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popular Posted by GoodDeals88 • 5h ago
popular Posted by GoodDeals88 • 5h ago

Costco Members: Ecoflow Delta Pro Ultra Whole-Home Power Solution (12 KWH Solution) w/ Panel $7199.99

$7,200

$8,000

10% off
Costco Wholesale
10 Comments 3,053 Views
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Deal Details
Manufacturer's savings is valid 6/18/25 through 6/26/25. While supplies last. Limit 2 per member. Terms & Conditions

Features:
  • Scalable 12kwh Solution Provides Up to a Week of Essential Power Supply
  • Exceptional 7200w Output Powers Most Household Appliances at 120v or 240v
  • Super-fast Charge Up to 8800w by Combining Solar and AC
  • Online Ups Ensures 0-ms Transfer Time, Offering Constant Protection for Sensitive Devices
  • Long-lasting 10-year LFP Battery for Reliable Performance
https://www.costco.com/ecoflow-de...54681.html
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Manufacturer's savings is valid 6/18/25 through 6/26/25. While supplies last. Limit 2 per member. Terms & Conditions

Features:
  • Scalable 12kwh Solution Provides Up to a Week of Essential Power Supply
  • Exceptional 7200w Output Powers Most Household Appliances at 120v or 240v
  • Super-fast Charge Up to 8800w by Combining Solar and AC
  • Online Ups Ensures 0-ms Transfer Time, Offering Constant Protection for Sensitive Devices
  • Long-lasting 10-year LFP Battery for Reliable Performance
https://www.costco.com/ecoflow-de...54681.html

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10 Comments

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4h ago
5 Posts
Joined Jun 2025
4h ago
couponcommander85
4h ago
5 Posts
Looks like a beast on paper — 12kWh, 7200W output, and fast solar+AC charging. But at $7,200, I'm wondering: has anyone actually used one of these in a real home setup? How's it compare to something like a Tesla Powerwall or Bluetti system in terms of reliability and integration? Curious if this is truly whole-home ready or more of a high-end backup solution.
2h ago
1,187 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
2h ago
ViciousXUSMC
2h ago
1,187 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ViciousXUSMC

Quote from couponcommander85 :
Looks like a beast on paper — 12kWh, 7200W output, and fast solar+AC charging. But at $7,200, I'm wondering: has anyone actually used one of these in a real home setup? How's it compare to something like a Tesla Powerwall or Bluetti system in terms of reliability and integration? Curious if this is truly whole-home ready or more of a high-end backup solution.
Ecoflow, Bluetti, etc make portable power stations that CAN power a whole home but none of them are ideal.

Extremely expensive, not flexible, stuck in an ecosystem, hard to scale, etc.

A Delta Pro/Ultra I would say is good up to a RV or something because the power demands are not as high and you can take advantage of its portable nature.

Since anything powering your home full time does not need to be portable, your much better off with a DIY system from Victron, EG4, etc.

DIY meaning piece by piece not so much that you have to do the work yourself, as even this system your paying an electrician to install the panel, so may as well pay them (less) to install a big inverter panel instead.

Here are some facts

12kWh "enough for a week" based on the advertisement that is enough for a few hours at my house. I use 60kWh a day on a normal day when I am home.

The average home probably at least 30kWh

The batteries are 6000Wh each costing over $2000 each with a maximum expansion point.
DIY you can buy a 5000Wh rack mount battery with more features and protections built in for under $1000 so if you scale up to say a 60,000Wh system just the battery alone

Delta Pro Ultra 60,000Wh = ~$22,000.00
DIY 60,000Wh = ~$10,800

That alone will pay for your install costs, stronger and better inverter, and even allow buying a backup system (or better solar)

Then features, the Ultra cant do things like EPS (Emergency Power Mode) for the 20ms UPS feature while also in self power mode to make use of solar power.

It also has a pretty terrible limitation for pass thru power.

This was my first big deal breaker and why I went with something else, as this is a very standard feature for a mid range hybrid inverter.

72000w also is not even strong enough to run most homes with HVAC. so you would need to buy two of these to get enough power, and that makes the cost start to go sky rocket (and you have to buy additional inverters to expand battery capacity as well)

I can keep going, the list is pretty long but I think you get the idea.

That said I own over 12 Ecoflow Power Stations and I pre-ordered the Bluetti Apex 300 so I am not biased or hating, just honest and transparent and I don't drink the Ecoflow Koolaid like most people on the respective FB/Reddit groups.

As a matter of fact, they hate me because I keep sharing ideas on how to hack their equipment to save money or recently even called out an inverter quality issue they have.

https://youtu.be/0fvpc5QyYHk?si=E996QIr9M3Ty9Sdv
1
2h ago
551 Posts
Joined Jul 2012
2h ago
gamespeed
2h ago
551 Posts
Quote from couponcommander85 :
Looks like a beast on paper — 12kWh, 7200W output, and fast solar+AC charging. But at $7,200, I'm wondering: has anyone actually used one of these in a real home setup? How's it compare to something like a Tesla Powerwall or Bluetti system in terms of reliability and integration? Curious if this is truly whole-home ready or more of a high-end backup solution.

OEM says "a residential power backup system designed for both extended outages and daily use"
2h ago
3,814 Posts
Joined Aug 2006
2h ago
TechiMan
2h ago
3,814 Posts
Quote from ViciousXUSMC :
Ecoflow, Bluetti, etc make portable power stations that CAN power a whole home but none of them are ideal.

Extremely expensive, not flexible, stuck in an ecosystem, hard to scale, etc.

A Delta Pro/Ultra I would say is good up to a RV or something because the power demands are not as high and you can take advantage of its portable nature.

Since anything powering your home full time does not need to be portable, your much better off with a DIY system from Victron, EG4, etc.

DIY meaning piece by piece not so much that you have to do the work yourself, as even this system your paying an electrician to install the panel, so may as well pay them (less) to install a big inverter panel instead.

Here are some facts

12kWh "enough for a week" based on the advertisement that is enough for a few hours at my house. I use 60kWh a day on a normal day when I am home.

The average home probably at least 30kWh

The batteries are 6000Wh each costing over $2000 each with a maximum expansion point.
DIY you can buy a 5000Wh rack mount battery with more features and protections built in for under $1000 so if you scale up to say a 60,000Wh system just the battery alone

Delta Pro Ultra 60,000Wh = ~$22,000.00
DIY 60,000Wh = ~$10,800

That alone will pay for your install costs, stronger and better inverter, and even allow buying a backup system (or better solar)

Then features, the Ultra cant do things like EPS (Emergency Power Mode) for the 20ms UPS feature while also in self power mode to make use of solar power.

It also has a pretty terrible limitation for pass thru power.

This was my first big deal breaker and why I went with something else, as this is a very standard feature for a mid range hybrid inverter.

72000w also is not even strong enough to run most homes with HVAC. so you would need to buy two of these to get enough power, and that makes the cost start to go sky rocket (and you have to buy additional inverters to expand battery capacity as well)

I can keep going, the list is pretty long but I think you get the idea.

That said I own over 12 Ecoflow Power Stations and I pre-ordered the Bluetti Apex 300 so I am not biased or hating, just honest and transparent and I don't drink the Ecoflow Koolaid like most people on the respective FB/Reddit groups.

As a matter of fact, they hate me because I keep sharing ideas on how to hack their equipment to save money [img]https://static.slickdealscdn.com/images/smilies/smile.gif[/img] or recently even called out an inverter quality issue they have.

https://youtu.be/0fvpc5QyYHk?si=E996QIr9M3Ty9Sdv
I am interested in a semi-DIY setup but dont know where to start? any links to the products you are referring?
2h ago
1,187 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
2h ago
ViciousXUSMC
2h ago
1,187 Posts
Quote from TechiMan :
I am interested in a semi-DIY setup but dont know where to start? any links to the products you are referring?

Check YouTube, DIY solar FB groups etc.

You can look at my videos to see my setup, it's one of a kind and I'm in the process of building a system now with 60,000Wh capacity with an 18,000w inverter powered by 15,000w of solar.
1h ago
56 Posts
Joined May 2018
1h ago
malch
1h ago
56 Posts
$7,200 is an expensive way to store about $1.56 worth of electricity (at the average US residential rate). Kinda like storing food in solid gold containers.
49m ago
41,120 Posts
Joined Aug 2005
49m ago
emelvee
49m ago
41,120 Posts
I had been shopping a "whole-house" battery backup solution for a while. I went with Jackery's Explorer 5000 Plus system: two inverters with batteries; two additional batteries; smart transfer switch. $9,500+tax (their standard "deal" right now). To start, this give me 14,400 watt output (to power essential home functions) and 20kw storage. As prices drop, I'll probably add more battery storage capacity (up to 60kw). We use about 30-40kw per day on average, though of course we'd use less during a power outage.

I also have an 8kw portable gas generator that I'll crank up if I need to run the HVAC, dryer, oven or other high-draw appliances. We had one real-world test, with a brief outage, and the Jackery kicked on just as it should.

It's still not as good a solution as a whole-house gas generator, but we only have propane available (not natural gas) and the County gave me fits about permitting, so I gave up on that.

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37m ago
12 Posts
Joined Aug 2021
37m ago
AmusedCrowd4018
37m ago
12 Posts
can this be a good solution primarily use at home and bring it to RV/boat to power electric need on the road
18m ago
6 Posts
Joined Jun 2025
18m ago
couponcommander85
18m ago
6 Posts
Quote from ViciousXUSMC :
Ecoflow, Bluetti, etc make portable power stations that CAN power a whole home but none of them are ideal.

Extremely expensive, not flexible, stuck in an ecosystem, hard to scale, etc.

A Delta Pro/Ultra I would say is good up to a RV or something because the power demands are not as high and you can take advantage of its portable nature.

Since anything powering your home full time does not need to be portable, your much better off with a DIY system from Victron, EG4, etc.

DIY meaning piece by piece not so much that you have to do the work yourself, as even this system your paying an electrician to install the panel, so may as well pay them (less) to install a big inverter panel instead.

Here are some facts

12kWh "enough for a week" based on the advertisement that is enough for a few hours at my house. I use 60kWh a day on a normal day when I am home.

The average home probably at least 30kWh

The batteries are 6000Wh each costing over $2000 each with a maximum expansion point.
DIY you can buy a 5000Wh rack mount battery with more features and protections built in for under $1000 so if you scale up to say a 60,000Wh system just the battery alone

Delta Pro Ultra 60,000Wh = ~$22,000.00
DIY 60,000Wh = ~$10,800

That alone will pay for your install costs, stronger and better inverter, and even allow buying a backup system (or better solar)

Then features, the Ultra cant do things like EPS (Emergency Power Mode) for the 20ms UPS feature while also in self power mode to make use of solar power.

It also has a pretty terrible limitation for pass thru power.

This was my first big deal breaker and why I went with something else, as this is a very standard feature for a mid range hybrid inverter.

72000w also is not even strong enough to run most homes with HVAC. so you would need to buy two of these to get enough power, and that makes the cost start to go sky rocket (and you have to buy additional inverters to expand battery capacity as well)

I can keep going, the list is pretty long but I think you get the idea.

That said I own over 12 Ecoflow Power Stations and I pre-ordered the Bluetti Apex 300 so I am not biased or hating, just honest and transparent and I don't drink the Ecoflow Koolaid like most people on the respective FB/Reddit groups.

As a matter of fact, they hate me because I keep sharing ideas on how to hack their equipment to save money Smilie or recently even called out an inverter quality issue they have.

https://youtu.be/0fvpc5QyYHk?si=E996QIr9M3Ty9Sdv
Really appreciate you breaking all that down. I had no idea how wide the gap was in value between these turnkey systems and a solid DIY setup. Makes sense that portability becomes a liability once you're powering a full home.

The 12kWh = "a week" claim felt off to me too... I'm nowhere near 60kWh/day, but even at half that, the math doesn't work.

Seems like EcoFlow is more about convenience than long-term scalability or cost-efficiency. For someone who doesn't want to go fully DIY but wants something better than a plug-and-play.
12m ago
1,187 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
12m ago
ViciousXUSMC
12m ago
1,187 Posts
Quote from couponcommander85 :
Really appreciate you breaking all that down. I had no idea how wide the gap was in value between these turnkey systems and a solid DIY setup. Makes sense that portability becomes a liability once you're powering a full home.

The 12kWh = "a week" claim felt off to me too... I'm nowhere near 60kWh/day, but even at half that, the math doesn't work.

Seems like EcoFlow is more about convenience than long-term scalability or cost-efficiency. For someone who doesn't want to go fully DIY but wants something better than a plug-and-play.
It's a huge gap, but like I said to ask this question in an EF group or something and you have paid off group members, brainwashed group members, etc so you won't get true neutral information there

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