⚡ Free · No Signup · Instant Results

Find the Right Generator Size in Under 2 Minutes

Select your appliances, get an accurate wattage recommendation, estimate runtime, calculate fuel costs — all from one free toolset built for homeowners.

Every Calculator You Need for Backup Power

From initial sizing to cost planning — all pure math, no account required.

Three Steps to the Right Generator

1
📋

Select Your Appliances

Choose every device you need to power during an outage. Set quantities for each item in your home.

2
⚙️

We Do the Math

The calculator sums running watts, identifies the highest startup surge, and applies a 20% safety buffer automatically.

3

Get a Recommendation

See a specific wattage rating, the generator type that fits your needs, and tips for buying within that range.

Most People Get Generator Sizing Wrong

The biggest mistake homeowners make is calculating only running watts and ignoring startup (surge) watts. When an electric motor starts — an air conditioner, refrigerator, sump pump, or well pump — it draws 3 to 6 times its running wattage for a fraction of a second.

A 5,000W generator cannot start a 5,000W A/C unit. A generator that can't handle the surge will stall, trip its breaker, or fail entirely — right when you need it most.

Our calculator accounts for surge wattage automatically, using real manufacturer data for every appliance on the list.

Run the Calculator →

Startup Surge Examples

⚠️ Often overlooked
Appliance Running Startup Surge
Central A/C (2 ton) 2,800W 8,000W
Well Pump (½ HP) 1,000W 2,100W
Sump Pump (½ HP) 1,050W 2,150W
Refrigerator 150W 600W
Air Compressor (1HP) 1,500W 4,500W

Common Generator Sizing Questions

Running watts (also called rated watts) is the continuous power an appliance needs while operating normally. Starting watts (surge watts) is the brief, higher power spike required to start motors — compressors, pumps, fans — from a dead stop. Most appliances with electric motors draw 3–6× their running wattage for a fraction of a second at startup. Your generator must handle both the combined running load and the worst-case startup surge.

Portable generators are lower cost ($500–$2,500), need to be manually started, and require storing and handling gasoline. They must be operated outdoors and connected via extension cords or a transfer switch. Best for occasional outages or under 10,000W needs.

Home standby generators (whole-home generators) start automatically, run on natural gas or propane, and connect directly to your home's electrical panel via an automatic transfer switch. They cost $3,000–$15,000+ installed. Best for frequent outages, larger homes, or anyone who needs full-home coverage without any manual intervention.

The appliance wattage figures are based on published manufacturer data and widely referenced industry standards. The calculator adds a 20% safety buffer on top of the calculated peak load, which is the standard recommendation in generator sizing guides. Real-world results can vary by appliance age, condition, and brand — always review the calculator output as a minimum starting point, not a guaranteed match. When in doubt, size up by one tier.

Yes, in virtually all cases. Connecting a portable generator directly to your home's wiring without a transfer switch (also called backfeeding) is illegal in most jurisdictions, dangerous to utility workers, and can destroy your generator when power is restored. A manual transfer switch ($200–$600 installed) lets you safely connect a portable generator to specific circuits. An automatic transfer switch (ATS) is required for home standby generators and costs $500–$1,500 plus installation.

Usually not — and you don't need to. A typical whole-house load during an outage is 8,000–15,000W, which requires a large and expensive generator. The better approach is to identify your essential circuits: refrigerator, a few lights, HVAC (or a window unit), sump pump, and phone charging. This critical load typically sits in the 3,000–7,000W range and can be handled by a mid-size portable generator at a fraction of the cost. Use our Generator Size Calculator to identify exactly what you need.