). A 150W refrigerator running 10 hours = 1,500 Wh = 1.5 kWh/day. A 9W LED bulb on 5 hours = 45 Wh/day.

5

Sum all devices

Add every device's daily Wh. Divide by 1,000 for kWh. This is your baseline daily consumption. Most off-grid households land between 1.5 and 10 kWh/day after efficiency improvements.

6

Identify peak load

List all devices that could run simultaneously. Sum their running watts. Then add the highest single-motor surge draw (well pump, AC, fridge). This total is your inverter minimum rating requirement.

7

Apply system loss factor

Multiply total daily kWh by 1.15โ€“1.25 to account for inverter conversion losses (85โ€“90% efficient), wire losses, and temperature derating. Use 1.25 for long wire runs or extreme temperatures. This is your final sizing target.

Appliance Power Consumption Reference Table

Running watts are what the appliance draws continuously. Surge watts are the peak draw at startup โ€” critical for inverter sizing. These figures are verified from manufacturer specs and community measurements (DIY Solar Forum 2025โ€“2026).

ApplianceRunning WattsSurge WattsOff-Grid Notes
LED bulb (9W equivalent to 60W incandescent)8โ€“10Wโ€”Replace all incandescent first; 85% reduction in lighting load
12V compressor fridge (Engel 40L, Dometic CFX3)30โ€“60W avgโ€”Most efficient off-grid choice; ~0.3โ€“0.6 kWh/day
Full-size household refrigerator100โ€“200W avg400โ€“800WNameplate often says 400W โ€” actual avg is 100โ€“200W. Measure it.
Chest freezer80โ€“150W avg300โ€“500WOften more efficient than upright; ~0.8โ€“1.5 kWh/day
Window AC (5,000 BTU)450โ€“550W1,200WMajor load; avoid if possible โ€” use mini-split instead
Mini-split (9,000 BTU)700โ€“900W1,800โ€“2,500WMore efficient; variable-speed (inverter) models draw less at partial load
Well pump (ยฝ HP)750W2,000โ€“2,500WRequires low-frequency inverter; kills high-frequency inverters
Laptop45โ€“65Wโ€”~0.3โ€“0.5 kWh/day; far better than desktop (200โ€“400W)
Washing machine500W1,500WRun during peak solar hours; line-dry instead of electric dryer
Electric dryer4,000โ€“5,000W5,000WNot practical off-grid. Use propane dryer or line-dry.
Router / modem (always on)10โ€“20Wโ€”24/7 = 0.24โ€“0.48 kWh/day; include in phantom load total
Starlink Standard50โ€“75W activeโ€”~0.6โ€“0.75 kWh/day at 8h use; use sleep schedule to save 0.4 kWh/night
CPAP machine30โ€“60Wโ€”Medical priority load โ€” include in baseline without question

Sources: DIY Solar Forum verified measurements, manufacturer specifications (Engel, Dometic, Starlink), AltE Store community data (accessed 2026-03-25).

Phantom Loads: The Hidden Tax on Your Battery Bank

Devices that draw power even when "off" โ€” TVs in standby, phone chargers with nothing plugged in, smart home hubs โ€” are called phantom loads or standby loads. Individually small, they compound into a significant daily drain.

Typical Phantom Load Sources

  • Router/modem (always on)10โ€“20W ร— 24h = 0.24โ€“0.48 kWh
  • Smart TV standby1โ€“5W ร— 24h = 0.024โ€“0.12 kWh
  • Phone charger (idle)0.5โ€“2W ร— 24h = 0.012โ€“0.048 kWh
  • Microwave clock2โ€“7W ร— 24h = 0.048โ€“0.168 kWh
  • Smart home hub2โ€“5W ร— 24h = 0.048โ€“0.12 kWh

The Real-World Impact

A modest collection of standby devices can add 50โ€“200W continuously, equating to 1.2โ€“4.8 kWh wasted every day.

At $400/kWh battery cost, 1.2 kWh of phantom load waste = $480 in battery capacity bought purely to power devices doing nothing.

Fix: smart power strips, manual switches on non-essential circuits, Kill-A-Watt measurement before finalizing your load figure.

Calculating Your Total Daily kWh

The Formulas

Device Wh/day = Running Watts ร— Daily Hours
Total Daily kWh = Sum of all device Wh รท 1,000
Sizing Target kWh = Total Daily kWh ร— 1.15โ€“1.25 (system loss factor)

The 1.15โ€“1.25 multiplier covers inverter conversion losses (typically 85โ€“90% efficient), wire losses, and temperature derating. Use 1.25 for long wire runs or extreme climates.

ApplianceRunning WHours/dayWh/day
LED lighting (8 ร— 9W)72W5h360 Wh
Full-size refrigerator (measured)150W avg10h1,500 Wh
Laptop55W5h275 Wh
TV (32" LED)50W3h150 Wh
Router (always on)15W24h360 Wh
Phone charging ร— 220W2h40 Wh
Totalโ€”โ€”2,685 Wh = 2.69 kWh/day
Sizing target (ร—1.20)3.22 kWh/day

Surge Watts and Inverter Sizing: Why Most Beginners Get This Wrong

Every motor-driven device โ€” refrigerators, well pumps, air conditioners, washing machines โ€” draws 2โ€“7ร— its running watts for 0.5โ€“3 seconds at startup. This is the surge draw (inrush current). Your inverter must handle this peak, not just the continuous running load.

Surge Example: Well Pump

A 3,000W continuous inverter with 4,500W surge fails on a ยฝ HP well pump:

  • Well pump running: 750W
  • Well pump surge: 2,500W
  • Refrigerator also running: +150W
  • Peak demand: ~2,650W
  • โ†’ Need 3,000W continuous / 6,000W surge minimum

Inverter Sizing Rule

Min inverter size = Peak running load + Largest single surge draw

Size for worst-case simultaneous draw, then buy an inverter rated 25% above that for headroom. For well pumps, use a low-frequency (LF) inverter โ€” high-frequency units commonly fail on motor surge.

Battery Bank Sizing Formula

Battery capacity is not just about how much energy you use per day. Two factors reduce usable capacity below the nameplate figure: depth of discharge (DoD) and days of autonomy. Both must be factored in.

The Complete Formula

Required Battery kWh = Daily kWh ร— Days of Autonomy รท DoD

LiFePO4 (DoD = 80%)

At 3 kWh/day ร— 2 days รท 0.80 = 7.5 kWh required

~$680โ€“860 at 48V rack pricing ($88โ€“115/kWh)

AGM (DoD = 50%)

At 3 kWh/day ร— 2 days รท 0.50 = 12 kWh required

60% more capacity needed vs. LiFePO4 for identical usable energy

LiFePO4 batteries let you use 80% of their rated capacity safely, while AGM batteries should not be discharged below 50% without significantly shortening their lifespan. Full battery chemistry comparison with 2026 pricing โ†’

Days of Autonomy: What the Practitioners Actually Recommend

AutonomySuitable ForRiskPractitioner Verdict
1 daySunny climates, van/mobile use onlyOne cloudy day = empty bankNot recommended for permanent setups
2โ€“3 days โ˜… RecommendedMost off-grid homes, cabins, homesteadsLow โ€” covers typical cloudy stretchesPractitioner consensus minimum for serious systems
4โ€“7 daysPacific NW, Alaska, monsoon IndiaHigher upfront costAppropriate for extended low-sun periods; pairs with generator
Real user warning (DIY Solar Forum 2026): "I went from 10 kWh/day on grid to 15โ€“20 kWh/day after adding electric appliances thinking solar was free โ€” almost destroyed my battery bank." Design for 2โ€“3 days autonomy minimum. It's not optional insurance; it's what keeps your batteries from deep cycling into premature failure.

Typical Daily Load Ranges by Use Case

Real-user data from DIY Solar Forum and r/offgrid community reports (2025โ€“2026).

Use CaseDaily kWhBattery Bank (2-day LiFePO4)Typical Loads
Van / tiny home (minimal)0.5โ€“1.5 kWh1.25โ€“3.75 kWh12V fridge, LED lights, phone charging
Basic cabin1.5โ€“3 kWh3.75โ€“7.5 kWhLights, fridge, laptop, device charging, router
Modest off-grid home (no AC, no well pump)3โ€“6 kWh7.5โ€“15 kWhAbove + washer, chest freezer, Starlink
Off-grid home with well pump5โ€“10 kWh12.5โ€“25 kWhAbove + ยฝ HP well pump (intermittent)
Full homestead with AC10โ€“20+ kWh25โ€“50+ kWhAbove + mini-split; propane heat keeps this manageable

Load Reduction Strategies Before You Size

Every watt you eliminate has a better ROI than adding more panels or batteries. Reduce load before finalizing any component purchase.

High-Impact Changes

  • Replace all incandescent/CFL with LED. 60W bulb โ†’ 9W LED = 85% reduction in lighting load.
  • Switch to propane for heating, cooking, and water heating. Electric resistance heating is incompatible with most off-grid solar budgets.
  • Use a 12V compressor fridge (Engel, Dometic) instead of a household unit โ€” 0.3โ€“0.6 kWh/day vs. 1โ€“2 kWh/day.
  • Line-dry clothes. Electric dryer at 5,000W is not viable off-grid. Propane dryer saves 3โ€“5 kWh per load.

Medium-Impact Changes

  • Replace old unrated appliances with energy-star or BEE-rated models. A decade-old fridge may draw 3โ€“5ร— a new efficient unit.
  • Use smart power strips to eliminate phantom loads from entertainment centers and office setups.
  • Schedule high-load tasks (laundry, water pumping) during peak solar hours to draw directly from panels rather than draining batteries.
  • Put Starlink on a daily power schedule โ€” off at night saves 0.4โ€“0.6 kWh/day.

Seasonal Load Variation: The Trap Most Guides Skip

Your load changes seasonally at the same time as your solar production changes. These two curves usually work against each other.

Winter

Load increases: More hours of lighting, heating-adjacent loads

Production drops: Shorter days, lower sun angle, more clouds

Design to winter as your worst case unless you have generator backup.

Summer

Load may spike: AC and cooling loads dominate in hot climates

Production peaks: Longest days, highest sun angle

Size AC for summer peak โ€” solar production compensates partially.

Shoulder Season

Load moderate: Neither cooling nor heating peak

Production good: High sun angles with milder temperatures

Best time to test your system and identify inefficiencies.

Worked Example A: 2 kWh/day Off-Grid Cabin

A 400 sq ft cabin, full-time residence. No well pump, no AC, propane cooking and water heating, line-dry laundry. Based on real builds reported on DIY Solar Forum (2025โ€“2026).

ApplianceWattsHours/dayWh/day
LED lighting (6 ร— 9W)54W5h270 Wh
12V compressor fridge (Engel 40L)45W avg10h450 Wh
Laptop55W4h220 Wh
Router (always on)15W24h360 Wh
Phone charging ร— 220W2h40 Wh
Starlink (8h use, sleep schedule rest)60W8h480 Wh
Subtotalโ€”โ€”1,820 Wh = 1.82 kWh
Sizing target (ร—1.20)2.18 kWh/day

Battery Bank

2.18 kWh ร— 2 days รท 0.80 DoD

= 5.45 kWh

EG4 48V 100Ah (5.12 kWh) โ‰ˆ $750 โœ“

Inverter

Peak running load: ~200W. No well pump or AC.

1,000โ€“1,500W

Growatt 1000W or Victron Multiplus-II 12/1600

Solar Array

2.18 kWh รท 4 PSH ร— 1.25 = 0.68 kW

2ร— 400W panels

= 800W; comfortable headroom for growth

Worked Example B: 8 kWh/day Off-Grid Home with Well Pump

A 1,200 sq ft home, family of four. Well pump, chest freezer, washing machine, Starlink, home office. No AC (propane heating and cooking).

ApplianceWattsHours/dayWh/day
LED lighting (12 ร— 9W)108W5h540 Wh
Full-size refrigerator (measured)150W avg10h1,500 Wh
Chest freezer100W avg8h800 Wh
Well pump ยฝ HP (3 cycles/day ร— 15 min each)750W0.75h562 Wh
Washing machine (3 loads/week avg daily)500W0.43h215 Wh
Home office (2 laptops + monitor)130W8h1,040 Wh
Router + Starlink (12h use)75W12h900 Wh
TV + entertainment80W3h240 Wh
Phantom loads / misc standby50W24h1,200 Wh
Subtotalโ€”โ€”6,997 Wh = 7.0 kWh
Sizing target (ร—1.20)8.4 kWh/day

Battery Bank

8.4 kWh ร— 3 days รท 0.80 DoD

= 31.5 kWh

6ร— EG4 LifePower4 48V 100Ah โ‰ˆ $4,500

Inverter

~1.5kW running + 2,500W well pump surge peak

5,000W LF inverter

Growatt SPF 5000ES or Victron Multiplus-II 48/5000

Solar Array

8.4 kWh รท 4.5 PSH ร— 1.25 = 2.33 kW

6ร— 400W panels

= 2,400W; size up to 3kW for headroom

Future-Proofing Your System

Expanding an off-grid system after installation is more expensive than sizing correctly the first time. Additional panels usually fit on existing racking. Additional batteries require age-matched chemistry and often a larger charge controller.

Add 10โ€“25% Load Buffer

Add 10โ€“25% to your calculated load before sizing. Covers appliance additions, extra occupants, new loads (EV charging, workshop), and the reality that usage estimates run low.

Buy Battery-Expandable Systems

48V rack-mount LiFePO4 batteries (EG4, Pytes, SOK) can be added in parallel as needs grow โ€” provided you add same-age, same-chemistry batteries. Mixed-age or mixed-chemistry banks fail early.

Oversize the Charge Controller Now

If you plan to add panels later, buy a controller that handles your future array size. Adding a second MPPT later costs $200โ€“500 plus separate cabling. A larger controller day one is almost always cheaper.

Account for Battery Degradation

LiFePO4 batteries degrade ~2โ€“3% per year. A 10 kWh bank at year 10 provides ~8 kWh usable. Size your initial bank to still meet your needs at 80% of original capacity in 10 years.

Free Sizing Calculators

Work through your off-grid daily energy consumption digitally โ€” add appliances, set hours, and get your daily kWh, required battery bank size, and solar array estimate.

External tools: NREL PVWatts ยท AltE Calculator ยท BigBattery Sizing Tool

Common Load Calculation Mistakes

Using nameplate wattage for refrigerators and compressors

Nameplate = peak draw, not average. Refrigerators average 25โ€“50% of their nameplate during normal cycling. Always measure with a Kill-A-Watt for any device with a compressor or motor.

Ignoring surge watts when sizing the inverter

A 3,000W inverter that can't surge to 6,000W will trip every time the well pump starts. Know your largest motor's surge draw before buying an inverter.

Designing for 1 day of autonomy

One cloudy day drains your bank entirely. Practitioners recommend 2โ€“3 days minimum; 5โ€“7 days in monsoon climates or the Pacific Northwest.

Using your grid utility bill as your off-grid sizing target

Grid households averaging 800โ€“1,000 kWh/month almost always need to reduce to 150โ€“400 kWh/month for a viable off-grid system. The bill is a starting point for identifying waste, not a target.

Not accounting for seasonal load variation

Winter lighting + reduced solar production is your design case. Summer AC in hot climates is a close second. Don't size for the annual average โ€” size for the worst-case season.

Forgetting phantom loads

Router, smart TV standby, phone chargers, microwave clocks can add 50โ€“200W continuously. Measure and eliminate before finalizing your load number.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate how much solar power I need for my house?+

Run a load audit first (Steps 1โ€“7 above), calculate your daily kWh, multiply by 1.20 for system losses, then divide by your location's average peak sun hours (PSH). That gives you the solar array size in kW. Use NREL PVWatts for your specific location's PSH data. Example: 5 kWh/day รท 4.5 PSH ร— 1.20 = 1.33 kW of panels.

How many watts does an average household use per day off-grid?+

Real off-grid households typically use 1.5โ€“10 kWh/day depending on whether they have AC, a well pump, and electric cooking. A basic cabin runs 1.5โ€“3 kWh/day. A homestead with a well pump and no AC uses 5โ€“10 kWh/day. Grid averages (800โ€“1,000 kWh/month) are not realistic for off-grid โ€” efficiency upgrades are required.

What appliances use the most electricity in an off-grid home?+

In order of impact: (1) Air conditioning / mini-splits โ€” 700โ€“2,000W running, (2) Electric water heater โ€” 4,000W, (3) Electric clothes dryer โ€” 4,000โ€“5,000W (avoid off-grid), (4) Well pump โ€” 750W running but 2,500W surge, (5) Refrigerator โ€” 100โ€“200W average. Propane heat, cooking, and water heating eliminate three of the top five electrical consumers.

How do you calculate battery bank size for an off-grid system?+

Use this formula: Required Battery kWh = Daily kWh ร— Days of Autonomy รท DoD. For LiFePO4 (DoD = 80%) at 3 kWh/day with 2-day autonomy: 3 ร— 2 รท 0.80 = 7.5 kWh required. For AGM (DoD = 50%), the same scenario requires 12 kWh โ€” 60% more capacity for the same usable energy.

What is a typical daily power consumption for an off-grid cabin?+

A basic cabin (LED lights, 12V compressor fridge, laptop, router, Starlink on a schedule) typically uses 1.5โ€“2.5 kWh/day. Adding a full-size refrigerator pushes this to 2.5โ€“4 kWh. Adding a well pump and washing machine pushes to 5โ€“8 kWh. These are real-user ranges from DIY Solar Forum and r/offgrid (2025โ€“2026).

How much power does a refrigerator use off-grid per day?+

A full-size household refrigerator averages 100โ€“200W during cycling, consuming 1โ€“2 kWh/day. A 12V compressor fridge (Engel, Dometic) averages 30โ€“60W, consuming just 0.3โ€“0.6 kWh/day. Replacing a household fridge with a 12V unit is the single highest-impact efficiency upgrade for van and small cabin builds.

How many solar panels do I need for 1000 kWh per month?+

1,000 kWh/month = ~33 kWh/day. At 5 PSH with a 1.25 loss factor, you need 33 รท 5 ร— 1.25 = 8.25 kW of panels โ€” roughly 20โ€“21 ร— 400W panels. This is full grid-replacement scale, typically requiring 25+ kWh of battery storage. Most off-grid builders target 150โ€“400 kWh/month after efficiency upgrades.

How do I reduce my electricity consumption for off-grid living?+

Priority order: (1) Replace all bulbs with LED, (2) Switch to propane for heating, cooking, and water heating, (3) Replace old unrated appliances with energy-star models, (4) Use a 12V compressor fridge instead of a full-size unit, (5) Eliminate the electric dryer โ€” propane or line-dry, (6) Put phantom loads on smart power strips, (7) Schedule high-draw tasks during peak solar hours.

Key Takeaways

Start with a load audit. Every other component is sized from your daily kWh figure. This is not optional.

Measure with a Kill-A-Watt ($20โ€“30). Don't guess wattage โ€” especially for fridges, compressors, or any cycling load.

Surge watts size your inverter, not running watts. A well pump needs a low-frequency inverter rated for 2,000โ€“2,500W surge.

Battery formula: Daily kWh ร— Days of Autonomy รท DoD. LiFePO4 = 80% DoD; AGM = 50% DoD.

2โ€“3 days autonomy is the practitioner minimum. 1 day is not enough. 5โ€“7 days for monsoon climates or the Pacific NW.

Grid households average 800โ€“1,000 kWh/month. Off-grid reality is 150โ€“400 kWh/month. Efficiency upgrades are non-negotiable.

Propane for heat, cooking, and water heating eliminates the three largest electrical loads.

Add 10โ€“25% buffer on your calculated load for future growth and the inevitable underestimation in your first audit.

MS

Marcus Sheridan

NABCEP-Certified Solar Installer | 12 Years Off-Grid Experience

Reviewed byOGOff Grid Collective EditorialยทResearched and verified against DIY Solar Forum, AltE Store, and NREL PVWatts