Home battery sizing worksheet comparing usable kWh, peak kW, essential loads, and outage hours

Home Battery Guide

Updated By Marcus Reed

Home Battery kWh Sizing Guide: How Much Backup Do You Need?

How to size a home battery by usable kWh, peak output, outage length, essential loads, solar recharge, and the quote mistakes that lead to overspending.

Budget

Quick answer: Home battery sizing starts with essential loads and outage duration. Usable kWh tells you energy capacity. Peak output tells you what can run at once. You need both before comparing quotes.

Best for

Homeowners trying to decide between one battery, multiple batteries, or a portable power station.

Wrong fit

Off-grid design or commercial storage sizing.

Tradeoff

More kWh buys longer backup, but only if the backed-up loads and inverter output match the outage you are solving.

The most expensive battery mistake is buying capacity without knowing what it has to carry.

Start with the outage, not the product page.

Quick Answer

List the loads you need during an outage, estimate how long they must run, and separate usable kWh from peak power output. A battery can have enough energy but not enough output for a large motor load, or enough output but not enough capacity for a long outage.

kWh and kW are different

TermPlain-English meaningBuyer question
kWhHow much energy the battery storesHow long can it run my loads?
kWHow much power it can deliver at onceWhat can run at the same time?
Usable kWhEnergy you can actually useWhat is the real backup capacity?
Surge powerShort burst for motorsCan it start pumps or compressors?

Build your load list first

Start with essentials: refrigerator, internet, lights, furnace controls, sump pump, garage door, outlets, medical equipment, and maybe a well pump. Then mark the big loads you probably should not back up unless the system is designed for them: central AC, EV charger, electric range, dryer, and electric resistance heat. How those circuits get separated is the essential loads panel question.

That list decides whether one battery is sensible or wishful. Our sizing calculator turns the list into a usable kWh target.

Solar changes duration, not nighttime capacity

Solar can recharge a battery during the day if the system is designed for islanded operation. But cloudy weather, snow, shade, short winter days, and storm timing change the math.

Do not assume "solar plus battery" means unlimited backup. Ask what happens after two cloudy days.

Ask for a runtime scenario

A quote should show at least one realistic outage scenario. For example: refrigerator, internet, lights, furnace controls, and a few outlets for 12 to 24 hours. If the quote only says "whole-home backup," ask what load assumptions are behind that claim. The tradeoff has its own guide: whole-home vs critical-loads backup.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is one battery enough for a house?

Sometimes. One battery can be very useful for essential loads. It is usually not enough for unrestricted whole-home use through a long outage.

How many kWh do I need?

It depends on the loads and outage duration. Start with essential circuits and calculate from there.

What drains a home battery fastest?

Large heating, cooling, cooking, drying, pumping, and EV charging loads. These need explicit design.

Should I buy more batteries now or later?

Ask whether the system is expandable, what later expansion costs, and whether incentives or installation labor change the answer.

Sources

Methodology

These guides are built from public specifications, primary program pages, utility documentation, manufacturer materials, and repeated buyer questions that show up in quote and installation decisions.

Manufacturer and installer responses can clarify pricing bands, warranty terms, support footprint, and common mistakes. They do not move a page up the shortlist on their own.

Written by Marcus ReedReviewed by Home Battery Guide Editorial Team, Editorial review on July 6, 2026How we reviewEditorial policy

Next Step

What to do next

Use one of these three paths. They are here to move the decision forward, not add more noise.

Want the full buyer path in your inbox? We send the short version.

Related Guides