Best overall
Honda EU2200i
2,200W start · 1,800W run
Gasoline · Inverter · 48–57 dBA · 47 lb
The benchmark quiet inverter — legendary engine reliability and clean power (<3% THD) for sensitive electronics.
Find on AmazonReal surge math — not just a sum
Free sizing tool — no signup
Pick the appliances you want to run — get the exact wattage and generator size you need, with real starting-watt surge math built in.
Carbon monoxide kills. Generator exhaust contains carbon monoxide (CO), which can be deadly in minutes. Run generators outdoors only, at least 20 feet from your home, with the exhaust pointed away from windows, doors, and vents. Never run a generator inside a house, garage, basement, shed, or RV — even with doors or windows open.
Estimates based on typical appliance wattages, not your specific model. Always confirm against your appliance nameplates and consult a licensed electrician before sizing a standby generator installation.
Real, widely available units we’d shop for in each size class. Independent picks — we're not affiliated with any manufacturer or retailer and earn nothing from these links.
Best overall
2,200W start · 1,800W run
Gasoline · Inverter · 48–57 dBA · 47 lb
The benchmark quiet inverter — legendary engine reliability and clean power (<3% THD) for sensitive electronics.
Find on AmazonBest value
2,200W start · 1,800W run
Gasoline · Inverter · 52 dBA · excellent fuel economy
Matches the Honda’s 1,800W running output for a fraction of the price, and sips even less fuel.
Find on AmazonBudget pick
2,500W start · 1,850W run
Dual fuel (gas / propane) · Inverter · CO Shield auto-shutoff · ultralight
Runs on gasoline or propane and includes a built-in carbon monoxide shutoff sensor.
Find on AmazonBest overall
4,500W start · 3,700W run
Gasoline · Inverter · 52 dBA · remote start · RV-ready TT-30R
Quiet enough for a campground and strong enough to start a 30-amp RV air conditioner.
Find on AmazonBest value
9,500W start · 7,500W run
Gasoline · Remote start · transfer-switch ready (L14-30R)
Serious home-backup wattage — enough for essentials circuits via a transfer switch — at a midsize price.
Find on AmazonQuietest
6,250W start · 5,000W run
Gasoline · Open-frame inverter · 69 dBA · <3% THD
50% quieter and 20% lighter than a conventional 5,000W unit, with inverter-clean output.
Find on AmazonBest overall
12,500W start · 9,500W run
Dual fuel (gas / propane) · Remote-start fob · L14-30R + 14-50R outlets · 74 dBA
12,500W of surge capacity with transfer-switch-ready outlets — a proven whole-panel backup workhorse.
Find on AmazonBest value
13,000W start · 10,500W run
Dual fuel (gas / propane) · Electric start · 500cc engine · 74 dBA
More peak wattage per dollar than anything else in the class, on gas or propane.
Find on AmazonBest overall
22,000W start · 19,500W run
Propane / natural gas · Auto-transfer in ~10s · Wi-Fi Mobile Link monitoring
The most widely installed home standby generator, backed by the largest dealer and service network. 22kW on LP, 19.5kW on natural gas.
Find on AmazonQuietest
20,000W start · 18,000W run
Propane / natural gas · 64–69 dB · corrosion-proof enclosure
Premium build quality and notably quiet operation — a favorite for noise-sensitive and coastal installs.
Find on AmazonStandby units are permanently installed and must be sized and fitted by a licensed electrician.
Most generator calculators just add up wattage numbers. That misses the one thing that actually determines whether a generator can handle your appliances: the starting watt surge. Motors — in refrigerators, well pumps, air conditioners, and power tools — briefly draw 2-3x their running wattage for a fraction of a second when they switch on.
This calculator adds your total running watts (everything you selected, running steady) to the single largest starting-watt spike among those appliances — because in real use, appliances don’t all surge at the exact same instant. That combined number is your true peak load, which we then round up to the nearest common generator size class.
Typical running and starting watts by category. Switch categories to check any appliance — these are industry-typical averages, so always confirm your specific appliance’s nameplate for exact figures.
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator / Freezer | 700W | 2,200W |
| Chest / Upright Freezer | 500W | 1,500W |
| Microwave (1000W) | 1,000W | 1,000W |
| Dishwasher | 1,500W | 1,500W |
| Coffee Maker | 1,000W | 1,000W |
| Toaster / Toaster Oven | 1,200W | 1,200W |
| Electric Range (per burner) | 2,100W | 2,100W |
| Electric Oven | 3,000W | 3,000W |
| Instant Pot / Slow Cooker | 700W | 700W |
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| Washing Machine | 1,200W | 2,300W |
| Electric Clothes Dryer | 5,400W | 5,400W |
| Gas Clothes Dryer (motor only) | 700W | 1,800W |
| Clothes Iron | 1,200W | 1,200W |
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| Window AC — 6,000 BTU | 700W | 2,200W |
| Window AC — 10,000 BTU | 1,200W | 3,600W |
| Central AC — per ton | 1,500W | 4,500W |
| Furnace Blower Fan (1/2 HP) | 800W | 2,350W |
| Electric Space Heater | 1,500W | 1,500W |
| Well Pump (1/2 HP) | 1,000W | 2,000W |
| Well Pump (1 HP) | 2,000W | 3,000W |
| Sump Pump (1/3 HP) | 800W | 1,300W |
| Sump Pump (1/2 HP) | 1,050W | 2,150W |
| Sewage Ejector Pump (1/2 HP) | 1,050W | 3,000W |
| Electric Water Heater (tank) | 4,000W | 4,000W |
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| LED TV (up to 55") | 150W | 150W |
| Laptop / Desktop Computer | 300W | 300W |
| WiFi Router / Modem | 20W | 20W |
| LED Light Bulb (each) | 15W | 15W |
| Ceiling Fan | 75W | 75W |
| Box / Stand Fan | 200W | 200W |
| Garage Door Opener (1/2 HP) | 550W | 1,100W |
| CPAP Machine | 90W | 90W |
| Phone / Device Charger | 20W | 20W |
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| Circular Saw (7-1/4") | 1,400W | 2,300W |
| Table Saw | 1,800W | 4,500W |
| Miter Saw (10") | 1,800W | 2,400W |
| Air Compressor (1.5 HP) | 1,500W | 3,000W |
| Angle Grinder | 1,200W | 2,400W |
| Power Drill (1/2") | 600W | 900W |
| Reciprocating Saw | 960W | 1,200W |
| Shop Vac / Wet-Dry Vac | 1,000W | 2,000W |
| Appliance | Running | Starting |
|---|---|---|
| RV Rooftop AC — 13,500 BTU | 1,500W | 3,500W |
| RV Rooftop AC — 15,000 BTU | 1,700W | 4,200W |
| RV Refrigerator | 600W | 2,000W |
| RV Microwave | 1,000W | 1,000W |
| RV Electric Water Heater | 1,500W | 1,500W |
| RV Converter / Battery Charger | 300W | 300W |
It depends entirely on which appliances you plan to run at the same time. Add up the running watts of everything you want powered, then add the starting (surge) watts of whichever single appliance has a motor that kicks on hardest — usually a refrigerator, well pump, or AC unit. Use the calculator above to get an exact number for your specific appliances instead of a generic house-size average.
Running watts is the power an appliance needs continuously once it's on. Starting (or surge) watts is a short spike some appliances need for a fraction of a second to get their motor moving — compressors, pumps, and power tools can need 2-3x their running wattage just to start. Resistive loads like heaters, toasters, and lights don't have this spike; their starting and running watts are the same.
Usually yes, as long as your generator can cover the combined running watts of both PLUS the starting watts of whichever one surges — and in practice only one motor surges at a time, since they don't start in the exact same instant. That's exactly what this calculator computes: total running watts plus the single largest starting-watt spike among your selected appliances.
The recommendation above already rounds up to the next common generator size class, which builds in headroom. If you plan to add more appliances later, or you live somewhere with frequent long outages, sizing up one class further gives you more comfortable margin and reduces wear on the generator from running near its limit.
Portable generators (2,000W-10,000W) cover a selection of essentials — fridge, some lights, a window AC, charging devices — and are far cheaper. Whole-house standby generators (10,000W-20,000W+) are hardwired and can run everything including central AC, but cost significantly more and need professional installation. This calculator works for sizing either — just select every appliance you want covered.
No — never. Generator exhaust contains carbon monoxide (CO), an odorless, invisible gas that can kill in minutes. Running a generator inside a house, garage, basement, shed, or RV is deadly even with doors and windows open. Always run generators outdoors, at least 20 feet from your home, with the exhaust pointed away from windows, doors, and vents — and install battery-powered CO alarms inside the house as a second line of defense.