Use case · filter first, rank second
RV Portable Power
RV use punishes small units: shore-power-style loads, higher duty cycles, and the need to recharge from solar or while driving. This page filters the index to stations with at least 1,000 Wh of capacity and 1,500 W of continuous output, then ranks the survivors — with a built-in RV (TT-30-class) outlet weighted heavily, because running an RV's AC input through household adapters is the main pain point this class solves.
Machine summary · use_case · rv-portable-power
- use_case
- rv-portable-power
- method
- hard filters first, ranking second
- eligible_products
- 14
- disqualified_products
- 12
- top_recommendations
- ecoflow-delta-pro, jackery-explorer-2000-plus, bluetti-ac200l, ecoflow-delta-2-max, bluetti-elite-200-v2
- dataset_updated
- 2026-07-05
- json_export
- /use-cases/rv-portable-power.json
What matters for RV
RV outlet (TT-30-class)
A native 30 A-style RV receptacle lets the RV's shore-power cable plug straight in. Only three units in the index have one.
Continuous AC output
RV appliances (roof AC, microwave, water heater elements) need real sustained watts — boost modes don't count here.
Capacity and expansion
Overnight loads add up; expansion batteries extend dry-camping time without replacing the unit.
Solar input ceiling
Roof arrays on RVs commonly exceed 400 W; a higher solar input cap recharges faster off-grid.
Who this is for — and who should skip it
Good fit
- RV and travel-trailer owners replacing or supplementing a generator
- Dry campers who recharge from roof solar
- Anyone who wants to plug a shore-power cable directly into a battery unit
Skip this page if
- Tent campers and car campers — see the camping page; these units are heavy
- Occasional weekend RVers with only phone/laptop loads — a mid-size unit may be enough
Hard disqualifiers (applied before any ranking)
- Battery capacity below 1,000 Wh — too small for meaningful RV loads
- Continuous AC output below 1,500 W — cannot run common RV appliances
12 of 26 indexed products are filtered out by these rules — each is listed below with its reason. Ranking only ever happens among the 14 products that pass.
Recommended for RV
-
#1 EcoFlow DELTA Pro
3,600 Wh LiFePO4 flagship with 3,600 W continuous AC output (7,200 W surge), a built-in TT-30 RV outlet, 1,600 W solar input, ~30 ms EPS switchover, and ecosystem expansion marketed to 25 kWh — at 45 kg.
- Built-in RV (TT-30-class) outlet — shore-power cable plugs straight in
- 3,600 W continuous (7,200 W surge)
- 3,600 Wh base capacity, expandable to 25,000 Wh
- Up to 1,600 W solar input
-
#2 Jackery Explorer 2000 Plus
2,042.8 Wh LiFePO4 power station with 3,000 W continuous AC output (6,000 W surge), a 25 A RV-style outlet, a 2 h full wall recharge, 1,400 W solar input, documented 20 ms EPS, and marketed expansion to 24 kWh — at 27.9 kg with wheels.
- Built-in RV (TT-30-class) outlet — shore-power cable plugs straight in
- 3,000 W continuous (6,000 W surge)
- 2,042.8 Wh base capacity, expandable to 24,000 Wh
- Up to 1,400 W solar input
-
#3 BLUETTI AC200L
2,048 Wh LiFePO4 power station with 2,400 W continuous AC output (3,600 W surge), a NEMA TT-30 RV outlet, 2,400 W turbo wall charging, 1,200 W high-voltage solar input, and expansion to 8,192 Wh — at 28.3 kg.
- Built-in RV (TT-30-class) outlet — shore-power cable plugs straight in
- 2,400 W continuous (3,600 W surge)
- 2,048 Wh base capacity, expandable to 8,192 Wh
- Up to 1,200 W solar input
-
#4 EcoFlow DELTA 2 Max
2,048 Wh LiFePO4 power station with 2,400 W continuous AC output (4,800 W surge) across six outlets, 1,800 W X-Stream charging, up to 1,000 W dual-port solar input, and expansion to 6,144 Wh — at 23 kg.
- 2,400 W continuous (4,800 W surge)
- 2,048 Wh base capacity, expandable to 6,144 Wh
- Up to 1,000 W solar input
-
#5 BLUETTI Elite 200 V2
2,073.6 Wh LiFePO4 power station with 2,600 W continuous AC output, an official 1.4 h full recharge at 1,800 W, 1,000 W MPPT solar input, a 6,000-cycle battery — the highest cycle rating in this index — at 24.2 kg.
- 2,600 W continuous
- 2,073.6 Wh base capacity
- Up to 1,000 W solar input
Top picks compared
| Product | Capacity | Continuous AC | Weight | RV outlet | Expansion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EcoFlow DELTA Pro | 3,600 Wh | 3,600 W | 45 kg (99.2 lb) | Yes | to 25,000 Wh |
| Jackery Explorer 2000 Plus | 2,042.8 Wh | 3,000 W | 27.9 kg (61.5 lb) | Yes | to 24,000 Wh |
| BLUETTI AC200L | 2,048 Wh | 2,400 W | 28.3 kg (62.4 lb) | Yes | to 8,192 Wh |
| EcoFlow DELTA 2 Max | 2,048 Wh | 2,400 W | 23 kg (50.7 lb) | No | to 6,144 Wh |
| BLUETTI Elite 200 V2 | 2,073.6 Wh | 2,600 W | 24.2 kg (53.4 lb) | No | No |
Also eligible (9)
These pass every hard filter but rank below the top picks under this page's scoring:
- Pecron E1500LFP (1,536 Wh, fit score 844)
- Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus (1,264.64 Wh, fit score 736)
- Goal Zero Yeti 1500 (1,505.28 Wh, fit score 731)
- Anker SOLIX C1000 (1,056 Wh, fit score 636)
- Pecron E1000LFP (1,024 Wh, fit score 632)
- EcoFlow DELTA 2 (1,024 Wh, fit score 612)
- EcoFlow DELTA 3 (1,024 Wh, fit score 612)
- BLUETTI AC180 (1,152 Wh, fit score 575)
- Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 (1,070 Wh, fit score 487)
Filtered out, and why (12)
| Product | Disqualification reason |
|---|---|
| Anker SOLIX C300 | Capacity 288 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Anker SOLIX C800 Plus | Capacity 768 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| BLUETTI AC2A | Capacity 204.8 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| BLUETTI AC70 | Capacity 768 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| EcoFlow RIVER 3 | Capacity 245 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus | Capacity 286 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Goal Zero Yeti 300 | Capacity 296.96 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Goal Zero Yeti 500 | Capacity 499.2 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Goal Zero Yeti 700 | Capacity 677.37 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Jackery Explorer 300 Plus | Capacity 288 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| OUPES Exodus 1200 | Capacity 992 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
| Pecron E600LFP | Capacity 614 Wh is below the 1,000 Wh RV floor |
Related comparisons
1 kWh Class: EcoFlow DELTA 2 vs BLUETTI AC180 vs Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 vs Anker SOLIX C1000 vs Pecron E1000LFP
Five US-market 1 kWh-class LiFePO4 stations compared on official specs. All but the Explorer 1000 v2 deliver 1,800 W continuous; they diverge sharply on weight (10.8–16 kg), solar input (400–600 W), expansion (none to 4,864 Wh), and recharge behavior.
High Capacity: EcoFlow DELTA 2 Max vs BLUETTI AC200L vs BLUETTI Elite 200 V2 vs Jackery Explorer 2000 Plus vs EcoFlow DELTA Pro
Five US-market home-backup-class LiFePO4 stations from 2 to 3.6 kWh. They split on inverter strength (2,400–3,600 W), RV outlets (three of five have one), solar ceilings (1,000–1,600 W), expansion architecture, and longevity ratings from 3,000 to 6,000 cycles.
How this page decides
This page is generated from the index's normalized product records — official-manufacturer specifications with per-field provenance — using explicit fit rules, not editorial taste. Hard disqualifiers run first; ranking happens second, only among eligible products. Eligible products are scored as: RV outlet present (+1000, dominant factor), continuous output ×0.2, capacity ×0.1, solar input ×0.2, expansion support (+50).
No runtime hours or real-world measurements are invented: every number traces to the source claims on each product page. Merchant relationships never affect these rules. See the methodology for the full data policy, and the JSON version of this page for machine consumption.