Off-Grid
Solar With Generator Backup: How I Size, Wire, and Automate a System
That Does Not Fall Apart in Bad Weather
Meta Description: Building off-grid solar with
generator backup? I walk through how I size the battery, solar array,
and generator, plus wiring priorities, autostart strategy, and common
mistakes that waste fuel or kill batteries.
Target Keywords: off-grid solar with generator
backup, generator backup for off-grid solar, how to size generator for
off-grid solar, off-grid solar battery generator sizing, generator
autostart off-grid inverter
Table of Contents
- Why
generator backup still matters in a solar-first system - The three
jobs your generator should handle - The five numbers I size
first - A
practical sizing example for a real cabin or small home - How I
decide battery size versus generator run time - How
I size the generator without buying a ridiculous monster - How I prefer to wire the
system - Generator
autostart and low-battery logic - What
changes if you use LuxPower, EG4, or a similar hybrid inverter - Fuel,
maintenance, and noise planning people ignore - Mistakes
that make off-grid systems miserable - What I
would build for three common scenarios - Final answer
If you are building an off-grid solar system with generator
backup, the generator is not a sign that solar failed. It is
the safety valve that keeps a practical system sane when the weather
turns ugly, the loads spike, or winter decides to be rude for a week
straight.
I like solar-first systems. I like batteries even more. But I also
like systems that keep working when conditions are bad, and that usually
means planning around a generator from day one instead of pretending you
are too pure for fossil fuel. Reality does not care about your ideals.
It cares whether the battery is empty at 6:30 AM while the well pump
wants to run.
This is how I think through sizing, wiring, and control strategy when
I want an off-grid system that feels robust instead of fragile.
Why
generator backup still matters in a solar-first system
The fantasy version of off-grid solar is simple: oversized array,
huge battery, endless freedom, no engine noise ever again.
The expensive version of that fantasy is also simple: you buy far
more battery and panel capacity than you really needed just to avoid a
generator that might run a few dozen hours per year.
For most people, a generator solves three real problems:
- multi-day bad weather
- seasonal production dips
- occasional heavy loads or battery recovery
If you size your whole system so the generator is literally never
needed, you often end up spending a pile of money to eliminate a tool
that would have covered the edge cases cheaply.
I would rather build a balanced system with a good LiFePO4 bank,
enough solar to carry daily loads in normal conditions, and a generator
that can rescue the system cleanly when conditions go sideways.
The three jobs your
generator should handle
Before I size anything, I decide what role the generator has.
1. Emergency battery recovery
This is the most common role. The generator charges the battery when
solar production is too low or the load was higher than expected.
2. Support for heavy
intermittent loads
Maybe you have a well pump, air compressor, shop tools, or a
mini-split that pushes the system hard at the wrong time. The generator
can cover those ugly moments without forcing you to oversize the entire
solar plant.
3. Seasonal backup
Some systems are comfortable from March through October and then need
help during winter storms or short daylight days. That is not failure.
That is sane design.
Once I know which of those jobs matter, the rest of the sizing starts
to make sense.
The five numbers I size
first
I do not start with panel count or generator brand. I start with
these five numbers:
1. Daily energy use in kWh
This is your real baseline. If you use 12 kWh/day, build for 12. If
you use 28 kWh/day, build for 28. Do not use vibes as a load
calculation.
2. Peak power demand
Average energy and peak load are different problems. A cabin that
uses only 10 kWh/day can still need serious inverter output if it runs a
well pump, microwave, and power tools.
3. Worst-month solar
production
I care more about winter reality than summer bragging rights. A
system that looks great in June can be pathetic in December.
4. Battery autonomy target
How long do you want to survive without useful solar?
For most practical builds I think in:
- 1 day of autonomy for mild backup-heavy systems
- 2 days for balanced off-grid systems
- 3 days if the site is remote or generator runtime is a pain
5. Acceptable generator
runtime
This part gets ignored. Some people are fine running a generator a
couple of hours every few days in rough weather. Some people hate it and
want it as a last resort only. That preference changes the battery and
array math.
A
practical sizing example for a real cabin or small home
Let us walk through a realistic example.
Assume:
- daily usage: 18 kWh
- peak load: 6 kW
- worst-month peak sun hours: 3.8
- desired battery autonomy: 2 days
- battery chemistry: LiFePO4
- acceptable battery depth of discharge: 80%
usable
Battery sizing
Two days of autonomy means:
18 kWh x 2 = 36 kWh usable storage
If I want to stay around 80% usable capacity:
36 / 0.80 = 45 kWh nominal battery
That means I would target roughly a 45 kWh LiFePO4
bank.
In a 48V system, that is about:
45,000 Wh / 51.2V = 879 Ah
Call it a practical target around 800 to 900 Ah at
48V.
Solar array sizing
Now I want enough array to cover the daily load in the worst useful
planning month, not just in perfect spring weather.
Use a conservative efficiency factor of 0.70 for
off-grid reality:
18 kWh / (3.8 x 0.70) = 6.77 kW
That says I need about 6.8 kW of solar just to cover
average daily use under those assumptions.
Would I stop there? No.
If the battery bank is 45 kWh, I also want the array to be able to
recharge meaningfully after a bad day. So I would be more comfortable
around 8 to 9 kW of PV instead of pretending 6.8 kW is
plenty.
Generator sizing
Now the generator does not need to power the whole property forever.
It needs to support the inverter/charger and recover the battery at a
reasonable rate.
If my inverter charger can absorb 5 kW to 7 kW of AC charging
power, I want a generator that can feed that continuously with
margin.
That often lands me in the 8 kW to 12 kW generator
range for a system like this, depending on 120/240V
requirements, motor starting, and charger behavior.
How I
decide battery size versus generator run time
This is where people either waste money on battery or waste patience
on fuel.
If you reduce battery size, the generator runs more often. If you
reduce generator dependence, the battery and array usually grow.
I usually think about it like this:
- More battery buys you time
- More solar buys you recovery
- More generator buys you insurance
Battery alone is not enough. A giant battery bank with a weak array
just gives you a larger thing to recharge later. That is how people end
up stranded with an expensive battery sitting half empty while the
generator does all the hard work anyway.
For a daily-use off-grid site, I like a battery bank that can
comfortably handle overnight loads plus one ugly day without panic.
After that, I would rather let a generator assist than explode the
budget chasing absolute perfection.
As a rule of thumb:
- light-use cabin: generator can be a bigger part of the strategy
- full-time home: battery and array should do most of the work
- remote critical site: size battery larger and treat generator as
true backup
How I
size the generator without buying a ridiculous monster
The generator should match the charger and the loads, not your
ego.
Here is the process I use:
Step 1: Check
inverter AC input and charger limits
If your inverter can only charge from AC at 60A into a 48V battery,
that is roughly:
60A x 52V = 3.1 kW DC
Add charging losses and overhead and maybe the generator only needs
to support about 4 to 5 kW for battery charging.
If the inverter can charge much harder, size for that.
Step 2: Add
any loads that may run while charging
If the fridge, well pump, and background house loads continue while
the generator is charging, you cannot size only for charge wattage.
Example:
- battery charging: 5 kW
- live house loads: 1.5 kW
- surge margin: 1 to 2 kW
That points toward an 8 kW generator, maybe
10 kW if motor loads are ugly.
Step 3: Respect fuel
efficiency
Many generators are least efficient when loafing at very low load. A
20 kW generator feeding a 3 kW charger is dumb unless you already own it
and enjoy paying for noise.
For many off-grid homes, the sweet spot is a generator large enough
to run the charger effectively but small enough to operate in a sensible
load range.
How I prefer to wire the
system
There are a few valid ways to do this, but my preference is:
- solar array into the hybrid inverter or charge controller
- battery bank on a short, properly fused DC path
- critical loads on the inverter output
- generator feeding the inverter AC input or dedicated generator
input
That arrangement lets the inverter decide when to pass through,
charge batteries, and support loads.
What I do not like is a pile of improvised transfer logic where
nobody can explain what happens during a low-battery event, a generator
start, or an overload. If you need a whiteboard and a prayer every time
the weather changes, the design is bad.
For 120/240V US systems, I also care a lot about:
- neutral-ground bonding rules
- transfer switching behavior
- whether the generator is bonded or floating
- whether the inverter expects a clean split-phase source
That is where a lot of otherwise decent builds get weird.
Generator autostart
and low-battery logic
If I have generator autostart available, I use it carefully.
I do not want the generator waking up every time the battery dips for
a minute because someone made coffee before sunrise.
I prefer start logic based on a combination of:
- state of charge below a threshold
- low battery voltage sustained for a delay
- quiet-hour restrictions if the site allows it
- optional weather forecast awareness through Home Assistant
A sane starting point might be:
- start generator below 20% to 25% SOC
- require the condition to last 5 to 15 minutes
- stop after the bank reaches 60% to 80% SOC or bulk
recovery completes
Why not charge to 100% every time? Because generators are best at
bulk charging. The last part of the curve slows down, burns fuel
inefficiently, and wastes runtime. I would rather let solar finish
absorption when the sun comes back.
If I am integrating with Home Assistant, I like using solar forecast
plus battery SOC to avoid stupid starts. If tomorrow looks excellent, I
may tolerate a lower overnight SOC. If three cloudy days are coming, I
want the system less optimistic and more paranoid.
What
changes if you use LuxPower, EG4, or a similar hybrid inverter
The details vary, but the general idea stays the same.
On LuxPower-style systems, I pay attention to:
- AC charge enable and schedule windows
- low-battery cutoffs and EOD SOC
- generator or grid input qualification
- maximum AC charging current
- priority modes so the inverter does not behave like a confused
traffic cop
On EG4, Sol-Ark, Growatt, and similar hybrids, the menu names change,
but the same logic still matters:
- when to allow AC charging
- how hard to charge
- when to transfer loads
- how to avoid deep battery abuse
My personal bias is simple: conservative low-end battery settings
beat heroic ones. I would rather protect the battery and accept a little
more generator use than squeeze the bank to the floor and act surprised
when longevity gets ugly.
Fuel,
maintenance, and noise planning people ignore
The generator is part of the system, so plan for it like an
adult:
- where the fuel is stored
- how long the fuel lasts at realistic load
- cold-weather starting
- oil change intervals
- spare filters, spark plugs, and starter battery care
- noise relative to neighbors, sleep, and your own sanity
Propane is convenient and stores cleanly, but power output and fuel
cost can change the math. Gasoline is easy but storage is annoying.
Diesel is great in some bigger installs but overkill for a lot of small
residential builds.
None of these are universal answers. I just hate seeing people spend
five figures on batteries and then treat the generator like an
afterthought from aisle seven at the farm store.
Mistakes that
make off-grid systems miserable
These are the ones I see most often:
Oversizing
the inverter and undersizing everything else
A giant inverter looks impressive right up until the battery and
solar array cannot support it for long.
Sizing from summer instead
of winter
Summer solar lies to you. Winter collects the debt.
Depending on
voltage alone for generator start
Voltage can sag under temporary load. SOC plus delay logic is usually
better if your equipment supports it.
Charging too slowly from
generator
If the generator is running, I want it doing useful work. A tiny
charger setting can double runtime and burn unnecessary fuel.
Treating the generator as
shameful
That attitude leads to under-planned backup integration. The
generator is a tool. Use the tool.
What I would
build for three common scenarios
Weekend cabin
- daily use: 4 to 8 kWh
- battery: 10 to 15 kWh LiFePO4
- solar: 2 to 4 kW
- generator: 3 to 5 kW inverter generator
I would keep this simple and quiet, with the generator mainly for
recovery after bad weather or heavy tool use.
Small full-time off-grid
home
- daily use: 12 to 20 kWh
- battery: 25 to 45 kWh
- solar: 6 to 10 kW
- generator: 8 to 12 kW
This is where I want the generator tied cleanly into the inverter
charger and ready to do real work without babysitting.
Larger home with shop loads
- daily use: 25+ kWh
- battery: 40 to 80 kWh
- solar: 10 to 18 kW
- generator: 12 to 20 kW, depending on charging power
and surge loads
At this size, I care even more about automation, fuel planning, and
not letting load growth outpace the original design.
Final answer
The best off-grid solar with generator backup system
is not the one that avoids generator use at all costs. It is the one
that uses solar for the daily work, batteries for resilience, and the
generator for recovery and insurance without drama.
If I were building for myself, I would size the battery for realistic
autonomy, size the solar array for the worst useful season, and then
choose a generator that matches the inverter charger and actual loads
instead of buying a giant machine for bragging rights.
That balance is what makes an off-grid system feel dependable instead
of fragile. You do not need purity. You need a system that still works
when the weather is bad and life gets inconvenient.
Bucky is a DIY solar enthusiast and network engineer who runs
PanelsAndPackets.com to share real-world solar knowledge without the
marketing fluff.