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Comparison

DJI Power 1000 vs Bluetti AC180: Which Should You Buy? (2026)

At a glanceDJI Power 1000Bluetti AC180
Rating★★★★⯨ 4.6/5★★★★⯨ 4.5/5
Price$599-$999$449-$699
Best forDrone pilots, photographers, and creators who want the highest output and quietest operation.Home backup buyers who want maximum capacity per dollar and don't move the unit often.
GuaranteeAmazon return policy appliesAmazon return policy applies
Check Today's Price →Check Today's Price →

These two solve the same problem — roughly a kilowatt-hour of lithium iron phosphate in a box — but they're built for different lives. The DJI Power 1000 is the road unit: more sustained AC output (2200W against the Bluetti's 1800W), noticeably quieter, and it drinks solar faster with up to 800W of input. The Bluetti AC180 is the stay-home unit: a slightly bigger 1152Wh battery, about 35 pounds of it, and usually a hundred-plus dollars cheaper. That's the whole comparison in one breath. The rest is deciding which trade-offs you'll actually feel.

Neither is a weak product. The DJI rates 4.6, the Bluetti 4.5, and both run LFP cells rated for thousands of charge cycles — call it a decade of regular use either way. So build quality doesn't settle this. Price and use pattern do.

The picks

Portable Power Stations ★★★★⯨ 4.6/5

DJI Power 1000

A quiet, high-output 2200W station with fast 800W solar input, built for creators and drone users.

$599-$999 · Amazon return policy applies

The Power 1000's case is simple: it does more, more quietly, for more money. 2200W sustained (2600W peak) is real headroom — you stop thinking about what you can plug in. Noise as low as 23dB means it can sit inside a tent or next to a recording rig without announcing itself, and that matters more than spec sheets suggest; plenty of power stations sound like a laptop with the fans pinned. The 800W solar ceiling refills it from panels in well under two hours of decent sun, and the 140W USB-C port fast-charges serious laptops. The catches: it typically runs $599–$999, the accessory ecosystem is thinner than Jackery's or EcoFlow's and leans toward DJI's own gear, and a V2 revision exists — confirm exactly which model you're ordering before you pay.

Portable Power Stations ★★★★⯨ 4.5/5

Bluetti AC180

A slightly larger 1152Wh battery with a 2700W surge ceiling, often the cheapest of the bunch.

$449-$699 · Amazon return policy applies

The AC180's case is value. It has the bigger battery at 1152Wh, it's frequently the cheaper unit at $449–$499 on sale, and its Power Lifting mode surges to 2700W — enough to start heating loads that stall other 1800W machines. Read the fine print on that surge, though: it only helps resistive loads like heaters and kettles, not motor-driven gear like fridge compressors or power tools, which need genuine inverter headroom rather than a heating trick. Ports are generous — four AC outlets, two 100W USB-C, USB-A, a 12V car socket. The real cost is mass. At roughly 35 pounds this is a unit you place, not one you carry, and Bluetti's app is workable but not the slickest in the category.

How to actually choose

Ask one question: does this thing live in one spot? If it waits in a closet for outages or sits under a desk as backup, buy the AC180 and pocket the difference — you get more watt-hours per dollar, and the weight never matters if you're not lifting it. If it rides in a vehicle, powers a shoot, or runs anywhere noise is a problem, the DJI earns its premium through output, silence, and solar speed. Drone pilots specifically should lean DJI; the fast-charge support for their own batteries is the point of the product.

Skip both if what you actually need is whole-home backup. A kilowatt-hour runs a fridge for hours, not a house for days — that's transfer-switch, multi-kilowatt territory, and no suitcase-sized station gets you there. And skip the DJI if you'll never plug in a panel and don't care about noise; you'd be paying for headroom you won't touch.

Bottom line

Stationary and price-sensitive: AC180. Mobile, noise-sensitive, or solar-heavy: Power 1000. Prices on both swing constantly, so check them the day you buy — a deep AC180 discount ends this debate, and a rare Power 1000 sale nearly does too.

As an Amazon Associate, Home Energy Lab earns from qualifying purchases. Home Energy Lab is reader-supported. Some links on this site are affiliate links — we may earn a commission if you buy through them, at no extra cost to you. We only feature gear we'd recommend to a friend, and our opinions are our own.