Off-Grid Power Sizer

Size battery, solar panels, inverter and controller for your Starlink setup — RV, boat, cabin or remote home.

Sized for 12V DC system · 2026 consumer pricing

1 · Starlink hardware

2 · Active hours per day · 12h

1h (light)12h (typical)24h (always on)

3 · Days of autonomy (cloudy buffer) · 2

4 · Climate (solar yield)

5 · Battery chemistry

Daily draw

1440Wh

Battery bank

3.6 kWh

296 Ah @ 12V

Solar array

446W

Total budget

$2,663

Recommended components

Battery bank

3.6 kWh · 296 Ah @ 12V

$1,778

e.g. 2× Battle Born 100Ah or Victron SmartLithium

Solar panels

446W array

$535

3 × 200W rigid panels or 5 × 100W flexible

Inverter

500W pure sine wave

$120

Pure sine required — Dishy won't boot on modified sine

MPPT charge controller

40A @ 12V

$150

e.g. Victron SmartSolar — Bluetooth monitoring recommended

Wiring + fuses

4 AWG battery lines, MC4 connectors, breakers

$80

Budget estimate — DIY varies

Total install budget

$2,663

Use DC power conversion

Skip the inverter entirely with a 12V-to-48V buck-boost converter. Saves ~15% loss and $200+ on the inverter. Works with Starlink 48V DC adapter cable.

LiFePO₄ wins long-term

$500/kWh vs $200/kWh for AGM sounds pricey, but LiFePO₄ lasts 8× longer (4,000 vs 500 cycles). Break-even is ~2 years of daily use.

Oversize solar by 30%

The calculator already bakes in a 1.3× loss factor, but in deep winter you'll want more. Adding 1-2 extra 100W panels costs $200-400 and eliminates dead-battery mornings.

Sleep mode = 45% savings

Idle Starlink still draws ~45W. If you can tolerate reboot time, schedule it off overnight — cuts daily draw by ~500Wh for most setups.