Portable Solar Panels: 5 Things To Consider Before You Buy

Portable solar panels are one of the cleanest, most cost-effective ways to keep your devices powered. Paired with solar generators, they can store energy for later use. Ideal for camping, road trips, van life, or even during a blackout.

What should you consider before buying a portable solar panel?

Solar panels come in a bunch of shapes and sizes, so there are a few questions you should ask yourself before you buy. In this blog post, we’ll tackle five things to help you make a choice:

Portable solar panels featured
  • Which solar power generator do you own? Why is that important?
  • Is your power station compatible with portable solar panels?
  • What kind of solar panels do you need?
  • Is portability or charging speed more critical?
  • In summary, what should you buy?

1) Which solar power generator do you own? Why is this important? 

When pairing your foldable solar panel with your solar generator, you’ll want to consider the capacity of the battery. A larger battery will be suited to a larger solar panel, or even multiple solar panels chained together. However, if your power station has a smaller capacity, you can get away with a much smaller panel as you have less capacity to charge.

Solar Panels For Large Portable Power Stations

Let’s take EcoFlow DELTA Pro as a large power station example. It has a 3600Wh capacity, expandable all the way to 25kWh. In this case, a small solar panel will take a long time to fully charge your unit. Here you should use larger panels such as EcoFlow’s 400W panels, or you can chain multiple smaller 160W panels together. With multiple solar panels, you’ll be able to charge larger EcoFlow power stations in mere hours.

Solar Panels For Smaller Portable Power Stations

If you’ve got a power station that puts portability first, such as EcoFlow River 2 Pro (768Wh) or DELTA (1260Wh), you might want to opt for smaller panels to stay travel-friendly. A good pick here might be a 110W EcoFlow Solar Panel or the 160W option. Again, you can chain panels together to charge up in 4—8 hours.Foldable Solar Panel for Outdoors

2) Is your power station compatible with portable solar panels?

You should double-check that your power station supports a high solar input, has an solar charging port, and supports a wide voltage range. Some power stations lack sufficient solar input and voltage ranges. EcoFlow portable power stations all have high solar input for their sizes, ranging from 256W for the River 2 series to a massive 1600W for EcoFlow DELTA Pro.Portable solar panel for camping

3) What kind of solar panel do you need?

For different uses, you’ll want different kinds of portable solar panels. Let’s take three use cases:

Solar panels for home backup

If you’re solely looking for home backup, you’ll likely have a larger solar power generator, such as a DELTA Pro or DELTA Max. In this case, the same advice applies. A larger portable solar panel or multiple panels would be best for faster charging.Solar panels for home back up

Solar panels for camping & outdoors

With camping on the rise, the need for outdoor power is on the rise too. If you’re heading camping, portability is usually an essential factor. Your panel should also be dust + water-resistant. Here, EcoFlow’s 110 or 160W panels would be good picks as they’re compact & efficient too.Foldable solar panel for outdoors

4) Is portability or charge speed more critical?

With the above in mind, you’ll start to get an idea of what kind of solar panel you need. If portability is more important to you, you might opt for a smaller panel such as EcoFlow’s 110W panel. The larger EcoFlow 160W solar panel is an excellent middle ground, with the 400W option a good choice if you need to maximize charge speed for larger power stations.

Whichever panel you go for, they’re all foldable, come with a kickstand carry bag, and are dust and water-resistant.Portable Solar Panel Carry Bag

5) In short, what should I buy?

TLDR? Here’s a summary. When shopping for a solar panel, you should consider the solar panel’s wattage (the higher, the faster your power station will typically charge), portability, and also dust & water resistance. You should also double-check your solar generator’s limitations for solar input, voltage, and ensure it has solar charging ports.

You can weigh up what is most important to you to pick the right panels & compare options here.

Kris Haagensen
Kris Haagensen
Born and raised in the UK, Kris is a 4.0 International Business grad from Sheffield Business School. After working in the tech industry for half a decade in Shenzhen, China, he's now Lead Copywriter at EcoFlow. Kris is a renewable power enthusiast & uses solar generators to run his DJ gear in exotic locations.

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