RV Boondocking Power Budget: How Many Watt-Hours Do You Really Need?

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The uncomfortable truth about boondocking: most first-timers run out of power on night two, and it is never the appliance they expected. It is not the TV — it is the fridge, the furnace fan, and the water pump quietly running while they sleep. Budget those first and the rest is easy.

The big four (in order of appetite)

LoadDrawDaily reality
Fridge (12V compressor)40-60W duty-cycled600-900Wh/day — the king of consumption
Furnace blower (cold nights)~80W while running300-600Wh/night in shoulder season
Lights, pump, fans, chargersvaries300-500Wh/day combined
Kitchen (induction, coffee, microwave)1,000-1,800W bursts400-800Wh/day if you cook electric

Typical two-person rig, modest habits: 1.6-2.8kWh per day. That number is why weekend batteries frustrate boondockers and why 3kWh-class stations exist.

Calculate yours

Boondocking budget calculator







Matching the budget to hardware

Five habits worth more than hardware

  1. Cook the big meal on propane; save electric for coffee and quick reheats.
  2. Chase shade for the rig, sun for the panel — cooling load down, harvest up.
  3. Charge everything while driving. Alternator miles are free electrons.
  4. Furnace to 55°F at night + good bedding beats 68°F and a dead battery at 5 a.m.
  5. Know your gauge. Check state-of-charge each morning; adjust the day accordingly, not the last hour.

FAQ

Why watt-hours instead of amp-hours?

Amp-hours mean nothing without voltage. Watt-hours are honest — every appliance and every battery speaks them directly.

Does the RV converter waste power?

Yes — older converters idle away 20-40W constantly. Powering DC loads straight from a power station skips that tax.

Air conditioning while boondocking?

The honest answer: 2-3 hours per 3kWh. AC boondocking is a soft-start unit, maximum battery, maximum solar conversation — budget accordingly or chase elevation instead.

Estimates reflect typical mid-size RV appliances — verify your own with each device's label or a DC watt meter.