The best time to plan for a power outage is before one happens. The worst time is when you’re standing in the dark, your phone is at 12%, and the food in your refrigerator is warming up. Emergency power planning isn’t complicated, but it requires thinking through your specific needs, choosing the right equipment, and testing everything before you actually need it.
I’ve helped dozens of families create emergency power plans — from apartment dwellers with a single power station to rural homeowners with standby generators and 500-gallon propane tanks. The process is the same regardless of budget or living situation: assess your needs, choose your equipment, prepare your supplies, and practice your plan.
Phase 1: Assess Your Power Needs
Identify Critical Loads
Start by listing everything you absolutely need during a power outage. Be honest about what’s essential versus what’s convenient. Critical loads typically include:
Tier 1 — Life Safety (must have):
Tier 2 — Food and Water Safety (important):
Tier 3 — Comfort and Convenience (nice to have):
Calculate Wattage Requirements
For each item on your list, find the running watts and starting watts. Add up the running watts for all Tier 1 items — this is your absolute minimum power requirement. Add Tier 2 for a comfortable minimum. Add Tier 3 for full comfort.
Typical household calculations:
| Scenario | Running Watts | Recommended Generator |
|---|---|---|
| Bare minimum (lights, phone, router) | 100-200W | Power station (500Wh+) |
| Essentials (+ fridge) | 300-500W | 2,000W inverter or power station (1,000Wh+) |
| Essentials + sump pump | 1,000-1,500W | 3,500W generator |
| Essentials + sump + furnace | 1,500-2,500W | 5,000W generator |
| Above + well pump + window AC | 3,000-4,500W | 7,500W generator |
| Most home circuits | 5,000-8,000W | 10,000W+ generator |
| Whole house including central AC | 10,000-18,000W | Standby generator (14-24kW) |
Estimate Outage Duration
Your power plan should account for your area’s typical outage patterns:
Check your utility’s outage history for your area. If your longest outage in the past 5 years was 8 hours, planning for 24-48 hours provides a comfortable margin. If you’ve experienced multi-day outages, plan for at least 5-7 days of self-sufficiency.
Phase 2: Choose Your Backup Power System
Option 1: Portable Power Station ($200-3,000)
Best for: apartments, short outages, moderate loads, noise-sensitive environments
Option 2: Portable Generator ($300-2,000)
Best for: homeowners, moderate to high power needs, multi-day outages
Option 3: Standby Generator ($7,000-15,000 installed)
Best for: frequent outages, medical needs, whole-house backup, hands-off operation
Option 4: Hybrid System ($800-3,000)
Best for: versatility, extended outages, noise management
Phase 3: Prepare Your Supplies
Fuel Storage
For gasoline generators:
For propane generators:
Electrical Supplies
Safety Equipment
Non-Power Essentials
Phase 4: Create Your Outage Action Plan
Immediate Response (First 5 Minutes)
- Confirm it’s a real outage (check if neighbors are also out, check utility outage map on your phone)
- Unplug sensitive electronics to protect from power surges when electricity returns
- Locate flashlights and headlamps
- Check on family members, especially elderly or those with medical needs
- If outage is expected to last more than 1-2 hours, proceed to generator startup
Generator Startup (5-15 Minutes)
- Move the generator to its designated outdoor location (at least 20 feet from the house)
- Check oil level and fuel
- Start the generator and let it warm up for 1-2 minutes
- Connect the generator cord to the power inlet (if using transfer switch/interlock) or run extension cords
- Transfer circuits or plug in appliances, starting with the highest priority loads
- Verify CO alarms are functioning
Ongoing Management
Power Restoration
- When utility power returns, wait 5-10 minutes to confirm it’s stable
- Transfer circuits back to utility power (transfer switch) or unplug appliances from extension cords
- Shut down the generator and let it cool
- Drain fuel or add stabilizer if you won’t use the generator again soon
- Refill fuel cans for next time
- Note any issues or lessons learned for plan improvement
Special Considerations
Medical Equipment
If anyone in your household depends on electrically powered medical equipment (CPAP, oxygen concentrator, home dialysis, powered wheelchair, insulin pump charger), your power plan is a medical necessity, not a convenience:
Extreme Weather
Power outages during extreme heat or cold are the most dangerous:
Extreme cold:
Extreme heat:
Apartment and Condo Dwellers
If you can’t use a generator (no outdoor space, building rules), your options are:
Annual Maintenance and Testing
Your emergency power plan is only as good as your last test. Schedule these tasks annually (ideally before storm season):
Emergency Power Planning Checklist
| Item | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Power needs calculated | ☐ | List all critical loads with wattages |
| Backup power system chosen | ☐ | Generator, power station, or both |
| Equipment purchased and tested | ☐ | Run under load before you need it |
| Transfer switch/interlock installed | ☐ | If connecting to home wiring |
| Fuel supply stored | ☐ | 48-72 hours minimum |
| Extension cords ready | ☐ | Outdoor-rated, correct gauge |
| CO alarms installed and tested | ☐ | Battery-powered, every level |
| Fire extinguisher accessible | ☐ | ABC-rated, near generator area |
| Flashlights and batteries | ☐ | LED, fresh batteries |
| Emergency radio | ☐ | Battery or hand-crank, NOAA capable |
| Water supply (3+ days) | ☐ | 1 gallon per person per day |
| Non-perishable food (3+ days) | ☐ | Plus manual can opener |
| Medications (7+ days) | ☐ | Essential prescriptions |
| Cash on hand | ☐ | Small bills for purchases |
| Family action plan written | ☐ | Everyone knows the steps |
| Annual test completed | ☐ | Date: ___________ |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much should I budget for emergency power?
A basic setup (portable power station + flashlights + batteries) starts at $300-500. A mid-range setup (portable generator + extension cords + fuel + safety equipment) runs $600-1,200. A comprehensive setup (generator + transfer switch + fuel storage + power station for nighttime) costs $1,500-3,000. A standby generator system runs $7,000-15,000 installed. Choose based on your outage risk, power needs, and budget — even a $300 power station is infinitely better than no backup power at all.
Q: What if I can’t afford a generator right now?
Start with what you can afford and build up over time. A $30 battery bank keeps your phone charged. A $50 LED lantern set provides light. A $200-300 small power station runs a phone, laptop, and LED lights for 12+ hours. Add a generator and transfer switch later when budget allows. Even partial preparedness is dramatically better than none.
Q: Should I get a generator or a whole-house battery system?
Whole-house battery systems (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase IQ, Generac PWRcell) are excellent but expensive ($10,000-20,000+ installed). They’re best paired with solar panels for daily energy savings plus backup power. For pure emergency backup on a budget, a portable generator ($300-800) provides more power for less money. If you’re already investing in solar, adding battery storage makes sense. If you just want outage protection, a generator is more cost-effective.
The Bottom Line
Emergency power planning comes down to four steps: know what you need to power, buy equipment that meets those needs, stock the supplies to keep it running, and test everything before an actual emergency. The specific equipment matters less than having a plan and being prepared. A $400 generator that you’ve tested and know how to use is worth more than a $4,000 system sitting in a box. Start where you are, plan for your specific risks, and test your setup at least once a year. When the next outage hits, you’ll be ready.
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