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Comparison

Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 vs EcoFlow DELTA 2: Which Should You Buy? (2026)

At a glanceJackery Explorer 1000 v2EcoFlow DELTA 2
Rating★★★★⯨ 4.6/5★★★★⯨ 4.6/5
Price$499-$799$499-$699
Best forCampers and homeowners who want the lightest, simplest 1kWh backup and don't need to run 1800W+ appliances.People who value the fastest recharge and want a system they can expand with extra batteries later.
GuaranteeAmazon return policy appliesAmazon return policy applies
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Both of these sit at the top of the 1kWh portable power station class, both use LiFePO4 batteries, both carry 4.6 ratings, and on a typical sale day both land in the same $499–$600 window. So price won't settle this. The real difference is one number: the inverter. The DELTA 2 runs 1800W — and its X-Boost mode stretches to 2200W on resistive loads like kettles and hair dryers — while the Explorer 1000 v2 tops out at 1500W.

Everything else follows from what each company traded to get there. Jackery kept the unit light (about 23.8 lbs, versus roughly 27 for the EcoFlow) and pushed cycle life to a 4,000-cycle rating. EcoFlow went for raw speed and headroom: 0–80% charge in about 50 minutes, and the option to bolt on extra batteries up to 3kWh later.

The picks

Portable Power Stations ★★★★⯨ 4.6/5

Jackery Explorer 1000 v2

A light, fast-charging 1kWh LiFePO4 station that's the easy default for camping and short outages.

$499-$799 · Amazon return policy applies

The Explorer 1000 v2 is the simpler machine. 1070Wh, a 1500W pure sine inverter, roughly 1.7 hours to a full charge on AC (about an hour in the app's emergency mode). That 1500W ceiling covers a fridge, a microwave, a coffee maker, a pile of laptops and phones — the things most people actually plug in during an outage or at a campsite. The 4,000-cycle rating means the battery will likely outlast your interest in it. What it won't do is run high-draw resistive appliances, and its 500W solar cap means off-grid recharging is steady rather than fast.

Portable Power Stations ★★★★⯨ 4.6/5

EcoFlow DELTA 2

A fast-charging 1024Wh station whose X-Boost trick lets it punch above its 1800W rating.

$499-$699 · Amazon return policy applies

The DELTA 2 is the more capable machine and the more ambitious one. 1024Wh — slightly less storage than the Jackery — but the 1800W inverter plus X-Boost is a real, felt difference in a kitchen or on a job site. Charging is the other headline: 80% in about 50 minutes off the wall, full in roughly 80. And if 1kWh turns out not to be enough, you add a battery instead of replacing the unit, up to 3kWh total. The costs: about three more pounds, a 3,000-cycle rating instead of 4,000, and a fan you'll hear when it's working hard. The 5-year warranty is a genuine point in its favor.

How to actually decide

Ask one question first: will you ever plug in something that pulls more than 1500W? Kettles, hair dryers, space heaters, most toaster ovens. If yes, the decision is over — buy the DELTA 2, because no amount of Jackery polish fixes a tripped inverter. If no, the Jackery's lighter body and longer-lived cells make it the better pure camping-and-outage box.

Second question: is this the start of a system or the end of one? The DELTA 2's expandability matters if you're building toward serious home backup. The Jackery is a finished product; what you buy is what you'll have.

Charge speed is the tiebreaker people overrate. Fifty minutes versus roughly a hundred sounds dramatic, but both are quick enough to top up before a storm or between stops on a road trip. Don't pay for speed in extra weight you'll carry for years.

Who should skip both

If your goal is whole-home backup — furnace, well pump, central AC — neither unit is the answer. You're shopping in the wrong class; look at 3kWh-plus systems or a transfer-switch setup instead. On the other end, if you only charge phones and run lights while camping, both are overkill, and a smaller, cheaper station will do the same job for half the money.

Bottom line

Near-identical price, same chemistry, same rating. Buy the Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 if you'll carry it more often than you'll stress it. Buy the EcoFlow DELTA 2 if you'll ever run big loads or want room to grow into a larger system. Most campers end up happier with the Jackery; most home-backup buyers end up happier with the EcoFlow.

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.