EcoFlow makes four portable power stations capable of keeping your home running during an outage. The problem? They range from $849 to $1,999, and the spec sheets blur together fast. Capacity, output wattage, 240V support, expandability: the differences matter, but they’re not always obvious.
This ranking breaks down the DELTA 3 Max, DELTA 2 Max, DELTA Pro, and DELTA Pro 3 by the specs that actually determine how well each unit performs as a home backup solution. No fluff, no filler. Just data-driven analysis to help you pick the right one for your budget and power needs.

If you want to explore the complete EcoFlow power station lineup before narrowing down to home backup, start there. This guide focuses exclusively on models with enough capacity, output, and integration features to serve as reliable home backup power.
Our Top Picks at a Glance
Here’s the quick version. Each model earns its spot for a specific reason, and no single unit wins across every category.

EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3
$1,999 $3,699
- 4,096Wh capacity, expandable up to 48kWh
- 4000W output (6000W X-Boost), 120V + 240V
- 0-80% in 50 minutes, 4000-cycle LFP battery
What to Look for in an EcoFlow Home Backup
For a broader look across all brands, our home backup power station guide covers the fundamentals of capacity planning and transfer switch requirements. Below, we focus on the five criteria that separate a good EcoFlow home backup from a great one.
Capacity: How Many Watt-Hours Do You Need?
Capacity (measured in watt-hours, or Wh) determines how long your power lasts. Think of it as the size of your fuel tank. A 2,048Wh unit keeps a refrigerator running for roughly 11 hours, while a 4,096Wh unit stretches that to around 23 hours (accounting for ~85% inverter efficiency).
For short outages lasting a few hours, 2,048Wh is typically sufficient. Multi-day blackouts require either a larger base capacity or expandable battery support. Your household’s critical load determines the minimum: add up the wattage of everything you need running (fridge, lights, router, phone chargers, medical devices) and multiply by the hours you want coverage.
Output Power: Can It Run Your Critical Appliances?
Output wattage tells you what appliances you can power simultaneously. A unit rated at 2,400W handles most household essentials. Jump to 4,000W and you can add larger loads like space heaters, well pumps, or smaller HVAC systems.
Keep in mind: EcoFlow’s X-Boost technology extends rated output by managing waveform delivery. A 2,400W unit with X-Boost can handle appliances drawing up to 3,400W. It works well for resistive loads (heaters, hair dryers) but isn’t ideal for sensitive electronics.
240V Support: Why It Matters for Home Backup
Many critical home appliances run on 240V circuits: central AC, electric dryers, well pumps, and some water heaters. Most portable power stations only output 120V. The DELTA Pro 3 stands alone with native 240V output from a single unit. The DELTA Pro achieves 240V through a Double Voltage Hub when pairing two units, adding cost and complexity.
If your backup plan only covers 120V circuits (lights, fridge, router, charging), 240V support isn’t necessary. But if you need to power anything on a 240V breaker, this becomes a deciding factor. The EcoFlow Transfer Switch integrates these units directly into your breaker panel for seamless switchover.
Expandability: Growing Your System Over Time
Starting with one unit and adding extra batteries later is a practical approach. The DELTA Pro 3 scales from 4,096Wh up to a massive 48kWh with add-on batteries. The DELTA Pro reaches 25kWh. The DELTA 2 Max caps at 6,144Wh. The DELTA 3 Max does not support expansion batteries.
If you’re planning for a growing system, expandability should weigh heavily in your decision. Starting with a DELTA Pro 3 and adding batteries over time is more cost-effective than replacing an entire unit later.
Recharge Speed: Getting Ready Between Outages
During storm season, power can cycle on and off. Fast recharging means your unit is ready for the next outage. The DELTA Pro 3 leads the pack at 0-80% in 50 minutes. The DELTA 3 Max reaches 80% in 68 minutes. The DELTA 2 Max takes about 60 minutes to 80%. The DELTA Pro is the slowest, requiring approximately 2.7 hours for a full charge.
✅ EcoFlow home backup is right if…
- You want a portable unit that doubles as outdoor/RV power
- You need a plug-and-play system without complex installation
- Fast recharging between outages is critical (50-68 min to 80%)
- You want app-based monitoring and Storm Guard automation
❌ Consider alternatives if…
- You need 10+ kWh without extra batteries (consider Tesla Powerwall)
- Your home regularly draws over 4,000W continuously
- You want permanent wall-mounted installation only
- Budget is under $800 (consider DELTA 2 or RIVER series instead)
Head-to-Head Comparison
Numbers tell the story better than marketing copy. Here’s how all four models stack up across the specs that matter most for home backup.
#1 EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3: Best Overall Home Backup ($1,999)

The DELTA Pro 3 is EcoFlow’s most capable portable power station for home backup, and the data makes a strong case for the top spot. At $1,999 (down from $3,699), it delivers the highest capacity, fastest recharge, and only native 240V output in the lineup.
Key Specifications
The numbers paint a clear picture. The DELTA Pro 3 packs 4,096Wh of capacity with 4,000W continuous output and 8,000W surge. X-Boost pushes that to 6,000W for demanding appliances. The EV-grade LFP battery is rated for 4,000+ cycles to 80% capacity, translating to roughly 11 years of daily use.
What sets it apart from every other model on this list: native 120V and 240V output from a single unit. No Double Voltage Hub, no second unit required. For home backup, this matters because well pumps, central AC, and electric dryers all run on 240V circuits.
Recharge speed is equally impressive. Wall charging reaches 0-80% in just 50 minutes. During storm season when power flickers on and off, that speed makes a meaningful difference. Solar input tops out at 2,600W, the highest in the lineup.
Why It Wins for Home Backup
Three factors push the DELTA Pro 3 to the top. First, native 240V eliminates the need for a Double Voltage Hub or dual-unit setup, saving hundreds of dollars and reducing complexity. Second, the 4,000-cycle battery outlasts every competitor by at least 1,000 cycles. Third, expandability up to 48kWh means this single platform can scale from partial-home backup to multi-day whole-home coverage.
Runtime calculations based on the 4,096Wh capacity show meaningful endurance: approximately 23 hours for a standard refrigerator, 8+ hours for a refrigerator plus lighting and router combined, or 4-5 hours running a 1,000W space heater. For extended blackouts lasting 3+ days, our multi-day outage planning guide covers load management strategies that pair perfectly with these units.
Pass-through charging is another standout: the DELTA Pro 3 delivers stable 120V/240V at 4,000W while simultaneously charging. You can use it as a UPS-style backup that’s always connected and always ready.
Limitations to Consider
At $1,999, it’s the most expensive option on this list. If your backup needs are limited to running a fridge, some lights, and charging devices, you’re paying a premium for capacity and features you may not need. Weight is also a factor: this isn’t a grab-and-go unit for weekend camping trips.
The DELTA Pro 3 also lacks the established ecosystem track record of the original DELTA Pro, which has been on the market since 2021. Owner feedback is still accumulating. For full specifications, visit the official DELTA Pro 3 specs page.

#2 EcoFlow DELTA 2 Max: Best Value for Home Backup ($849)

At $849 (down from $1,899), the DELTA 2 Max delivers more value per dollar than any other EcoFlow home backup option. It shares the same 2,048Wh base capacity as the newer DELTA 3 Max but costs $350 less.
Key Specifications
The DELTA 2 Max outputs 2,400W continuous with 5,000W surge and 3,400W via X-Boost. That’s enough to run most household essentials simultaneously. The LFP battery delivers 3,000+ cycles to 80%, which translates to roughly 10 years of daily use with EcoFlow’s 5-year warranty backing it up.
Recharging hits 80% in approximately 60 minutes using X-Stream dual AC+Solar charging. Solar input maxes out at 1,000W. The unit powers up to 15 devices simultaneously across its output ports.
Why It’s the Best Value
The math is straightforward. At $849, the DELTA 2 Max costs less than half the DELTA Pro 3 while covering the essentials: fridge, lights, router, phone charging, and a laptop. For homeowners who experience occasional outages lasting a few hours rather than multi-day events, the 2,048Wh capacity is more than adequate.
Expandability adds long-term flexibility. Two DELTA 2 Max Smart Extra Batteries push total capacity to 6,144Wh, enough for roughly 34 hours of refrigerator runtime. That’s a meaningful upgrade path without replacing the base unit.

Limitations to Consider
No 240V output means it can’t power well pumps, central AC, or electric dryers. The 2,400W continuous output also limits what you can run simultaneously. If you need a space heater (1,500W) plus a refrigerator (150W) plus a microwave (1,000W), you’ll hit the ceiling quickly even with X-Boost.
The DELTA 2 Max is also a previous-generation design. While the LFP battery and performance are solid, it lacks some of the refinements found in the newer DELTA 3 Max, including the whisper-quiet 25dB operation and faster auto-switch speed.

#3 EcoFlow DELTA Pro: Best Expandability ($1,599)

The original DELTA Pro remains a strong contender at $1,599 (down from $3,699). It was EcoFlow’s first portable power station designed specifically for home backup, and its expansion ecosystem is the most mature in the lineup.
Key Specifications
The DELTA Pro packs 3,600Wh of base capacity with 3,600W continuous output and 7,200W surge. X-Boost extends that to 4,500W. The LFP battery carries a 3,000+ cycle rating. Full AC recharge takes approximately 2.7 hours using EcoFlow’s MultiCharge system at up to 6,500W combined input.
Solar input reaches 1,600W, which is solid for off-grid recharging. Both the DELTA Pro and DELTA Pro 3 support EcoFlow’s transfer switch for hardwired home integration (see our transfer switch installation guide for details).
Why Choose It Over the DELTA Pro 3
Expandability is the DELTA Pro’s strongest argument. With Smart Extra Batteries, a single DELTA Pro scales from 3,600Wh to 25kWh. Pair two DELTA Pros and you get 7,200W output with 240V capability through the Double Voltage Hub. That dual-unit configuration has been field-proven since 2021.
The mature ecosystem also means accessories, extra batteries, and third-party integrations are widely available and well-documented. If you already own one DELTA Pro, adding a second unit or extra batteries is a logical upgrade path rather than starting over with a DELTA Pro 3.
Limitations to Consider
The 2.7-hour full recharge is significantly slower than the DELTA Pro 3’s 50-minute sprint to 80%. During rapid-cycle outages (common in storms), this delay matters. The DELTA Pro also lacks native 240V output from a single unit. Achieving 240V requires two DELTA Pro units plus the Double Voltage Hub, pushing total cost well above a single DELTA Pro 3.
At $1,599, the DELTA Pro sits in an awkward price gap: $400 less than the DELTA Pro 3 but $750 more than the DELTA 2 Max. Unless you specifically need the expansion capacity beyond 6kWh or the dual-unit 240V configuration, the value proposition gets squeezed from both sides.

#4 EcoFlow DELTA 3 Max: Best Budget Home Backup ($1,199)

The DELTA 3 Max represents EcoFlow’s latest generation technology at a mid-range price point. At $1,199 (down from $1,499), it shares the DELTA 2 Max’s 2,048Wh capacity but brings significant engineering improvements.
Key Specifications
Output matches the DELTA 2 Max at 2,400W continuous with 4,800W surge and 3,400W X-Boost. The automotive-grade full-tab LFP cells deliver 3,000+ cycles and are rated for 10 years of reliable power. Wall charging reaches 80% in 68 minutes. Solar input handles up to 1,000W.
The standout spec: 25dB operation at 600W load. That’s quieter than a whisper and a significant improvement over older models that can be noticeable at night. The unit also weighs 20.3 kg, making it 13% lighter than the previous generation.
Why It’s a Strong Contender
The DELTA 3 Max makes sense for homeowners who want the latest EcoFlow technology without the $1,999 price tag of the DELTA Pro 3. The whisper-quiet operation is a genuine advantage if the unit sits in a living space or bedroom during outages. The fast 68-minute recharge to 80% keeps it competitive with the DELTA 2 Max.
Four charging methods (wall, solar, generator, car) and broad compatibility with appliances up to 3,400W via X-Boost cover most home backup scenarios. If your critical load stays under 2,400W, the DELTA 3 Max handles it capably and quietly.
Limitations to Consider
The biggest gap: no expansion battery support. Unlike the DELTA 2 Max (expandable to 6,144Wh), the DELTA Pro (25kWh), or the DELTA Pro 3 (48kWh), the DELTA 3 Max is locked at 2,048Wh. What you buy is what you get.
At $1,199, it’s also $350 more expensive than the DELTA 2 Max for the same base capacity. You’re paying for newer tech, quieter operation, and lighter weight. Whether those upgrades justify the premium depends on your priorities. No 240V output either, limiting it to 120V circuits only.

What About the DELTA Pro Ultra?
EcoFlow’s DELTA Pro Ultra is the company’s flagship whole-home backup solution, starting at $4,099+ for the base configuration. It’s a different category entirely: a permanently installed system with up to 90kWh capacity and 7,200W output designed to replace traditional whole-home generators.
We’re not ranking it alongside the four portable models above because the use case, price point, and installation requirements are fundamentally different. The DELTA Pro Ultra requires professional installation and a dedicated transfer switch setup. For homeowners considering a permanent installation, our guide to whole-home backup battery systems compares portable and fixed solutions.
If budget isn’t a constraint and you want true whole-home coverage without managing portable units, the DELTA Pro Ultra deserves a closer look. We’ll publish a dedicated review as owner data accumulates.
How We Ranked These Models
Every ranking needs a transparent methodology. Here’s how we evaluated and scored each EcoFlow model for home backup.
Our Evaluation Criteria
Five factors drive our ranking, weighted by their impact on real-world home backup performance:
1. Capacity and Runtime (30%) : Raw watt-hours determine how long your power lasts. Runtime calculations factor in approximately 85% inverter efficiency, which is standard across these units. Use our runtime calculator to see exactly how long each model can power your specific appliances.
2. Output Power and Versatility (25%) : Continuous wattage, surge capacity, X-Boost ceiling, and 240V support. Home backup demands the ability to handle multiple loads simultaneously, including high-draw appliances like refrigerators, sump pumps, and space heaters.
3. Expandability and Ecosystem (20%) : Maximum expandable capacity, extra battery availability, and integration options (transfer switch, Smart Home Panel, app control). A system that grows with your needs offers better long-term value.
4. Recharge Speed (15%) : Time to 80% via wall charging is the primary metric. During storm season, the interval between outages determines whether your unit is charged and ready. Solar recharge capacity is a secondary factor for extended outages.
5. Value and Longevity (10%) : Price per watt-hour, cycle life, warranty coverage, and overall cost of ownership. The cheapest unit isn’t always the best value when you factor in battery longevity and expansion costs.
Spec-for-spec comparison, owner feedback patterns, and practical home backup scenarios all fed into the final ranking. No single metric determines placement: the DELTA 2 Max wins on value despite having the smallest capacity, while the DELTA Pro 3 wins overall despite being the most expensive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an EcoFlow power station power a whole house?
The DELTA Pro 3 comes closest to whole-home capability with its 4,000W output and native 240V support. It can power most critical circuits including refrigerators, lighting, and even smaller HVAC systems. For full whole-home coverage (central AC, electric range, dryer simultaneously), a dual-unit setup with extra batteries or the DELTA Pro Ultra system is recommended. The DELTA Pro can achieve 240V output through a Double Voltage Hub when pairing two units.
How long will an EcoFlow run a refrigerator during a power outage?
Runtime depends on the model and refrigerator draw. A standard refrigerator averaging 150W continuous draw would run approximately 11 hours on the DELTA 3 Max (2,048Wh), 11 hours on the DELTA 2 Max (2,048Wh), 20 hours on the DELTA Pro (3,600Wh), and 23 hours on the DELTA Pro 3 (4,096Wh). These estimates account for approximately 85% inverter efficiency. Actual runtime varies based on your refrigerator’s age, efficiency rating, ambient temperature, and how often the compressor cycles on.
Do I need a transfer switch with an EcoFlow power station?
A transfer switch is not required but strongly recommended for home backup. Without one, you plug appliances directly into the power station using extension cords. With EcoFlow’s Transfer Switch ($349-$499), the unit integrates with your breaker panel for automatic switchover during outages. The DELTA Pro 3 supports 10ms auto-switch, fast enough to keep sensitive electronics running without interruption. Professional installation is recommended for the transfer switch.
Which EcoFlow is best for hurricane preparedness?
The DELTA Pro 3 is the strongest choice for hurricane preparedness due to its 4,096Wh capacity, fast 50-minute recharge to 80%, and 240V output for critical appliances. Its expandable capacity (up to 48kWh with extra batteries) provides multi-day power during extended outages. For budget-conscious hurricane preparation, the DELTA 2 Max at $849 offers strong capacity with expandability to 6,144Wh and rapid 60-minute recharging.
Can I charge an EcoFlow with solar panels for home backup?
Yes, all four models support solar charging. The DELTA Pro 3 accepts up to 2,600W solar input, the DELTA Pro supports up to 1,600W, the DELTA 2 Max handles up to 1,000W, and the DELTA 3 Max accepts up to 1,000W. Solar charging makes these units energy-independent during extended outages when grid power is unavailable. EcoFlow’s 400W portable solar panels are the most popular pairing for home backup setups, and all models include built-in MPPT controllers for optimized solar harvesting.
Final Verdict: Which EcoFlow Should You Buy for Home Backup?
The right EcoFlow for your home depends on your budget, the length of outages you’re preparing for, and whether you need 240V circuit support.
If budget is secondary to capability, the DELTA Pro 3 is the clear winner. Native 240V, the fastest recharge, the highest capacity, and the longest battery life make it the most complete home backup solution EcoFlow offers in a portable format.
If value drives your decision, the DELTA 2 Max at $849 delivers the essentials at less than half the cost. Expandability to 6kWh gives it room to grow.
If you need maximum expansion potential, the DELTA Pro scales to 25kWh with a proven ecosystem. The dual-unit 240V configuration provides whole-home backup capability for those willing to invest in two units.
If quiet operation and latest-gen tech matter most, the DELTA 3 Max brings EcoFlow’s newest technology at a competitive price point, though the lack of expandability is a notable trade-off.
No matter which model you choose, pairing it with solar panels and a transfer switch transforms a portable power station into a serious home backup system. The investment pays for itself the first time the lights stay on while your neighbors sit in the dark.
EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3
$1,999
Best overall EcoFlow for whole-home backup
Price verified March 2026. Free shipping available