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Portable vs Standby Generator: Which Is Right for Your Home?

When shopping for a home generator, the most fundamental decision you’ll face is portable versus standby. Both provide backup power during outages, but they differ significantly in cost, convenience, capacity, and installation requirements. Understanding those differences will help you choose the right solution for your home and budget.

⚡ Key Takeaways

  • The core difference is automation and permanence.
  • Cost is often the deciding factor between portable and standby generators.
  • This is where standby generators have a decisive advantage for many homeowners.

How Portable and Standby Generators Differ

The core difference is automation and permanence. A standby generator is a permanently installed appliance that monitors your electrical supply and starts automatically when power fails. A portable generator is a moveable machine you pull out of storage, add fuel to, and start manually when an outage occurs.

Portable Generator Overview

Portable generators are fueled by gasoline, propane, or dual-fuel (both). They range from compact inverter models producing 2,000–3,000 watts to large conventional generators producing 8,000–12,000 watts or more. They must be operated outdoors — at least 20 feet from doors and windows — due to carbon monoxide risk — the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) notes that generator CO poisoning is a leading cause of non-fire-related home carbon monoxide deaths. Connecting a portable generator to home circuits requires a transfer switch or interlock kit installed by a licensed electrician.

Standby Generator Overview

Standby generators are permanently installed on a concrete pad next to your home. They connect to your natural gas or propane supply and to your home’s electrical panel via an automatic transfer switch. When the utility power fails, the generator starts automatically — typically within 10–30 seconds — and restores power to all connected circuits. When utility power returns, the generator shuts off automatically and the home switches back to grid power.

Cost Comparison

Cost is often the deciding factor between portable and standby generators. The price difference is substantial.

Portable Generator Costs

Portable generators range from about $500 for a basic gasoline model to $3,000 for a high-quality dual-fuel inverter generator. Add $500–$1,500 for a transfer switch or interlock kit installation by a licensed electrician. Total investment: $1,000–$4,500 for a complete, code-compliant portable generator setup.

Standby Generator Costs

Standby generators range from $5,000 for a basic 10kW whole-home unit to $20,000+ for a large 22kW+ unit, fully installed. The installed price includes the generator, automatic transfer switch, electrical work, gas line extension, concrete pad, permits, and inspection. Annual maintenance adds $150–$300 per year on top of that.

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Whether you need a portable or standby unit, our generator specialists can handle the electrical connection and transfer switch installation safely.

Convenience and Usability

This is where standby generators have a decisive advantage for many homeowners.

Automatic Operation

A standby generator requires nothing from you during an outage — it detects the power failure and starts itself. This is critical if you travel frequently, have elderly family members who may not be able to operate a portable generator, or have medical equipment that cannot tolerate even a brief interruption. Portable generators require you to be home, physically retrieve the generator, add fuel, connect it, and start it — tasks that can be challenging in bad weather or at night.

Runtime and Fuel Management

Portable generators running on gasoline typically have 8–12 hour run times per tank. During extended outages, you need a reliable fuel supply, which can be difficult to obtain when gas stations are also without power. Standby generators connected to natural gas have unlimited runtime — they run as long as needed with no refueling required.

Which Is Right for You?

There’s no universally correct answer — it depends on your priorities and budget.

Choose a Portable Generator If

You experience infrequent, short outages; you’re on a tight budget; you don’t have medical equipment or other critical power needs; and you’re physically able to operate the generator when needed. A quality portable generator with a proper transfer switch covers most essential needs at a fraction of the cost of a standby unit.

Choose a Standby Generator If

You experience frequent or extended outages; you travel often or want protection when you’re away from home; you have medical equipment, sump pumps, or other critical systems; you want to power central air conditioning during outages; or you simply want the convenience of automatic, hands-free protection.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a portable generator power my whole house?

Most portable generators can power essential circuits — refrigerator, sump pump, lights, and device charging — but not a whole home. Running central HVAC, electric water heaters, or electric dryers typically requires a standby generator sized for the full home load.

Is a standby generator worth the cost?

For homeowners who experience regular outages, have critical power needs, or want hassle-free protection, most find standby generators worth the investment. The value is especially clear when you consider avoided losses (spoiled food, flooded basements from sump pump failure, hotel costs during extended outages) and the convenience of automatic operation.

Do I need an electrician to connect a portable generator?

Yes. Connecting a portable generator to your home’s wiring requires a transfer switch or generator interlock kit, which must be installed by a licensed electrician. Never plug a generator into a wall outlet — this practice (backfeeding) is dangerous and illegal.

How noisy are portable vs. standby generators?

Conventional portable generators are significantly noisier than standby units, typically producing 65–75 dB at 23 feet. Inverter-type portable generators are quieter (50–60 dB). Standby generators produce 65–70 dB at 23 feet but are often positioned farther from living areas.

Does a standby generator add value to a home?

Yes. Standby generators are considered a home improvement and generally increase resale value, particularly in areas prone to severe weather or frequent outages. Real estate professionals typically value standby generators at 3–5% of the home’s purchase price.

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