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Portable power station on floor powering a CPAP machine on the nightstand

Best Portable Power Station for CPAP Machines: A Practical Buyer's Guide

19 min read April 12, 2026 Timothy Garner
Contents

Key Takeaways

  • CPAP machines require pure sine wave power
  • Battery capacity: 300-500Wh covers one night without a humidifier
  • DC input extends runtime 20-30% compared to AC
  • LiFePO4 batteries last 2,500+ charge cycles
  • Solar charging lets you run indefinitely off-grid

Last updated: April 17, 2026

Quick Answer

For most CPAP users, the Jackery Explorer 600 V2 (640Wh, pure sine wave, LiFePO4) is the best balance of capacity, portability, and price, and it runs a 45W CPAP for about 12 hours on AC or 15 hours on DC. If you run a heated humidifier nightly or need multi-day backup, step up to the Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus (1,264Wh). The non-negotiable spec is pure sine wave output, and the real trade-off is battery capacity versus weight, not brand.

A CPAP machine keeps you breathing through the night. The benefits of CPAP therapy[1] depend entirely on consistent use, and consistent use requires reliable power. Without power, it stops. For the 30 million Americans living with sleep apnea[2], a power outage or camping trip is not just an inconvenience. It is a health problem. Miss one night and you wake exhausted. Miss several and the health consequences compound.

This guide is for:

  • CPAP and BiPAP users preparing for storm season or power outages
  • Campers and RV travelers who use CPAP nightly
  • Anyone who needs uninterrupted sleep therapy off the grid

The right portable power station for CPAP delivers reliable backup power whether the grid goes down or you are sleeping off the grid entirely. It runs silently at 0 dB, produces no fumes, and requires no special setup. Plug in, turn on, and your sleep therapy continues exactly as it would from a wall outlet.

This guide covers what to look for in a power station, which units work reliably with CPAP machines, and how to match battery capacity to your specific setup. Every unit below delivers pure sine wave power for CPAP machines and accepts solar charging, and is available through Mighty Generators as an authorized dealer with full manufacturer warranty support. Check with your HSA or FSA provider to see if CPAP-related power accessories qualify as eligible expenses under your specific plan.

Why CPAP Machines Need a Pure Sine Wave Power Station

Most CPAP machines require pure sine wave AC power, the same clean, smooth power your wall outlet delivers. Modified sine wave inverters, common in cheaper backup units, produce choppy power that can trigger error codes, shorten motor life, or shut your machine off mid-night.

The difference matters more than most people realize. A pure sine wave mimics the continuous wave that utility power delivers. A modified sine wave is stepped and approximated. Many household electronics tolerate the difference. CPAP motors and humidifier heating elements often do not. Symptoms include unusual humming, error codes on startup, or the machine cycling off unexpectedly during the night, robbing you of uninterrupted sleep.

Before buying anything, check your CPAP manual or the label on the power supply. It will list the input voltage range (typically 100-240V AC) and wattage. Most machines draw 30-60W without a humidifier, depending on settings. Add a heated humidifier and that number climbs to 120W or more.

These power stations offer clean pure sine wave output and can run most CPAP machines without issue. None of them will damage your CPAP devices or cause error codes.

CPAP machine on nightstand powered by portable power station during lightning storm
A 1000Wh+ station delivers uninterrupted power for multiple nights of CPAP therapy and keeps lights and a phone running during an extended outage.

How Much Battery Capacity Do You Need?

Battery capacity is measured in watt-hours (Wh). Divide the station capacity by your machine wattage to estimate run time.

A 512Wh station running a 45W CPAP (no humidifier) lasts roughly 10-11 hours. Enough for one full night with margin to spare. Add a heated humidifier and plan on twice the battery capacity.

  • CPAP without humidifier: 30-60W power usage. A 300-500Wh station covers one night.
  • CPAP with heated humidifier: 80-120W power usage. Plan for 500-1000Wh per night.
  • Multi-night or extended outages: 1000Wh+ with solar panel recharging.

BiPAP and APAP users: The same rules apply. BiPAP machines typically draw 30-80W depending on pressure settings and whether a heated humidifier is active. APAP machines adjust pressure automatically and may draw slightly more on average than a fixed-pressure CPAP. Check the wattage label on your machine and use the same capacity math. The power stations in this guide work with all three machine types.

Battery chemistry also matters. The four units below use LiFePO4 (lithium iron phosphate). LiFePO4 holds capacity better over time than older lithium cobalt designs and is rated for 2,500 to 3,500 charge cycles before capacity drops noticeably[4]. These are not disposable backup batteries. They are long-term backup power solutions that last through years of storm seasons and camping trips.

If you use a heated humidifier regularly, buy more capacity than the math suggests. How much power a humidifier adds varies depending on the machine settings, room temperature, and altitude. A 20% buffer gives you peace of mind when conditions are not ideal.

Scenario: 3-Night Camping Trip, CPAP Required

You have a weekend camping trip planned at a state park with no electrical hookups. Your ResMed AirSense 11 draws about 45W on AC without the humidifier. You sleep 7 hours per night. That is 45W x 7 hours = 315Wh per night. Over three nights: 945Wh total. A Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus (1,264Wh) covers all three nights with over 300Wh of margin. Using a DC cable drops the draw to roughly 35W, stretching total consumption to about 735Wh and leaving nearly half the battery untouched. Add a 100W solar panel and you recover 400-500Wh during the day, making four or five nights realistic without a wall outlet. Pack the station fully charged, test it at home for one night first, and you sleep confidently off-grid.

Station Capacity Low Setting (~30W) Medium Setting (~50W) High + Humidifier (~70W)
500Wh ~14 hrs (2 nights) ~8.5 hrs (1 night) ~6 hrs (partial night)
1000Wh ~28 hrs (4 nights) ~17 hrs (2 nights) ~12 hrs (1-2 nights)
1500Wh ~42 hrs (6 nights) ~25 hrs (3 nights) ~18 hrs (2-3 nights)
2000Wh ~56 hrs (8 nights) ~34 hrs (4-5 nights) ~24 hrs (3 nights)

Estimates assume 85% inverter efficiency on AC power. Actual runtime varies by machine model, altitude, and temperature. DC cable use adds 20-30% to these figures.

DC vs AC: How to Get More Runtime from Your CPAP

Most CPAP machines have a DC input port, a small round barrel jack on the back or side of the unit. If yours has one, use it.

Running a CPAP on DC power instead of AC skips one conversion step inside the power station, reducing power consumption and making the most of your power source. Without DC input, the station converts battery power to AC, then the CPAP's internal power supply converts it back to DC for the motor. Two conversions, two losses. DC input cuts that to one conversion, and the result is 20-30% more run time from the same battery.

A 512Wh station running a CPAP at 45W on AC might deliver 10 hours. The same station on DC often delivers 13 hours. On a car camping trip or backpacking trip where you are relying on a solar panel to recharge during the day, those extra hours matter.

To use DC power, you need a cable specific to your CPAP brand and model. ResMed, Philips Respironics, and DeVilbiss all use different connectors and DC input voltages (typically 12V or 24V). Search your machine model number plus "DC power cable" or "travel DC adapter" to find the right cable. The power stations in this guide include 12V car outlets that work with these cables.

Check your machine first. Some auto-adjusting (APAP) machines and heated humidifiers require AC even if a DC port is present. If the manual does not list DC input specs, use AC.

Quick Comparison: Best CPAP Power Stations

Station Capacity Weight Price Solar Input Est. CPAP Run Time Best For
EcoFlow RIVER 3 245Wh 7.7 lbs $199 110W max ~6 hrs AC / ~8 hrs DC Travel, one-night trips
Bluetti EB3A 268Wh 10.1 lbs $219 200W max ~6 hrs AC / ~8 hrs DC Budget, car camping
Jackery Explorer 600 V2 640Wh 14.1 lbs $429 200W max ~12 hrs AC / ~15 hrs DC Multi-night, all-around
Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus 1,264Wh 32 lbs $599 800W max 2-4+ nights Extended outages, home backup
Station Battery Capacity CPAP Runtime Portability Charging Speed Price Value
EcoFlow RIVER 3 ●●○○○ ●●○○○ ●●●●● ●●●●● ●●●●○
Bluetti EB3A ●●○○○ ●●○○○ ●●●●○ ●●●○○ ●●●●●
Jackery Explorer 600 V2 ●●●○○ ●●●●○ ●●●●○ ●●●●○ ●●●●○
Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus ●●●●● ●●●●● ●●○○○ ●●●●○ ●●●○○

Best Portable Power Stations for CPAP Use

The units below work with all major CPAP brands including ResMed AirSense 10, ResMed AirSense 11, Philips Respironics DreamStation 2, and DeVilbiss IntelliPAP. All output pure sine wave power, so no error codes and no motor damage regardless of which machine you run.

Best for Travel: EcoFlow RIVER 3 (245Wh)

The EcoFlow RIVER 3 weighs under 8 lbs and fits in a carry-on bag. Its 245Wh LiFePO4 battery delivers pure sine wave power from two AC outlets, making it a reliable CPAP backup battery for one-night trips or camping without a humidifier. Fast charging from a wall outlet tops it off in under an hour.

Run time estimate: 245Wh divided by a 45W CPAP draw gives roughly 5.4 hours on AC. Use a DC cable and that extends to around 7 to 8 hours, enough for most sleep cycles. For CPAP users on lower pressure settings or who sleep fewer than 7 hours, it covers a full night without needing to stretch run time.

The compact footprint fits between a nightstand and a wall, and it is easy to carry to a hotel room or campsite. Two AC outlets handle a CPAP and a phone charger at the same time. For travel CPAP users who need reliable CPAP battery power and portability on-the-go, the RIVER 3 is the simplest option in our lineup, designed for extended runtime across one full night.

EcoFlow RIVER 3 Portable Power Station 245Wh Fast Charging Solar - Compact Silent Backup Power
Best for Travel

EcoFlow RIVER 3 Portable Power Station 245Wh Fast Charging Solar - Compact Silent Backup Power

$199

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Best Budget Option: Bluetti EB3A (268Wh)

The Bluetti EB3A packs 268Wh of LiFePO4 capacity into a 10 lb unit with a 600W AC inverter. It runs a standard CPAP without a humidifier for one full night. Charges from a solar panel, a wall outlet, or a car port.

Rated for 2,500+ charge cycles before capacity drops, so it will outlast most CPAP devices connected to it. The 600W inverter handles a CPAP with margin to spare. For users on high pressure settings or those who sleep 8+ hours, run time is tight without a DC cable, so use DC input if your machine supports it.

Charging from a 12V car outlet while driving makes it practical for car camping and road trips. Top off during the drive and run on battery at the campsite. One of the most practical battery backups for CPAP users who want reliable performance without overspending.

BLUETTI EB3A Compact Portable Power Station 600W 268Wh LiFePO4
Best Budget Option

BLUETTI EB3A Compact Portable Power Station 600W 268Wh LiFePO4

$219

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Best All-Around: Jackery Explorer 600 V2 (640Wh)

The Jackery Explorer 600 V2 is the unit most CPAP users should start with. Its 640Wh LiFePO4 battery keeps your CPAP machine running for two full nights without a humidifier, or one night with a heated humidifier. At 14 lbs it stays portable. Accepts up to 200W of solar panel input, so a single panel tops it off well before sunset on a weekend camping trip. Two AC outlets, USB-C, and a car outlet cover everything at the bedside.

At 640Wh you have plenty of battery for two nights, and at 14.1 lbs it is easier to carry than larger 1000Wh units. If therapy runs long or pressure settings increase, there is capacity to absorb it without cutting the night short. Its 500W inverter (1,000W surge) handles CPAP machines and heated humidifiers comfortably within normal operating draw.

Wall charging reaches 80% in about 70 minutes. For a first power station that covers car camping, storm season backup, and occasional travel, this is the most versatile size in our lineup.

Jackery E600v2 Explorer 600 v2 Portable Power Station - 640Wh LFP Battery
Best All-Around

Jackery E600v2 Explorer 600 v2 Portable Power Station - 640Wh LFP Battery

$429

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Best for Extended Outages: Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus (1264Wh)

When a storm takes out the grid for several days, the Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus keeps sleep therapy going without interruption. Its 1,264Wh LiFePO4 battery delivers uninterrupted power for a CPAP with humidifier for two nights, or four or more nights without. Accepts up to 800W of solar panel input. Three AC outlets handle a CPAP, humidifier, and phone charger at the same time.

This unit also covers lights, a router, and small appliances during an outage. The CPAP is one of many essential devices it protects. For households where one or more family members relies on powered medical devices including CPAP, oxygen concentrator, or nebulizer, this is the station that covers everyone.

Additional battery modules can expand total capacity beyond the base 1,264Wh, giving the station a longer useful life as your backup power needs grow. At 32 lbs, it belongs in a bedroom corner, plugged in and ready.

Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus 1264Wh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station 2000W
Best for Extended Outages

Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus 1264Wh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station 2000W

$599

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CPAP and Solar: What You Need to Know

A solar panel extends CPAP camping power indefinitely on multi-day trips. Match panel wattage to the station's maximum solar input rating.

The Jackery Explorer 600 V2 accepts up to 200W of solar panel input. The Explorer 1000 Plus accepts up to 800W. A 100W panel in good sun adds roughly 5-6 hours of CPAP run time through the day, enough to recover from a night of use.

Keep panels clean, angle them toward the sun, and avoid partial shade. A shadow on one corner of a panel drops output across the whole array.

Weather planning matters. In overcast regions or during stretches of poor weather, a single solar panel may not fully recover a 245Wh station in a day. If your trip destination gets reliable sun, one panel covers a 600Wh station. If conditions are uncertain, pair a 1000Wh station with 200W of solar panels to stay ahead.

A solar panel also works as a permanent home backup answer. A station connected to roof panels or kept near a south-facing window stays charged without grid power. During a multi-day outage, solar charging removes the concern about running out entirely.

Browse our for bundles sized for extended off-grid use.

Traveling with a Portable CPAP Power Station

TSA allows portable power stations in carry-on bags[3] for flights within the US, with capacity limits. Stations under 100Wh are allowed without airline approval. Stations between 100Wh and 160Wh require airline approval but are generally permitted. Stations above 160Wh are not allowed on passenger aircraft.

Portable power station running a CPAP machine inside a camping tent
A compact power station keeps a CPAP running through a full night of car camping or backpacking without noise or fumes.

None of the four units above qualify for air travel under those rules. For flights, use a dedicated CPAP travel battery rated under 100Wh. Search for your machine brand plus "travel battery" or "DC battery pack". ResMed, Philips, and DeVilbiss all make or license compatible units. Most hotels and rental properties have outlets, and calling ahead to confirm removes the guesswork.

For car camping, backpacking access routes, and road trips, no restrictions apply. Every unit on this list handles vehicle transport, temperature swings, and repeated charging without issue.

  • Store the station at 50-60% charge for transport to reduce heat risk during a long drive.
  • Pack the AC cable and any DC adapter cables together in a labeled pouch.
  • Run a full overnight test at home before the trip to confirm run time with your specific machine and pressure settings.
  • Check your destination for outlet availability. Many campgrounds now offer electrical hookups for topping off backup batteries between nights.

How to Set Up Your CPAP with a Portable Power Station

Plug your CPAP power cord into an AC outlet on the station. Turn the station on to use your CPAP machine with reliable power for your CPAP exactly as it would draw from a wall outlet. Running your CPAP machine on battery power works exactly as it does at home.

  • Run a full-night test at home before a camping trip or storm season to confirm actual run time with your specific machine.
  • If your CPAP has a DC input port, use it. DC power skips the inverter and extends run time by 20-30%.
  • Disable the heated humidifier when running on limited battery. Most machines allow this without affecting therapy pressure.
  • Store the station at 40-60% charge if it sits unused for more than a few weeks.
  • Check the station charge level weekly during storm season. A station at 5% when the power goes out provides little backup power.
  • Good power management: drain the station below 10% and recharge fully every 3 months. This recalibrates the battery management system so charge readings stay accurate.

Using a Power Station as a Home CPAP Backup

A portable power station works as a permanent home backup for CPAP therapy, giving you reliable emergency power during a power outage at home. Keep it plugged in and it stays charged. During a short power blip or a multi-day outage, it switches to battery automatically. No setup required.

For home backup, larger units like the EcoFlow DELTA series or the Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus are the right call. Large enough to cover a multi-day outage, and useful enough to power lights, a router, and a phone at the same time, giving your family peace of mind during extended outages. Position it within reach of the CPAP power cord. A short extension cable gives placement flexibility. Keep it in a ventilated space away from bedding.

For households where multiple people depend on powered medical devices, a second station or a unit with expansion capacity removes single-point-of-failure risk. Two 1000Wh stations covering separate rooms is a more reliable setup than one large station with a long extension cord.

If you are also evaluating whole-home coverage, our includes options that scale from a bedside CPAP backup to full-home systems.

The Bottom Line

Choosing the right portable power station for CPAP use comes down to simple math: check your machine's wattage label, decide whether you run a heated humidifier, and multiply by the hours you sleep. Without a humidifier, most CPAP machines draw 30-60W. With one, plan for 80-120W. A 600Wh station covers two nights without a humidifier or one night with. A 1000Wh+ station handles multi-day outages.

For most CPAP users, the Jackery Explorer 600 V2 hits the right balance of capacity, portability, and price. It delivers pure sine wave power, accepts solar charging, and weighs under 15 lbs. If you need multi-day home backup or run a humidifier every night, step up to the Jackery Explorer 1000 Plus.

Run a full overnight test at home before relying on any station during a storm or camping trip. Knowing your exact runtime removes the guesswork and lets you sleep without worry.

References

  1. American Academy of Sleep Medicine. "CPAP Therapy Overview." aasm.org
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. "CPAP Machines: Consumer Guide." fda.gov
  3. Federal Aviation Administration. "Lithium Battery Packing Safety." faa.gov
  4. U.S. Department of Energy. "Lithium-Ion Battery Basics." energy.gov
  5. National Renewable Energy Laboratory. "Lithium Iron Phosphate Battery Performance." nrel.gov
  6. Jackery. "Explorer 600 V2 Specifications." jackery.com

Frequently Asked Questions

CPAP Power Basics
What size portable power station do I need for a CPAP machine?

For a CPAP without a humidifier, a 300-500Wh station covers one night. With a heated humidifier, plan for 500-1000Wh per night. For two or more nights between charges, or to run other devices alongside CPAP, 1000Wh gives you reliable backup power with solid margin.

Choosing a Power Station
Can I use any portable power station with my CPAP?

To run a CPAP machine safely, only use a station with pure sine wave AC output. Modified sine wave inverters can cause CPAP error codes, noisy operation, or motor damage. All four units in this guide output pure sine wave power. Verify this spec for any unit not listed here before connecting your machine.

Will a portable power station run a CPAP with a humidifier?

Yes, but heated humidifiers roughly double the power usage. The Jackery Explorer 600 V2 at 640Wh runs a CPAP with humidifier for about one night. For two or more nights, use the Explorer 1000 Plus or disable the humidifier on a smaller station.

What is the difference between a CPAP battery pack and a portable power station?

A dedicated CPAP battery pack is a small, lightweight unit designed for one machine. It is often under 100Wh, qualifies for air travel, and runs nothing else. A portable power station is larger, powers multiple CPAP devices and other equipment, and handles everything from phone charging to small appliances. For home backup power and multi-night camping, a portable power station gives you far more flexibility. For frequent air travel, a dedicated portable CPAP battery is the right tool.

What should I buy when I first start using a CPAP machine?

To choose the best CPAP battery backup for someone who just started using a CPAP machine, the Jackery Explorer 600 V2 is the right starting point. It offers enough CPAP battery power for two nights without a humidifier, accepts solar panel charging, and handles most travel scenarios. It delivers extended runtime, it is easy to carry at 14.1 lbs, and it covers other devices during an outage. Start here and expand capacity only if your needs grow.

Travel & Compliance
Is it safe to run a CPAP on a portable power station all night?

Yes, as long as the station outputs pure sine wave power and has enough capacity for your machine run time. Run a test at home before relying on the station during a storm or a remote trip so you know how it performs with your specific CPAP model.

Battery & Maintenance
Can I charge a portable power station with a solar panel while camping?

Yes. The Jackery Explorer 600 V2 accepts up to 200W of solar panel input. The Explorer 1000 Plus accepts up to 800W. One 100W panel in good sun adds hours of CPAP run time through the day. With 200W of panels you fully recover overnight use by early afternoon on a clear day.

How do I know if my CPAP requires pure sine wave power?

Check the CPAP manual or the power supply label. If it lists AC input voltage and no special requirements, assume pure sine wave is needed. Some newer CPAP models include universal switching power supplies that tolerate modified sine wave, but manufacturers rarely advertise this clearly. When in doubt, use pure sine wave. All four stations in this guide output pure sine wave, so connecting any of them to any CPAP is safe.

How do I get power for my CPAP without electricity?

A portable power station is the most reliable way to run your CPAP without grid electricity. Pair it with a solar panel for indefinite run time on extended trips. Charge the station fully at home before any trip or storm season. If your machine has a DC input port, use a DC cable instead of AC for 20-30% better efficiency. A dependable station with enough capacity functions like an uninterruptible power supply for your sleep therapy, keeping it running regardless of grid access.

About the Author

Timothy Garner

Founder, Mighty Generators — Dawsonville, Georgia

Timothy Garner founded Mighty Generators in 2023 after watching too many neighbors in North Georgia sit through ice storms and summer outages without a backup plan. Every brand on the site is personally curated, vetted for reliability, warranty support, and real ownership experience. His goal is simple: no one should go without power because they got bad advice or bought the wrong thing. As an authorized dealer for 23+ brands, he picks up the phone, asks the right questions, and makes sure you leave with the right solution. Reach him Mon-Fri 8am-6pm ET at (706) 701-8552.