Best overall
Westinghouse iGen4500
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 AmazonReal surge math — not just a sum
Short answer
A electric clothes dryer draws about 5,400 watts and has no motor surge, so a generator rated for at least 5,400 watts can run one on its own — a 6,500W unit gives comfortable headroom for anything else you add.
Running watts
5,400W
Starting watts
5,400W
Minimum generator
5,400W
Recommended
6,500W
A electric clothes dryer is a resistive load with no motor, so its starting and running watts are the same — about 5,400 watts. You only need to cover that steady draw, plus headroom for anything else on the generator.
To run one on its own, choose a generator rated for at least 5,400 starting watts. To run it alongside other essentials, add up everything you need and size up — the calculator below does that math for your exact list.
This page covers the electric clothes dryer on its own. Open the calculator with it pre-selected, then add everything else you plan to power at the same time.
Size a generator with a electric clothes dryerReal, widely available units in the 3,500 – 8,500W class. Independent picks — we're not affiliated with any manufacturer or retailer and earn nothing from these links.
Best 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 AmazonTo run a electric clothes dryer on its own you need a generator rated for at least 5,400 starting watts. We recommend a 6,500W (midsize portable) unit so you have headroom to add other appliances without running the generator at its limit.
A electric clothes dryer uses about 5,400 watts. It has no motor, so its starting and running watts are the same. Always check your unit's nameplate for exact figures.