You need about 31 Wh — and 26 units fit. The smallest sufficient is the Bluetti EB3A; we never push more capacity than your load can use. Surge to clear: 1,100 W.
The math
Running watts (everything on at once) = 550 W
Surge watts (worst single startup + the rest running) = 1,100 W
Average draw (cyclic loads counted by their duty cycle) = 28 W
Watt-hours = 28 W × 1.0 h ÷ 90% usable reserve = 31 Wh
1
Bluetti EB3Asmallest that fits
268 Wh600 W cont · 1,200 W surge~8.6 h on this load$
Punches above its size — a 600 W inverter in a tiny 268 Wh body for surgey small loads.
LiFePO4 · ~30 min to 80% AC; up to 200 W solar · 10 lb
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Can a specific unit run a garage door opener (1/2 hp)?
26 of the units we track deliver enough watts to run a garage door opener (1/2 hp). Check a specific one for the runtime and the full verdict:
What size power station do I need to run a garage door opener (1/2 hp)?
A garage door opener (1/2 hp) draws about 550 W running, with a startup surge near 1,100 W. So you want a unit with at least 550 W continuous output and 1,100 W+ surge. For 1.0 h of runtime that's roughly 31 Wh of capacity — the Bluetti EB3A is the smallest unit that clears all of it.
How many watts does a garage door opener (1/2 hp) use?
About 550 W while running, spiking to roughly 1,100 W on startup. It only draws power about 5% of the time, so over an outage its energy use is well below 550 W × the hours — which is why a modest battery lasts longer than you'd expect.
Sources: Garage Door Opener (1/2 HP) wattage — Standard appliance-wattage / generator-sizing charts (representative values; verify your nameplate); station specs — manufacturer published specifications (compiled 2026-06-15; approximate). Informational only — a computed sizing estimate from published appliance-wattage charts and manufacturer station specs. It is not an electrical guarantee. For hardwired or whole-home backup, transfer switches, or any permanent install, consult a licensed electrician.