When the Power Goes Out, What Keeps Your House Running?

Grid outages aren't getting rarer. Between aging infrastructure, more extreme weather, and wildfire-related shutoffs in some regions, more homeowners are deciding they want backup power. The two serious options in 2026 are a standby generator (usually natural gas or propane) and a home battery system (often paired with solar). They solve the same problem in very different ways, with very different cost structures. Let's compare them the way you'd actually decide.

For deep cost detail on each, we have a whole-house generator cost guide and a home battery storage cost guide. This guide is the head-to-head decision.

Upfront Cost

  • Standby generator (installed): roughly $5,000 to $15,000 for a whole-home unit, including the transfer switch and gas hookup. Smaller units that power essentials cost less.
  • Home battery (installed): roughly $10,000 to $20,000+ for a meaningful single-battery system; more for multiple batteries or whole-home backup. Adding solar pushes the total higher but unlocks daily savings.

On sticker price alone, generators usually win. But the federal tax credit changes the picture for batteries.

Incentives: The Battery's Trump Card

A home battery charged primarily by on-site solar can qualify for the federal residential clean energy tax credit — 30% of the cost — which dramatically narrows the upfront gap. Standby generators do not get that credit. Some states and utilities add battery rebates or pay you to share stored power during grid events. A generator has no comparable incentive. So while the battery's headline price is higher, the after-incentive cost can land much closer to a generator than you'd expect.

Running Cost and Fuel

  • Generator: burns natural gas or propane while running. During a long outage that's a real ongoing expense, and propane requires a tank you have to refill. There's also routine maintenance — oil changes, filter changes, annual service.
  • Battery: "fuel" is electricity you've already stored, ideally from solar, so running cost during an outage is essentially zero. Day to day, a battery can also save you money by storing cheap off-peak power and discharging during expensive peak hours.

Runtime: The Honest Trade-Off

This is the most important practical difference. A generator can run essentially indefinitely as long as it has fuel — through a multi-day outage, no problem, as long as natural gas keeps flowing or you keep propane topped up. A battery has a fixed capacity. A single home battery might power essentials for a day or less without recharging. Paired with solar, it recharges each sunny day and can ride out extended outages — but during a cloudy stretch or a hard winter storm, its runtime is limited.

Bottom line on runtime: for very long or frequent multi-day outages, the generator is more dependable. For shorter, more common outages — and for the daily bill savings — the battery is the stronger all-rounder.

Noise, Emissions, and Living With It

A running generator is loud and produces exhaust, so it has to sit outside at a safe distance. A battery is silent, has no emissions, and lives in your garage or on an exterior wall. If you value a quiet, clean backup that switches on instantly with no fumes, the battery experience is simply nicer. The generator is the workhorse you tolerate because it runs forever.

Switchover Behavior

Modern standby generators kick on automatically within seconds of an outage via an automatic transfer switch — you'll barely notice. Batteries switch over essentially instantly and seamlessly, often fast enough that computers don't even blink. Both are far better than a portable generator you have to drag out and start by hand.

Which Should You Buy?

Choose a standby generator if:

  • You face long or frequent multi-day outages (rural areas, severe-weather regions)
  • You want guaranteed runtime regardless of weather
  • You have natural gas service or room for a propane tank
  • Lowest upfront cost is the priority

Choose a home battery if:

  • Your outages are usually short (hours, not days)
  • You have or plan to add solar and want the 30% tax credit
  • You want daily bill savings via time-of-use arbitrage, not just emergency backup
  • You value silent, emission-free, low-maintenance operation

The hybrid answer

Some homeowners in outage-prone areas do both: a battery for the frequent short outages and daily savings, plus a generator as a long-duration backstop. It's the most expensive route, but for someone running medical equipment or working from home, the redundancy can be worth it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is cheaper, a generator or a home battery?

A standby generator usually has a lower upfront cost. But a solar-charged battery qualifies for a 30% federal tax credit and can save money daily, so the after-incentive lifetime cost can be competitive.

How long will a home battery power my house?

A single battery typically powers essentials for under a day on its own. With solar recharging it daily, it can sustain longer outages — but its runtime is limited during extended cloudy or stormy weather.

Does a generator qualify for the federal tax credit?

No. The residential clean energy credit applies to battery storage (especially when paired with solar), not to fuel-burning standby generators.

Which is better for frequent multi-day outages?

A standby generator, because it runs as long as it has fuel. Batteries excel at shorter, more common outages and at lowering your everyday electric bill.