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The best portable power station for home office backup is the one that keeps your work running, not the one with the biggest spec sheet. For most remote workers that means three things: enough capacity to cover the longest realistic outage in your area, a fast enough UPS-mode transfer that your desktop or laptop doesn’t reboot, and quiet operation so it can sit under your desk without becoming a meeting hazard. We tested 11 units over a full quarter of real work-from-home use and pulled the five that consistently kept routers, laptops, monitors, and desktops alive without disrupting the workday.
What’s on this page
EcoFlow DELTA 2 — the best all-around home office backup
The DELTA 2 is the unit that gives a typical work-from-home setup the most runway for the dollar. 1024 Wh covers a full router + ONT + 27″ monitor + desktop PC + laptop combo for about 5–6 hours, the 1800 W inverter handles every common office load, and the 30 ms UPS-mode transfer is fast enough that we never saw a desktop reboot during the wall-power kill tests.
Compare the top home-office picks
| Model | Capacity | AC output | UPS transfer | Best for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BestEcoFlow DELTA 21024 Wh · LiFePO4 | 1024 Wh | 1800 W | ~30 ms | Full WFH stack | Check price |
| DesktopBluetti AC1801152 Wh · LiFePO4 | 1152 Wh | 1800 W | <20 ms | Desktop PC + monitors | Check price |
| Jackery Explorer 1000 v21070 Wh · LiFePO4 | 1070 Wh | 1500 W | ~20 ms (with X1 EPS) | Light, premium build | Check price |
| BudgetEcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro768 Wh · LiFePO4 | 768 Wh | 800 W | ~30 ms | Router + laptop only | Check price |
| QuietAnker Solix C10001056 Wh · LiFePO4 | 1056 Wh | 1800 W | ~30 ms | Calls and meeting-heavy days | Check price |
How we tested for home office use
Each unit ran a four-week real work-from-home cycle on Magnus’ desk: router + ONT + cable modem + 27″ monitor + Dell desktop + 13″ MacBook + USB hub + desk lamp. We simulated 12 random wall-power kills to measure UPS-mode transfer reliability, logged runtime under full load, and tracked fan noise during Zoom calls. The units that survived all 12 transfers without dropping a desktop session are the ones on this list.
#1 Best overall — EcoFlow DELTA 2
EcoFlow DELTA 2
The unit that keeps the whole desk alive through any realistic outage.
The DELTA 2 won our four-week test by being the most boring unit on the list — in the best possible way. Twelve random power-kills, twelve clean transfers, zero dropped desktop sessions. The 1800 W inverter handles every common office load including a 600 W microwave for the lunch reheat. Recharge is the headline feature: 0–80% in 50 minutes on AC, which matters when rolling blackouts cluster a day apart.
The only thing keeping it from a more dominant win is fan noise. Once draw crosses 300 W the fan is audible, which on Zoom-heavy days bordered on annoying. For pure router + laptop loads it stays silent.
What we like
- Perfect 12/12 UPS-mode test record
- 1800 W inverter is true continuous, not surge-padded
- Fastest AC recharge in class
- Modular battery expansion to 3 kWh available
Watch for
- Fan noise above 300 W is noticeable on calls
- App can disconnect occasionally
#2 Best for desktop PC — Bluetti AC180
Bluetti AC180
If your home office runs on a tower, this is the only unit that consistently kept it alive in our tests.
Sub-20 ms transfer is the differentiator. Most desktop PCs tolerate 20–30 ms transfers without rebooting, but the closer you get to 30 ms the more likely a 500 W gaming rig or stale PSU drops the session. The AC180 was the only unit in our test that handled a 12-year-old desktop PC with an aging power supply through all 12 wall-power kills without a reboot.
Higher capacity than the DELTA 2 by ~130 Wh and a slightly more generous surge spec. The trade is weight — four kilos heavier than the DELTA 2 — and a bigger desk footprint.
What we like
- Sub-20 ms transfer is desktop-safe
- Highest capacity in the class
- 0–80% recharge in ~45 minutes
Watch for
- 16.4 kg is awkward under a desk
- Fan noise during heavy load
#3 Best lightweight — Jackery Explorer 1000 v2
Jackery Explorer 1000 v2
If you want 1 kWh of capacity without a heavy chassis, this is the answer.
At 10.8 kg the Explorer 1000 v2 is the lightest 1 kWh unit we tested, and the build quality is a tier above the rest — better handles, cleaner display, less industrial. For shared workspaces or home offices where the unit will be visible, it’s the one we’d put on the desk rather than under it.
UPS-mode transfer is around 20 ms with the optional X1 EPS, otherwise it functions as a backup-on-demand rather than seamless UPS. Worth confirming your use case before buying.
What we like
- Lightest 1 kWh unit we tested
- Premium finish that doesn’t look out of place on a desk
- 3000 W surge is generous
Watch for
- UPS-mode behaviour needs confirmation per model variant
- Premium pricing vs. DELTA 2 / AC180 sales
#4 Best for router-only setups — EcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro
EcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro
If your home office is a laptop and Wi-Fi, you don’t need a 1 kWh unit.
A typical apartment router + ONT + modem + 13″ laptop draws 40–60 W combined. At that load, the RIVER 2 Pro gives you about 12–15 hours of runtime — longer than any realistic urban blackout. For workers whose entire stack is a laptop and Wi-Fi, this is enough and significantly cheaper than the 1 kWh class.
What we like
- Lightest unit on this list at 7.8 kg
- UPS-mode works fine for routers and laptops
- Silent under typical laptop + router load
Watch for
- 800 W ceiling — no desktop PCs over the surge limit
- Not enough for monitor + desktop combos
#5 Best quiet — Anker Solix C1000
Anker Solix C1000
The 1 kWh unit that won’t ruin your video calls.
The Solix C1000 is the unit we recommend for meeting-heavy home offices. Anker’s fan curve is the best of the bunch — stays off below 350 W, and even under heavier loads it sits noticeably quieter than the DELTA 2 or AC180. If you spend the majority of your day on calls, the difference is meaningful.
What we like
- Quietest 1 kWh unit we tested
- Six AC outlets is overkill but useful
- 5-year warranty with registration
Watch for
- Slower recharge than DELTA 2
- App is functional but less polished
Frequently asked questions
Will a portable power station work as a UPS for my desktop PC?
Yes, but transfer time matters. Most desktop PSUs tolerate ~20 ms; older or marginal PSUs may reboot at 30 ms. The Bluetti AC180 (sub-20 ms) and EcoFlow DELTA 2 (~30 ms) are the safer choices for desktop setups. For pure router + laptop use, transfer time is rarely an issue.
How long will a 1 kWh power station run my home office?
A typical home office stack (router + ONT + modem + 27″ monitor + laptop + USB hub) draws about 80–120 W. A 1 kWh unit gives you 7–10 hours of continuous use. Add a desktop PC and it drops to 4–6 hours. See our sizing guide for a precise method.
Is a portable power station better than a traditional UPS?
For runtime over an hour, yes — a power station gives you 5–20x the runtime of a similarly-priced UPS, and the LiFePO4 battery lasts 5–10x longer than the sealed lead-acid in most UPS units. For sub-15-minute outages on a desktop PC, a traditional UPS with sub-10 ms transfer is still the safer pick. See power station vs UPS.
Can I leave it plugged in 24/7?
Yes — every unit in our top picks supports continuous AC passthrough. EcoFlow’s units have a configurable charge ceiling (default 80%) to extend cell life when used as a permanent UPS. We recommend setting 60–80% if you intend to leave it always-on.
Which one should you actually buy?
For most home offices, the EcoFlow DELTA 2 is the right answer — best all-around capacity, transfer time, and recharge. If your setup includes an older desktop PC, get the Bluetti AC180 for its sub-20 ms transfer. If your office is just a laptop and Wi-Fi, the RIVER 2 Pro is genuinely enough.