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Anker SOLIX F2600 vs Anker SOLIX S2000

Real-world runtimes, scenario verdicts, and ownership costs compared — which wins for your use case.

Written by Gunner GustafsonUpdated

Whole-Home Backup Tester, Station Arena Test Desk

MethodologyReader-supported — we may earn from links (details)
Anker SOLIX F2600 Portable Power Station

Anker

SOLIX F2600

2,560Wh2,400W70.5 lb

3,942Power Score · Appliance Class

Check price →

$1499.00 list · direct from Anker

Anker SOLIX S2000 Portable Power Station

Anker

SOLIX S2000

2,009.6Wh1,500W35.7 lb

4,417Power Score · Appliance Class

Check price →

$699.99 list · direct from Anker

Spec deltas

Capacity
2,560Wh
2,009.6Wh
Output
2,400W
1,500W
Weight
70.5 lb
35.7 lb
Price
$1,499
$700
Cost / Wh
$0.59
$0.35
Cycle life
3,000
10,000
Solar input
1,000W
400W
01

Both carry the Anker name, but they're built for different buyers. The SOLIX F2600 (2,560Wh, 2,400W) and the SOLIX S2000 (2,010Wh, 1,500W) come from different product lines with different engineering priorities and a $799 price gap. The SOLIX S2000 has a slight edge, but the margin is close enough that your use case should break the tie.

What the spec gap means in practice: the SOLIX F2600's 2,400W inverter can run a window AC unit, a full-size fridge, or power tools. The SOLIX S2000's 1,500W inverter will flat-out refuse to start those appliances. On stamina, the SOLIX F2600 keeps a fridge alive for roughly 15 hours vs the SOLIX S2000's 11 hours. The cost? Portability. At 70.5 lbs, the SOLIX F2600 is heavy enough to make you think twice about moving it. The SOLIX S2000 at 35.7 lbs is something one person can actually carry.

Pick the SOLIX S2000 if you want maximum capability and room to grow. Go with the SOLIX F2600 if you primarily need it for weekend camping or 8-hour blackout. Most buyers overlook this: the SOLIX S2000 costs ~$0.03/kWh over its full lifespan, which adds up significantly over years of regular use. Keep scrolling for the full breakdown. The scenario verdicts below hold a few surprises.

02

Bench Notes

What each unit does well, where it falls short, and the trade-offs that matter.

Anker SOLIX F2600

With a massive 2,400W output (and 2,800W surge), the SOLIX F2600 can run high-wattage appliances like space heaters, hair dryers, and electric grills without tripping. Weighing in at 70.5 lbs, this is not a unit you want to carry far. It's best suited as a stationary backup or RV companion. A standout feature is the value proposition: at roughly $0.59 per watt-hour, it's one of the most cost-effective options on the market.

Strengths

  • +Larger battery capacity
  • +Higher AC output
  • +Faster solar charging

Trade-offs

  • Substantially more expensive (+$799) than the SOLIX S2000.
  • Significantly heavier (+34.8 lbs), making it harder to move.

Anker SOLIX S2000

The 1,500W inverter handles most daily devices like laptops, blenders, and TVs, but will struggle with heating elements that require over 1500W. A standout feature is the value proposition: at roughly $0.35 per watt-hour, it's one of the most cost-effective options on the market.

Strengths

  • +Costs $799 less
  • +Lighter by 34.8 lb

Trade-offs

  • Weaker inverter (-900W) limits appliance compatibility.
  • Sealed capacity — the SOLIX F2600 can add batteries to grow past 2,009.6Wh; this one can't.
03

Will It Power Your Gear?

Scenario math and per-appliance runtimes, modeled from the spec record.

Scenario verdicts

We ran the math on six real-world scenarios. Here's which unit survives your actual life.

SCN-01 · 2 nights · needs 2,100Wh

Weekend Camping

Two nights off-grid with essential comfort

SOLIX F2600

The SOLIX S2000 runs out of juice. It only has 1,708Wh usable, but this scenario needs 2,100Wh. The SOLIX F2600 covers it and still has 5h of phone charging left over.

Camping power station guide

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  Phone Charger 15W×6h · LED Lights 40W×8h · Box Fan 75W×14h · CPAP Machine 40W×16h

SCN-02 · 8 hours · needs 1,645Wh

8-Hour Blackout

Keep the essentials running through a night without power

SOLIX F2600

Both survive, but the SOLIX F2600 finishes at just 76% used. That's enough reserve for a second blackout night. The SOLIX S2000 at 96% leaves little margin if the outage runs longer than expected. In storm-prone areas, that remaining capacity is insurance.

Emergency blackout power guide

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  Fridge 150W×8h · Router + Modem 20W×8h · LED Lights (4 bulbs) 40W×6h · Phone Charger 15W×3h

SCN-03 · 8 hours · needs 320Wh

CPAP Overnight

Sleep therapy without interruption — the #1 medical use case

Either unit

Both are wildly overqualified for CPAP. You're using 19% or less. Save your money and buy whichever is cheaper; the extra capacity is completely wasted on a 40W overnight load. Put the savings toward a second battery for multi-night trips.

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  CPAP Machine 40W×8h

SCN-04 · 8 hours · needs 910Wh

Remote Workday

Full work day off-grid without power anxiety

SOLIX F2600

The SOLIX F2600 gives you a comfortable buffer at 42%. Enough to work late, join extra video calls, or charge a second device without worry. The SOLIX S2000 at 53% works but leaves less room for the unexpected. For daily remote work, that peace of mind matters.

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  Laptop 60W×8h · External Monitor 30W×8h · Router + Modem 20W×8h · Phone Charger 15W×2h

SCN-05 · 4 hours · needs 670Wh

Tailgate Party

Game day power for the crew

Either unit

Both handle game day easily. Since capacity isn't the deciding factor, consider weight: the lighter unit is easier to load into a truck bed. Also check if either has Bluetooth speaker-level noise. Fan sound matters in social settings.

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  Blender 400W×0.5h · LED TV (55") 80W×4h · Bluetooth Speaker 15W×4h · Phone Charger (×3) 45W×2h

SCN-06 · 24 hours · needs 4,685Wh

Van Life Daily

A full day of mobile living — the ultimate endurance test

Neither unit

Neither unit can fully handle this scenario (needs 4,685Wh). You'd need a higher-capacity station or to cut back on usage.

RV & van-life power guide

Battery budget usedlower = more headroom

LOAD  Mini-Fridge 150W×24h · Laptop 60W×4h · Phone Charger 15W×3h · LED Lights 40W×5h · Fan 75W×8h

The Load Test

RUNTIME = (Wh × 0.85) ÷ LOAD

None of the six scenarios above exactly yours? Build it. Toggle what you'd plug in; both units are tested against the combined draw.

Essentials

Comfort & Convenience

High-Draw Appliances

Test duration

8h

Continuous draw

205W

Projected runtime

SOLIX F260010.6h
75% of usable battery in 8h
SOLIX S20008.3h
96% of usable battery in 8h

For this load: SOLIX F2600 runs 10.6h vs 8.3h.

Check SOLIX F2600 price →

$1,499 list · direct from Anker

Modeled from the spec record — same math as the tables below. Methodology

Runtime by appliance

Real-world runtime estimates for common appliances, modeled at 85% inverter efficiency.¹

Essentials

The basics you need runningscale 0–145.1h
ApplianceSOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000
CPAP Machine40W draw
SOLIX F2600: 54.4h6 full nights
SOLIX S2000: 42.7h5 full nights
Phone Charger15W draw
SOLIX F2600: 145.1h
SOLIX S2000: 113.9h
Router + Modem20W draw
SOLIX F2600: 108.8h
SOLIX S2000: 85.4h
Starlink75W draw
SOLIX F2600: 29h
SOLIX S2000: 22.8h
LED Lights (4 bulbs)40W draw
SOLIX F2600: 54.4h
SOLIX S2000: 42.7h
Laptop (Working)60W draw
SOLIX F2600: 36.3h
SOLIX S2000: 28.5h

Comfort & Convenience

Makes off-grid life actually enjoyablescale 0–29h
ApplianceSOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000
Box Fan75W draw
SOLIX F2600: 29h
SOLIX S2000: 22.8h
LED TV (55")80W draw
SOLIX F2600: 27.2h
SOLIX S2000: 21.4h
Mini-Fridge150W draw
SOLIX F2600: 14.5h
SOLIX S2000: 11.4h
Electric Blanket200W draw
SOLIX F2600: 10.9h1 full night
SOLIX S2000: 8.5h1 full night

High-Draw Appliances

These reveal the real limitsscale 0–2.2h
ApplianceSOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000
Coffee Maker1000W draw
SOLIX F2600: 2.2h
SOLIX S2000: 1.7h
Microwave1200W draw
SOLIX F2600: 1.8h
SOLIX S2000: 1.4h
Space Heater1500W draw
SOLIX F2600: 1.5h
SOLIX S2000: 1.1h

¹ Runtime = (capacity × 0.85) ÷ appliance watts. Within each group, all bars share one time scale (the group's longest runtime), so lengths are comparable across appliances; identical runtimes collapse into a single blue/orange bar. Actual runtime varies with battery age, temperature, and simultaneous loads — see methodology.

Conclusion

July 10, 2026

Verdict: the SOLIX S2000, on Power Score margin

These two units are closely matched on individual specs, but our Power Score analysis gives the SOLIX S2000 the edge with a composite score of 4,417 vs 3,942.

Cost to ownSOLIX S2000$0.03 vs $0.20 /lifetime-kWh
Cycle lifeSOLIX S200010,000 vs 3,000 cycles
Continuous outputSOLIX F26002,400W vs 1,500W
Sticker priceSOLIX S2000$700 vs $1,499
PortabilitySOLIX S200035.7 vs 70.5 lb
Solar inputSOLIX F26001,000W vs 400W

Overall score margin: 3,942 vs 4,417 (−12.0%)

List prices as of July 10, 2026. The links below open Anker's current price.

Check SOLIX S2000 price

$699.99 list · direct from Anker

or check the SOLIX F2600 price$1499.00 list

Written by Gunner Gustafson, Whole-Home Backup Tester · Station Arena Test Desk · Updated July 10, 2026

04

Measured Data

Benchmark scores and the full spec record, side by side.

Benchmark scores

SOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000
Overall Power Score
3,942
4,417
UPSResponse & Reliability
3,099
4,239
Home BackupCapacity & Resilience
3,884
4,529
CPAPSleep Therapy Reliability
3,129
4,724
Solar GeneratorSolar Input & Efficiency
3,679
4,060
TailgatingOutlets & Portability
3,330
3,921

Not rated for both units (minimum threshold unmet): RV Living, Food Truck, Apartment Balcony, Camping.

Full specifications

SpecificationSOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000★ Our pick
Price
$1499.00
Check latest price
$699.99
Check latest price
Capacity (Wh)25602009.6
Output (W)24001500
Surge Peak2800W2600W
AC Outlets55
USB-C Charging Outputs100W100W
Solar Input (W)1000400
Weight (lbs)70.535.7
UPSYes (<20ms)Yes (10ms)
Charging Cycles300010000
ChemistryLiFePO4LiFePO4
Warranty (Years)55
Battery Expansion FeasibilityYesNo
App ControlYesYes
$/Watt Hour$.59$.35
Noise Level (db)N/ANot Specified
Solar Input TypeXT-60XT60i (11-60V)
USB-A Ports21
USB-C Ports32
Cost per Whᵈ$0.59/Wh$0.35/Wh

ᵈ Derived: price ÷ rated capacity.

Comparison ToolAdd more power stations, side by sideOpen Tool →
How these numbers are produced

Numeric verification

Every figure on this page traces to our spec database or arithmetic on it — no estimated numbers.

Owner claims

Statements about owner experience are cited to published reviews.

Runtime model

Runtime = (rated capacity × 0.85 inverter efficiency) ÷ device wattage. Solar recharge estimates assume panels deliver 70% of rated output. Cold weather, battery age, and stacked loads reduce real-world results.

Power Score

Computed from 14 published spec dimensions, weighted per use-case bench. Higher is better; a unit must meet a bench's minimum threshold to be rated.

Test Notes & Caveats

Hidden gotchas and advantages we spotted that you won't find on the product page.

[NOTE]

SOLIX F2600: 70.5 lbs Is a Commitment

At 70.5 lbs, this is manageable but not fun to carry. That's heavier than a large checked suitcase. Moving it from your car to a campsite requires some effort and flat terrain.

[NOTE]

SOLIX S2000: Fixed Capacity

The SOLIX S2000 is sealed at 2,010Wh — fine if that covers you, but it's the ceiling. The SOLIX F2600 starts at 2,560Wh and can add expansion batteries, so if your needs may climb toward partial-home backup, it has room to grow the SOLIX S2000 doesn't.

[ADVANTAGE]

Surge Power: Inverter Quality Indicator

The SOLIX S2000 has a 1.7× surge-to-continuous ratio vs the SOLIX F2600's 1.2×. A higher ratio (≥2×) means the inverter handles motor startup surges better. That's critical for fridges, AC compressors, and power tools that briefly draw 2-3× their rated wattage. The SOLIX F2600 may trip when starting these appliances even though its continuous wattage looks sufficient.

[NOTE]

UPS Speed: line-interactive (<10ms) vs standby (<20ms)

The SOLIX S2000 switches to battery in 10ms (line-interactive (<10ms)), while the SOLIX F2600 takes 20ms (standby (<20ms)). Safe for desktop PCs, routers, and CPAP machines. NAS drives are protected. This matters if you're using it as a home UPS for always-on equipment.

[NOTE]

Warranty Value Comparison

The SOLIX S2000 gives you 7.1 years of warranty per $1,000 spent, vs the SOLIX F2600's 3.3 years. That's 2.1× more coverage per dollar. An underrated factor if you're keeping this unit for years.

[NOTE]

Battery Lifespan in Real Years

The SOLIX S2000 is rated for 10,000 cycles vs 3,000. In real life: at daily use, that's 27.4 vs 8.2 years. At weekend use (twice a week), it's 96 vs 29 years. After hitting the cycle limit, the battery doesn't die. It drops to ~80% original capacity, which is still very usable.

Full record above — the Test Desk pick is the SOLIX S2000.

Check SOLIX S2000 price →or check the SOLIX F2600 price
05

Ownership Analysis

What happens after you buy — true cost of ownership, brand trust, and growth potential.

Lifetime value

SOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000

│ warranty ends · Reaching the cycle rating means ~80% capacity remains — degraded, not dead.

MetricSOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000
Purchase price$1499.00$699.99
Lifetime energy delivery7,680 kWh20,096 kWh
Cost per lifetime kWh$0.20$0.03
Cost per warranty year$300/yr$140/yr
Battery lifespan8.2yr daily · 28.8yr weekends · 57.7yr weekly27.4yr daily · 96.2yr weekends · 192.3yr weekly

Analyst note

The SOLIX S2000 wins on both sticker price and long-term value. At $0.03/kWh over its lifetime, it's meaningfully cheaper to own. Clear value winner.

Delivers each lifetime kWh for $0.17 less — check the SOLIX S2000 price →

Growth path

SOLIX F2600

EXPANDABLE

Supports Anker expansion batteries, so you can add capacity later without replacing the base unit — useful if your needs may climb past 2,560Wh.

Accepts up to 1,000W of solar. Enough for a serious multi-panel array.

Generous port selection supports complex multi-device setups.

Expansion batteries are Anker-specific. You're investing in the Anker ecosystem.

SOLIX S2000

FIXED CAPACITY

Fixed at 2,010Wh — a sealed, complete system. No expansion port, but that capacity already covers heavy and multi-day loads.

Accepts up to 400W of solar. Suitable for a 1-2 panel setup.

Adequate ports for most setups, but heavy users may want a power strip.

SOLIX F2600SOLIX S2000

Analyst note

The SOLIX S2000 is sealed at 2,010Wh, which is fine if that covers you. The SOLIX F2600 starts at 2,560Wh and can grow beyond it with Anker expansion batteries — real headroom the SOLIX S2000 doesn't have if your needs climb toward partial-home backup.

06

The Bottom Line

The full picture comes down to this. The SOLIX S2000 edges ahead on our overall analysis, but the margin is narrow enough that your specific use case should drive the decision. Review the scenario verdicts above — if the SOLIX F2600 wins in the scenarios that match your life, it's the right choice regardless of aggregate scores.

If neither the SOLIX F2600 nor the SOLIX S2000 feels like the right fit, your power needs probably sit outside what these two target. For lighter use — weekend camping or phone/laptop charging — you'd be overpaying for capacity you'll rarely tap. Consider a unit in the 500–1,500Wh range instead. Prices on portable power stations fluctuate frequently. Both Anker discount regularly, so check the current price before committing. Prime Day and Black Friday pricing typically drops 20-30%.

07

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers drawn from the spec record and cited owner research.

Is the SOLIX F2600 worth $799 more than the SOLIX S2000?

The short answer: yes, if you'll actually use the extra capability. The SOLIX F2600 costs $799 more, but that premium buys you 550.4Wh more battery capacity (that's 3 extra hours of running a mini-fridge); 900W higher AC output (opening the door to more demanding appliances); 600W faster solar charging for quicker off-grid recovery. On a cost-per-watt-hour basis, you're paying $0.59/Wh vs $0.35/Wh. For regular use, we'd pay the premium.

How does the 550.4Wh capacity difference actually affect daily use?

The SOLIX F2600's 2,560Wh battery keeps a mini-fridge running for roughly 15 hours vs the SOLIX S2000's 11 hours. Both can handle a full 8-hour blackout setup (fridge + router + lights + phone charging ≈ 1,645Wh), but the SOLIX F2600 finishes with significantly more margin. That matters if conditions aren't ideal or the outage runs long. What specs don't mention: runtime drops 20-30% in cold weather (below 32°F/0°C) as battery chemistry slows down. The SOLIX F2600's extra capacity provides a critical cold-weather buffer. For occasional phone and laptop charging, both are overkill. This gap only matters for sustained, multi-appliance use.

Can I actually carry the SOLIX F2600, or is the SOLIX S2000 the only portable option?

Neither is "portable" in any hiking sense. The SOLIX S2000 (35.7 lbs) and the SOLIX F2600 (70.5 lbs) are both appliances you place and leave. The 34.8-lb difference matters when loading into a vehicle or moving between rooms, but that's about it. If true portability is your priority, look at units under 20 lbs in a different class entirely.

How fast can each unit recharge from solar panels in real conditions?

On paper, the SOLIX F2600 accepts 1,000W vs the SOLIX S2000's 400W of solar input. What the spec sheet won't tell you: solar panels typically deliver only 60-80% of their rated output due to panel angle, cloud cover, and temperature. In realistic conditions, expect full recharge in about 3.7 hours for the SOLIX F2600 and 7.2 hours for the SOLIX S2000. That gap widens on cloudy days, when the SOLIX F2600's higher input ceiling captures more of whatever sunlight is available. One more thing: summer gives you ~7 productive solar hours per day. Winter drops to ~4. If solar is your primary recharge method, the SOLIX F2600's advantage is substantial.

"10,000 vs 3,000 cycles" — what does that actually mean for me?

In real years: the SOLIX S2000 (10,000 cycles) lasts 27.4 years at daily use, 96 years at weekend use (twice a week), or 417 years at twice-monthly camping trips. The SOLIX F2600 (3,000 cycles): 8.2 years daily, 29 years weekends, or 125 years twice-monthly. What most people miss: hitting the cycle limit doesn't kill your battery. Capacity drops to about 80%. Your 2,009.6Wh unit becomes a ~1,608Wh unit. Still very usable. For weekend users, both batteries will outlast the warranty by years.

What if I need more capacity than the SOLIX S2000's 2,009.6Wh later?

The SOLIX S2000 is sealed at 2,009.6Wh, so if you expect your needs to climb, the SOLIX F2600 is the more future-proof pick: it starts at 2,560Wh and adds Anker-compatible batteries without replacing the base unit. That said, "not expandable" isn't a flaw on its own — if 2,009.6Wh comfortably covers your loads, the SOLIX S2000 is a complete unit, not a downgrade.

Bottom line: should I buy the SOLIX F2600 or the SOLIX S2000?

We'd buy the SOLIX S2000. Strong value at a lower price, and for most real-world use cases the spec gaps don't translate to meaningful capability gaps. The SOLIX F2600 makes sense only if you specifically need its higher capacity for demanding sustained loads like full-home backup or commercial use.

Check SOLIX S2000 price →

Where to buy

SOLIX F2600

Anker SOLIX F2600

$1499.00

Check current price

$1499.00 list · direct from Anker

SOLIX S2000

Anker SOLIX S2000Pick

$699.99

Check current price

$699.99 list · direct from Anker

Prices may vary by retailer and are subject to change.