12V Battery Capacity Calculator

12V Battery Capacity Calculator

Estimate the 12V battery capacity, battery count, protected runtime, and DC current needed for routers, cameras, alarm panels, CPAP machines, pumps, and small backup loads.

Choose a real 12V backup scenario

Enter the load and battery assumptions

Use measured running watts, not surge watts.
Backup duration required from the 12V bank.
DoD protects cycle life and reduces usable energy.
Example: one 12V 100Ah battery or one 12.8V 100Ah LFP.
Use 95-98% for DC loads, 85-92% for inverter loads.
Added after efficiency and DoD losses.
Cold batteries deliver less usable capacity.
Use 80-90% for aged batteries you still plan to keep.

12V capacity results

Required Nameplate Energy
0 Wh
After losses, DoD, reserve, and derating
Required 12V Capacity
0 Ah
At the selected battery voltage
Battery Count
0
Parallel 12V batteries
Running DC Current
0 A
Battery-side current estimate
Enter values and calculate to see the 12V capacity recommendation.

12V battery type spec grid

12.8V
Typical LiFePO4 nominal voltage
12.0V
Typical lead acid nominal voltage
50%
Common lead acid planning DoD
85%
Common LiFePO4 planning DoD
10A
Approx current at 120W on 12V
100Ah
Common single battery size
1.28kWh
12.8V 100Ah nameplate energy
90%
Typical small inverter planning efficiency

Battery chemistry planning assumptions

12V battery type Nominal voltage Planning DoD Typical use in this calculator
LiFePO4 4S pack 12.8V 80-85% High cycle smart home backup, DC loads, inverter loads with BMS limits checked
AGM lead acid 12.0V 50% Standby loads, UPS-style backup, alarm cabinets, moderate discharge rates
Flooded lead acid 12.0V 50% Ventilated utility spaces where regular inspection is already part of the system
Gel lead acid 12.0V 45% Low-current standby systems that avoid aggressive charge and discharge rates
Small sealed SLA 12.0V 35% Compact electronics backup where high-rate discharge reduces available Ah
Lead carbon 12.0V 60% Partial-state backup systems with more usable depth than conventional lead acid
NiMH 10-cell pack 12.0V 70% Specialized low-voltage packs where the battery maker gives a usable Ah rating

Common 12V smart home loads

Load group Typical watts Example runtime Useful capacity note
Fiber ONT plus WiFi router 18-35W 8-24 hours A 12V DC path often avoids inverter losses for network gear.
Alarm panel with LTE communicator 6-18W 24-48 hours Small SLA batteries lose usable capacity quickly under age and cold derating.
NVR with four PoE cameras 45-90W 6-12 hours Camera infrared mode can raise the overnight average load.
Smart hub cabinet and modem shelf 35-80W 8-16 hours Measure the whole power strip when several adapters share one backup bank.
CPAP without humidifier heat 30-60W 7-10 hours Humidifier heat can more than double the watt-hour requirement.
Small compressor refrigerator 60-140W avg 8-18 hours Use average watts over a full cooling cycle, not only compressor running watts.
Sump pump backup window 250-700W avg 1-4 hours Inrush current and inverter surge rating matter as much as steady Ah.
Low-voltage LED outage lighting 15-60W 8-24 hours Direct 12V lighting can keep current predictable and avoid idle inverter draw.

12V battery count examples

Project size Load and runtime LiFePO4 85% DoD AGM 50% DoD
Network shelf 30W for 12h About 39Ah before battery rounding About 72Ah before battery rounding
Security cabinet 60W for 8h About 52Ah before battery rounding About 96Ah before battery rounding
Camera rack 90W for 10h About 96Ah before battery rounding About 180Ah before battery rounding
CPAP night 45W for 8h About 38Ah before battery rounding About 72Ah before battery rounding
Small refrigerator 100W for 12h About 127Ah before battery rounding About 240Ah before battery rounding
Pump backup 500W for 2h About 106Ah before battery rounding About 200Ah before battery rounding

Efficiency, reserve, and derating reference

Adjustment Typical planning value Formula position Why it changes capacity
DC buck or boost converter 90-98% Load Wh ÷ efficiency Electronics consume part of the battery energy as heat.
Small inverter 85-92% Load Wh ÷ efficiency AC loads also include inverter conversion loss and sometimes idle draw.
Reserve margin 10-25% Multiply after DoD Gives headroom for load changes, battery spread, and measurement error.
Cold capacity derate Depends on chemistry Divide by temp factor Lower battery temperature reduces deliverable Ah at the same discharge rate.
Battery age derate 80-100% Divide by age factor Aged batteries may no longer deliver their original rated capacity.
12V current Watts ÷ volts Load W ÷ efficiency ÷ voltage High current can trigger BMS, fuse, connector, or inverter limits.

Capacity formula reference

Step Formula Output Calculator use
Load energy Average watts × runtime hours Watt-hours Energy the device must receive during the outage.
Battery usable energy Load Wh ÷ efficiency Usable Wh Energy that must leave the 12V battery before DoD limits.
Nameplate energy Usable Wh ÷ DoD × reserve ÷ derates Required Wh Total rated energy needed from the selected battery type.
12V amp-hours Required Wh ÷ nominal battery voltage Required Ah Capacity to compare with 12V battery labels.
Battery count Required Ah ÷ one battery Ah Parallel count Number of same-voltage 12V batteries required after rounding up.
Current estimate Load W ÷ efficiency ÷ nominal voltage Battery amps Steady current to compare with BMS, inverter, fuse, and connector ratings.
Capacity tip For smart home electronics, measure the combined load at the wall or DC bus for a few hours. Routers, camera infrared LEDs, and storage drives often vary by time of day.
12V current tip A 12V bank moves high current quickly: 600W is roughly 50A before inverter losses. Check steady current, surge current, BMS limits, and device data sheets separately.

A 12V battery bank are used to provide backup power for various devices in the case that there is a power outage. A power outage occur when the electrical grid in a home stop providing power to the devices in that home. Many people purchases a 12V battery bank to provide power to essential devices during a power outage.

The correct size of a 12V battery bank is a difficult decision to make due to teh misleading information that is often printed on the labels of batteries. A battery bank label might read that the battery bank can provide 100Ah of energy. However, the battery bank does not have to provide 100Ah of energy to the devices.

How to Choose the Right 12V Battery Bank

If a person purchases a 12V battery bank of too small of a size, the battery bank will not provide enough energy to support the devices during the power outage. Additionally, if a person who purchase the battery bank purchases a 12V battery bank of too larger of a size for the devices that are to be powered, the person who purchase the battery bank will end up spending more money than is necessary. The first factor to consider when purchasing a 12V battery bank is the depth of discharge, or DoD.

The depth of discharge is the amount of energy that is drawn from a battery compared to the total amount of energy that the battery can contain. If you are to use lead acid batteries, it is important to ensure that all of the energy is not drawn from the batteries as this will damage the batteries. For AGM batteries, however, only about 50% of the batteries capacity should be use.

LiFePO4 batteries are different than lead acid batteries in that with these batteries, a much larger percentage of the energy can be drawn from the battery without damaging the battery. Thus, the equation for calculating the size of the battery bank will change depending upon whether lead acid or LiFePO4 batteries is to be used in the battery bank. The second factor to consider when purchasing a 12V battery bank is the loss of energy that occur during power conversion.

Power conversion is the process of changing DC power to AC power or changing the voltage levels of the electricity that is to be delivered to the devices. If an inverter is used to power an AC device, the inverter will use some of the energy that the battery bank provides. Additionally, energy is lost during the process of changing DC to AC power.

If a DC to DC converter is used, energy is also lost due to the release of energy as heat from the DC to DC converter. Thus, the wattage of the devices that the battery bank must power must be measured. The wattage that is measured should be the average wattage, not the maximum wattage that is listed on the devices label.

The third factor to consider when purchasing a 12V battery bank is the temperature of the environment in which the batteries are to be stored. Batteries are chemical engine. Chemical engines run less efficiently at lower temperatures.

Thus, if the batteries are to be stored in a location that is often cold, such as a garage, the 12V battery bank will have a smaller amount of energy that it can provide to the devices compared to a 12V battery bank that is stored in a warmly location. Thus, the temperature of the storage area for the battery bank should be considered in the calculations of the size of the battery bank. The fourth factor to consider when purchasing a 12V battery bank is the age of the batteries.

As batteries age, they hold less energy than when they were new. For instance, a battery that is three years old might only hold 80% of the energy of a new battery. Thus, a reserve margin must be provided for the 12V battery bank when purchasing the batteries to ensure that there is enough energy to power the devices.

The fifth factor to consider when purchasing a 12V battery bank is the electrical current that the batteries will provide and the thickness of the wires that will be used to provide power to the devices. To provide a large amount of wattage with the 12V battery bank, a person must purchase thick wires with heavy-duty fuses. If the wires are too thin for the amount of current that the system is to provide, the wires will heat up and the devices will often reboot.

Additionally, if a very large number of batteries are to be used in the battery bank, the voltage of the system might have to be higher than 12V to increase the efficiency of the battery bank. Finally, the cost of the batteries and the amount of space in which the 12V battery bank can be stored must be considered. Using a calculator, a person can determine the nameplate capacity of the 12V battery bank based off the length of time that the devices will need to run and the chemistry of the batteries that will be used in the battery bank.

Additionally, using the calculator, a person can determine the number of batteries that will have to be placed in parallel with one another to provide power to the devices. By considering the chemistry of the batteries, the temperature at which they will be stored, the losses of energy during power conversion, the age of the batteries, and the amount of electrical current that will have to be provided to the devices, an individual can accurately calculate the size of the 12V battery bank that will be needed for such a situation.

12V Battery Capacity Calculator

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