Jackery is trying to make gas generators look old-fashioned. The company’s new HomePower series is built for households that want Jackery HomePower battery backup without fumes, noise, or the small thrill of wrestling with pull cords during a blackout. The lineup includes three models: the HomePower 3600 Pro Max, HomePower 2000 Plus v2, and HomePower 1000 v2.

The pitch is straightforward: plug-and-play backup, automated switchover, and a claimed 16-year lifespan. That combination puts Jackery in the same broad category as increasingly serious home battery systems from rivals such as EcoFlow, Anker Solix, and Bluetti, all of which are pushing portable power deeper into whole-home territory. The difference here is that Jackery is leaning hard into easy installation and a clear ladder of sizes rather than one sprawling all-in-one system.

Jackery HomePower 3600 Pro Max specs

The flagship model is the HomePower 3600 Pro Max, aimed at households that need backup for multiple rooms and bigger appliances. It starts with a 3584Wh base capacity and can be expanded to 43kWh, which Jackery says is enough to keep essential appliances running for up to nine days.

It also offers a 4000W output and can handle heavy-draw 120V and 240V appliances at the same time. The sub-10ms automated backup switchover is the sort of spec that sounds tiny until the lights go out; if it works as advertised, users should not have to think about a manual restore process in the middle of an outage.

HomePower 2000 Plus v2 and 1000 v2 details

The middle model, the HomePower 2000 Plus v2, scales from 2kWh to 12kWh and delivers 2400W of output. Jackery says it uses intelligent device prioritization, which should help it decide what stays on first instead of dumping power indiscriminately at everything plugged in.

  • HomePower 3600 Pro Max: 3584Wh base capacity, expandable to 43kWh, 4000W output
  • HomePower 2000 Plus v2: expandable from 2kWh to 12kWh, 2400W output
  • HomePower 1000 v2: 1024Wh capacity, built-in surge protection

The smallest unit, the HomePower 1000 v2, is pitched more toward connected home life than whole-house resilience. With 1024Wh of capacity and built-in surge protection, Jackery says it can keep home offices online for over 50 hours during a storm. That is a tidy answer to a very modern problem: the home office still has to function even when the grid decides not to.

Price and launch date

The HomePower series goes on sale on June 23, 2026, through Jackery’s official website and Amazon. Pricing is set at:

  • $2,999 for the HomePower 3600 Pro Max
  • $1,799 for the HomePower 2000 Plus v2
  • $849 for the HomePower 1000 v2

Jackery will also run a launch promotion from June 23 to June 26, with first-come, first-served discounts on individual units and bundled installation hardware. The timing is smart: battery backup products are getting easier to buy, but not exactly cheaper, so the opening sale may do more heavy lifting than the marketing copy.

The open question is whether Jackery can turn its consumer-friendly reputation into a serious home-backup business. The hardware is clearly chasing the same buyers who have been flirting with solar-plus-storage setups, but the real test will be whether households see these boxes as convenience toys or as the thing standing between dinner and a dead kitchen.

Source: 3dnews

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