🌞 Want to keep your fridge running during blackouts or go off-grid? This guide breaks down exactly how many solar panels and batteries you’ll need – with real-world examples.

🚀 Quick Answer

Most refrigerators need:

  • 300-600W solar panels
  • 100-200Ah battery bank
  • Example: A standard 18 cu. ft. fridge running 8 hours/day needs about 400W solar + 200Ah lithium battery.

🧮 Solar Sizing Calculator (We’ll add this link later)

Fridge Size Solar Needed Battery Backup Runtime (No Sun)
Mini (4.5 cu. ft.) 200W 100Ah Lithium 12 hours
Standard (18 cu. ft.) 400W 200Ah Lithium 24 hours

❄️ Fridge Power Basics

All fridges have:

  1. Running watts (continuous power)
  2. Surge watts (3-8x higher at startup)

Pro Tip: Older fridges (pre-2001) use 2-3x more power! Consider upgrading to an EnergyStar model.

⚡ Solar Calculation Formula

### ✏️ Calculate Your Exact Needs 1. Find fridge wattage (use a [Kill-A-Watt meter](https://amzn.to/3…)) 2. Daily watt-hours = Watts × Hours used 3. Add 30% buffer: ___ Wh × 1.3 = ___ Wh 4. Solar needed = (Daily Wh ÷ Peak sun hours) (Daily kWh × 1,000) ÷ Peak Sun Hours = Solar Watts Needed

Example Calculation:

  1. Fridge: 150W running × 8 hours = 1.2kWh daily
  2. Account for 30% system losses: 1.2kWh × 1.3 = 1.56kWh
  3. Divide by peak sun (4 hours): 1,560Wh ÷ 4h = 390W solar needed
🔢 Try Our Recommended Solar Calculator

🔋 Battery Sizing Guide

  • Lithium (LiFePO4): 100Ah runs 100W fridge for ~10 hours
  • Lead-Acid: Double the capacity (50% depth of discharge)

Learn more: Battery Types Compared

💰 Real-World Setup Examples

ScenarioSolar NeededBatteryCost Estimate
Home Fridge (18 cu. ft.)400W200Ah LiFePO4$1,200-$1,800
RV Fridge (12V)200W100Ah Lithium$600-$900

Prices before solar tax credits.

Can I run a fridge directly from solar panels without batteries?

Only with grid-tied systems (they use the grid as a “battery”). For off-grid setups, batteries are essential. Learn more in our Grid-Tied vs. Off-Grid comparison.

How do I find my fridge’s exact wattage?

Three methods:

  1. Check the nameplate sticker inside the fridge
  2. Use a Kill-A-Watt meter ($25)
  3. Look up your model on EnergyStar’s database
Fridge Type Running Watts Surge Watts Daily kWh (8h)
Standard 18 cu. ft. (new) 120-150W 900-1,200W 1.0-1.2kWh
Mini Fridge (4.5 cu. ft.) 50-80W 300-500W 0.4-0.6kWh
12V RV Fridge 40-60W 200-300W 0.3-0.5kWh

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