
BLUETTI FridgePower Review


Most home battery backups are built around the question: "how do I power everything?" The BLUETTI FridgePower asks a more focused question — "what if I just kept the fridge running?" It's a surprisingly refreshing premise, and the execution is clever enough to take seriously.
The Concept: Smarter Than It Sounds
The FridgePower is a slim 2kWh LFP (lithium iron phosphate) battery slab designed to sit on top of your refrigerator — occupying what engineers apparently call "dead space" — or mount flat against a wall. It's purpose-built as a single-appliance UPS, with a secondary outlet for additional small devices. At 2kWh, Bluetti estimates roughly 21 hours of backup for the average refrigerator. That's a full day of protection without touching grid power.

What makes the architecture interesting is the bypass-first design: the FridgePower sits passively on grid power without cycling the battery. It only kicks in when the grid drops. This matters for LFP longevity — you're not grinding through charge cycles every single day just to be "ready." Smart.
Solar Input and Expandability
The 1kW solar input via XT60 connector (12–60V, up to 20A) is the feature that caught the r/SolarDIY community's attention. As one commenter noted, this could be "an easy entry point into some DIY solar" — buy the base unit, add a small panel array, and you've got a genuinely self-sustaining food preservation system without the complexity of a whole-home solar install.
The battery is also expandable up to 8kWh, which means you can stack capacity over time rather than committing to a large upfront purchase. For hurricane preppers and budget-conscious buyers alike, that modularity is real value.

Alexa and Google Assistant voice control round out the smart-home credentials — a nice touch for a product that otherwise stays invisible until you need it.
What the Community Is Saying
Early access reviewers on Reddit and CleanTechnica seem genuinely impressed by the form factor and the bypass architecture. The r/SolarDIY thread called it out as a practical entry point for solar newcomers, and the homeassistant community flagged the smart assistant integration as a legitimate selling point.
That said, a few fair concerns surfaced:
- One Reddit commenter raised a valid point about fridge-top ventilation: "Isn't that so-called dead space very important to airflow and temperature management?" Bluetti hasn't publicly addressed this in detail yet — worth checking your specific fridge model before assuming the top mount works for you.
- Price is still TBD as of early access. Until pricing is confirmed, it's impossible to say whether the value proposition holds up against buying a general-purpose power station and simply plugging the fridge into that.
- The secondary outlet is a nice bonus, but this is decidedly not a whole-home solution. If you need to run a well pump, CPAP, sump pump, or anything beyond the fridge and a few USB devices, you'll need to look at something like the Jackery 5000 Plus or a full Anker Solix setup.

Who This Is Actually For
The FridgePower fits a very specific buyer profile: someone who wants reliable food preservation during outages, lives in an apartment or smaller home without space for a full power station, and ideally wants to dabble in solar without going full off-grid. It's not for serious preppers who need 240V appliances or multi-day whole-home coverage — those folks should look at the Jackery 5000 Plus or Tesla Powerwall territory.
For a household that lost power for 20 hours and watched the fridge creep toward unsafe temps? This product was designed for exactly that scenario.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How long will the BLUETTI FridgePower keep a refrigerator running?
A: Bluetti estimates approximately 21 hours of backup for an average refrigerator on the base 2kWh configuration. Larger or older (less efficient) fridges will see shorter runtimes.
Q: Can the FridgePower power more than just the refrigerator?
A: Yes — it includes a secondary outlet for additional devices, but it is primarily designed as a refrigerator UPS. It is not intended to power high-draw appliances like well pumps, electric dryers, or HVAC systems.
Q: Does the FridgePower support solar charging?
A: Yes, via an XT60 connector supporting 12–60V input at up to 20A, for a maximum solar input of 1kW.
Q: Is the battery expandable?
A: The base unit is 2kWh and can be expanded up to 8kWh with additional battery modules, allowing you to build capacity over time.
Q: When is the BLUETTI FridgePower available and how much does it cost?
A: As of the early access period, Bluetti indicated availability "as early as June" via their product page. Pricing had not been confirmed at the time of this review — check the Bluetti website for current availability and pricing.

The BLUETTI FridgePower is a genuinely creative product solving a real problem in an elegant way. The bypass-first design, LFP chemistry, solar input, and modular expansion tick all the right boxes on paper. The main unknowns — price and the ventilation question for fridge-top mounting — need answers before you can call this a no-brainer buy. But the concept is sound, and if the price lands reasonably, this could become the easiest "starter" home backup product on the market.
— Home Lead Editor 2, CPrice
Posted on June 9, 2026