Anker SOLIX F2000 Review: The Premium Contender

Updated: May 2026 • 8 min read

Anker is the new kid on the portable power station block, but they came in swinging. The SOLIX F2000 (formerly the PowerHouse 767) is their flagship 2,048Wh unit, and it brings some genuinely innovative features that the old guard — Jackery, EcoFlow, Bluetti — should be nervous about. I've been testing one since February 2026, including a week-long off-grid cabin trip. Here's how it stacks up.

Quick Specs Overview

SpecAnker SOLIX F2000
Battery Capacity2,048Wh (LiFePO4 — Anker InfiniPower)
AC Output2,400W continuous / 4,800W surge
AC Outlets4× 120V (NEMA 5-20R)
USB Ports2× USB-C 100W, 2× USB-A 18W, 1× USB-A 12W
Car Socket1× 12V/10A
TT-30 RV OutletNo
Solar Input1,000W max (11-60V, 25A MPPT)
AC Charging0-100% in ~1.4 hours (1,800W via AC)
UPS ModeYes — under 20ms transfer
ExpandableYes — up to 4,096Wh with 1× expansion battery
Weight67.2 lbs (30.5 kg)
Cycle Life3,000 cycles to 80%+ (10-year lifespan claim)
App ControlWiFi + Bluetooth via Anker app
Warranty5 years
Street Price (2026)~$1,599

What I Loved

10-Year Lifespan Claim (And It's Backed Up)

Anker calls their battery tech "InfiniPower" and claims a 10-year lifespan with everyday use. The chemistry is LiFePO4 (same as everyone else), but Anker uses thicker electrodes and a proprietary thermal management system. What's convincing is the 5-year warranty — the best in the business. Jackery and Bluetti offer 5 years too, but Anker's is a full replacement warranty, not prorated.

Suitcase Handle Design Is Genius

Instead of a telescoping luggage handle that extends from the top (and makes you tilt the entire 67-pound unit to roll it), the SOLIX F2000 has a built-in suitcase-style handle on the side. You lift it like a briefcase and the wheels are positioned so it rolls upright. It's far more stable on uneven ground. On a gravel path to my campsite, it was noticeably easier to maneuver than the Jackery or EcoFlow.

Fastest UPS Transfer in Class

The SOLIX F2000 switches to battery in under 20 milliseconds. That's faster than the EcoFlow Delta Pro (30ms) and dramatically faster than Jackery (400ms+) or Bluetti (200ms+). If you're using this as a UPS for a desktop computer, NAS server, or CPAP machine, the Anker is the best option. My PC stayed running through a simulated power cut with zero interruption.

Surprisingly Quiet Under Load

Anker clearly put engineering effort into thermal management. Even at 2,000W continuous load (running a space heater for testing), the fans were quieter than the EcoFlow Delta Pro and roughly on par with the Jackery 2000 Plus. The heat dissipation design routes air through side vents rather than a single loud fan, which spreads the noise across a wider frequency range.

1.4-Hour AC Charging Is Brilliant

With 1,800W AC input, the F2000 charges from dead to full in about 85 minutes. That's faster than the Jackery 2000 Plus (2 hours) and competitive with the EcoFlow Delta Pro (1.8 hours, but with a much larger battery). If you have access to grid power and need a quick top-up before heading out, this is a real quality-of-life feature.

What Could Be Better

Only 4 AC Outlets

The Bluetti AC200P gives you six. The Jackery gives you five. Anker gives you four. It's not a dealbreaker, but if you're powering a group campsite with multiple devices, you'll probably need a power strip. The outlets are well-spaced (unlike some competitors where bulky plugs block adjacent sockets), but the count is low for the price.

No RV 30A Outlet

Like the Jackery, the Anker SOLIX F2000 lacks a TT-30 RV outlet. If you're an RV owner, this is a significant limitation. The Bluetti AC200P and EcoFlow Delta Pro both include one. You can use an adapter from the 20A outlet, but you're limited to 2,400W total — not ideal for running an RV air conditioner.

Expansion Limited to One Battery

You can add one SOLIX expansion battery to double your capacity to 4,096Wh. But that's the ceiling. Jackery lets you stack up to 5 expansion packs (24kWh) and EcoFlow goes up to 25kWh with their ecosystem. Anker's system is simpler and cleaner, but far less expandable for serious off-grid setups.

The App Is Still Catching Up

Anker's app is functional but bare-bones compared to EcoFlow's. You can monitor battery percentage, input/output wattage, and toggle ports on/off. But there's no scheduling, no energy usage history beyond a simple graph, and no smart home integration (Alexa/Google). For a company that makes some of the best charging accessories in the world, the software feels like an afterthought.

Pros

  • Fastest UPS transfer in class (under 20ms) — keeps PCs alive
  • Best-in-class suitcase handle design for portability
  • Quiet operation even under heavy load
  • Blazing fast 1.4-hour AC charging (1,800W input)
  • 10-year lifespan claim with 5-year full warranty
  • 1,000W solar input — good, not great
  • GaN (Gallium Nitride) power electronics for efficiency
  • Surge protection built into all outlets

Cons

  • Only 4 AC outlets — fewer than competitors at this price
  • No TT-30 RV outlet
  • Expansion capped at 4,096Wh (one extra battery)
  • App is bare-bones — no scheduling or smart home integration
  • Heavier than Jackery 2000 Plus (67.2 vs 61.5 lbs)
  • No wireless charging pads
  • Fewer accessory options than EcoFlow ecosystem

Real-World Performance

Week-Long Off-Grid Cabin

I used the SOLIX F2000 for 7 days at an off-grid cabin with two 200W solar panels (400W total input). Daily load: 12V fridge (55W), Starlink (75W for about 6 hours/day), LED lights, phone/laptop charging, and occasional use of a 900W coffee maker. With solar input averaging 350W during daylight hours, the battery never dropped below 40%. I could have gone indefinitely with that setup.

Home Office UPS Test

I ran my home office through the F2000 in UPS mode for a week: desktop PC (150W avg), 27" monitor (45W), LED desk lamp, and internet modem/router. During two simulated outages, the switchover was seamless — my PC didn't blink. In a real outage, the F2000 would power this setup for about 10 hours.

Anker SOLIX F2000 vs The Competition

FeatureAnker F2000Jackery 2000 PlusEcoFlow Delta ProBluetti AC200P
Capacity2,048Wh2,042Wh3,600Wh2,000Wh
AC Output2,400W3,000W3,600W2,000W
UPS Transfer<20ms~400ms<30ms~200ms
AC Charge Time1.4 hrs2 hrs1.8 hrs5-6 hrs
Solar Input1,000W1,400W1,600W700W
Expandable To4,096Wh24kWh25kWh8,192Wh
Warranty5 years5 years5 years2 years
Price$1,599$1,899$2,199$1,299

Who Should Buy the Anker SOLIX F2000?

The SOLIX F2000 is the best choice for home office UPS use — that sub-20ms transfer time is genuinely unbeatable right now. It's also ideal if portability ergonomics matter (the suitcase handle makes a real difference), if you want the peace of mind of a 10-year lifespan claim, or if you're looking for the fastest AC wall charging in the 2,000Wh class.

Skip it if you're an RV owner (no TT-30), if you need massive expansion capability, or if you want a rich app experience. In those cases, the EcoFlow Delta Pro or Bluetti AC200P are better fits.

What Real Users Say

Across Reddit communities — r/anker, r/preppers, r/SolarDIY, r/GoRVing, and others — the SOLIX F2000 earns strong marks for its ultra-low standby power draw (as little as 1–4W idle), quiet operation, and reliable outage performance. Owners love the fast UPS transfer and suitcase handle design. But the story isn't all rosy: a recurring E4 USB-A overload error on brand-new units is the most common hardware complaint, and the bare-bones Anker app draws near-universal frustration. Several users also report disappointing solar input from Anker's own-brand panels, recommending third-party alternatives instead.

"Enter the power station, it now handles all power needs in perfect silence on demand and I use my generator to charge it. You can pick the charging rate meaning I can charge it quietly with low RPM generator usage."

— u/ejk905, r/GoRVing

"I went with Anker for my security/smart home system so i get 28 days of power on a F2000+BP2000 at 3-4w of usage which I don't think ecoflow can even come close to. My F2000 is so lean and efficient compared my D2M."

— u/kinwcheng, r/anker

"Today my brand-new Solix F2000 gave me an E4 USB-A overload error. 6 times. While nothing was turned on or plugged in. Is this normal?"

— u/malwolficus, r/anker

"Does anyone know if anker is planning on doing ANYTHING with their 767 app? I have a F2000 + BP2000 + solar panels running 24/7 and the only thing the app does is change the input charging voltage, which frankly is not useful at all."

— u/malwolficus, r/anker

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