Portable Solar Panels: What to Check Before You Buy
The most common portable solar panel mistake is buying by wattage alone without checking whether the panel is compatible with the device you plan to charge. A 200W panel that uses the wrong connector, outputs the wrong voltage, or exceeds the device's maximum solar input will underperform or not work at all. Compatibility comes before capacity.
- Check compatibility first: the panel's output voltage and connector must match your power station's solar input specifications.
- Then check wattage: more watts = faster charging, but only up to the station's maximum solar input.
- Expect 70–80% of rated output in real Australian conditions — a 100W panel delivers ~70–80W in good sun.
- Portable panels do not connect to your home's grid or rooftop solar system. They charge a power bank or power station directly.
Check 1: Compatibility with your power station
Every portable power station has a maximum solar input rated in watts and a required voltage range. Matching the panel to these specifications is not optional — it is what makes the system work.
Where to find these numbers:
- Your power station's manual or spec sheet, under "Solar input" or "PV input"
- Typical specifications: 12–60V input voltage, 100–400W maximum solar input
Where to find the panel's numbers:
- The panel's product page or label: "Open circuit voltage (Voc)" and "Short circuit current (Isc)"
- The output connector type — MC4, Anderson, DC barrel, or brand-specific
Check 2: Wattage and charging time
Once compatibility is confirmed, the right wattage depends on how quickly you need the station charged.
Estimate: Station capacity (Wh) ÷ Panel output (W) × 1.25 (efficiency loss) = approximate hours to full charge
| Panel wattage | 300Wh station | 1,000Wh station |
|---|---|---|
| 60W | ~6 hours | ~21 hours |
| 100W | ~4 hours | ~13 hours |
| 200W | ~2 hours | ~6 hours |
These estimates assume ideal sun conditions. Real-world performance in Australian conditions is typically 70–80% of rated wattage due to angle, temperature and partial cloud.
For camping and outage recharging: a 100W panel recharges a 300Wh station in one good afternoon of sun — enough for daily cycling during a campsite stay or multi-day grid outage.
Check 3: Form factor and portability
Portable solar panels come in two main forms:
Foldable panels with a carry handle — most popular for camping and caravanning. Fold to roughly suitcase size, unfold to lean against a surface or stake into the ground. Weights range from 3kg (100W) to 7kg+ (200W).
Rigid framed panels — lighter and more durable than foldable models of the same wattage, but harder to store and transport. Better for semi-permanent setups in a caravan or on a boat.
For genuine portability — loading and unloading from a car for camping — foldable panels are the practical choice for most buyers.
Check 4: Weather and temperature performance
All portable panels lose efficiency at high temperatures (above ~25°C the rated output begins dropping — relevant in Australian summer conditions). Monocrystalline panels generally perform better in heat than polycrystalline.
IP rating matters for rain and dust resistance. If the panel will be used at campsites through rain events, look for IP67 or similar water resistance on the connectors and junction box.
What portable solar panels do not do
- They do not connect to the home grid — a portable panel charges a power station or power bank only, not your home's electrical system
- They do not replace rooftop solar — a 200W portable panel generates roughly 800Wh on a good day; a rooftop system generates 20–40× that
- They do not work at night — they require sunlight to generate output
- No installation, no electrician, no landlord permission
- Dual use: camping and home outage recharging
- Genuine self-sufficiency for power stations during extended off-grid periods
- Works anywhere with sun, including remote areas with no grid access
- Must be manually positioned for best sun angle throughout the day
- Output varies with cloud cover, angle and temperature
- Compatible only with stations that match the panel's voltage output
- Does not help with grid bill reduction — charges only the connected device
Check the power station's maximum solar input voltage and wattage before buying any panel. Then match panel wattage to how quickly you need the station recharged. For most camping and outage scenarios, a 100W foldable panel striking a balance of weight, size and charge speed is the right starting point.
Browse Portable Power for power stations and portable solar panels.

