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Battery Size Calculator
Estimate required Ah capacity for your backup or solar system.
Enter Your Values
Formula
Energy (Wh) = Load (W) × Hours (h)
Required Ah = Energy ÷ Voltage ÷ (DoD × Efficiency)
Need to size a battery backup? The Battery Size Calculator tells you how big a battery bank (Ah) you need to run specific loads for a target number of hours. Enter device wattages or total power draw, desired backup hours, system voltage (12V/24V/48V), and an efficiency / depth-of-discharge (DoD) factor — the tool returns required amp-hours (Ah) and recommended battery bank configuration. This is essential for off-grid solar, backup systems, UPS planning, and EV accessory sizing. Use it to pick the right battery capacity, avoid under-sizing, and estimate run times accurately.
Definition / Why it matters
A Battery Size Calculator estimates battery capacity (Ah) required to supply a known load for a set time considering system voltage and battery usable capacity. It prevents undersized banks, reduces repeated cycling, and improves long-term battery life.
Formula(s)
Energy needed (Wh) = Total Load (W) × Backup Hours (h)
Required Ah = Energy needed (Wh) ÷ System Voltage (V) ÷ Usable Fraction (DoD × Efficiency)
Example: Ah = (W × h) / (V × DoD × Eff)
If using inverter: include inverter efficiency → Effective load = Load ÷ Inverter Efficiency
Inputs
Load entry: list of devices (W) OR total power (W)
Backup time (hours)
System voltage (12 / 24 / 48 V)
Depth of discharge (DoD %) (default 50% for lead-acid, 80% for Li-ion)
Inverter efficiency (%) (if AC loads)
Safety margin % (optional)
How to use (step-by-step)
Add device wattages or enter total load in watts.
Select backup time (hours).
Choose system voltage (12/24/48V).
Enter DoD and inverter efficiency (defaults provided).
Click Calculate → receive required Ah, suggested battery count (e.g., 2 × 12V 200Ah in series/parallel), and estimated runtime.
Quick reference examples (5)
200 W load, 5 h, 12 V, DoD 50% → Wh=1000 → Ah=(1000)/(12×0.5)=166.7 Ah
500 W load, 4 h, 24 V, DoD 80% → Ah=(2000)/(24×0.8)=104.17 Ah
1000 W load, 2 h, 48 V, DoD 80% → Ah=(2000)/(48×0.8)=52.08 Ah
50 W LED, 24 h, 12 V, DoD 50% → Ah=(1200)/(12×0.5)=200 Ah
1500 W inverter, 1 h, 48 V, inverter eff 90%, DoD 80% → Effective Wh=1500/0.9=1666.7 Wh → Ah=1666.7/(48×0.8)=43.45 Ah
Quick table example (short)
| Load (W) | Hours | Voltage | DoD | Required Ah |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 200 | 5 | 12V | 50% | 167 Ah |
| 500 | 4 | 24V | 80% | 104 Ah |
| 1000 | 2 | 48V | 80% | 52 Ah |
FAQs
Q: How do I calculate battery size?
A: Multiply load (W) by hours → divide by voltage and usable battery fraction (DoD × eff).Q: What DoD should I use?
A: Lead-acid: 40–50%; Li-ion: 70–90%. Use conservative DoD for longer life.Q: Does inverter efficiency matter?
A: Yes — divide AC loads by inverter efficiency to get DC energy required.Q: How many batteries do I need?
A: Calculator can output suggested number based on battery Ah ratings and required system voltage.Q: Should I add a safety margin?
A: Yes — add 10–20% for contingencies and aging.Q: Is Ah the same as Wh?
A: No. Wh = Ah × Voltage. Wh measures energy, Ah measures battery capacity at a voltage.