The Complete
Load Audit Guide for Off-Grid Solar
A Step-by-Step Worksheet Method for Sizing Your Solar System Correctly
Introduction: Why Most People Get This Wrong
The most expensive mistake in off-grid solar isn't buying cheap panels or the wrong inverter. It's skipping the load audit entirely—or doing it wrong.
Here's what typically happens: Someone decides they want to go off-grid, searches "how much solar do I need," finds a rule of thumb like "1,000 watts per bedroom," buys a system, and discovers six months later that their batteries die every winter or they can't run their well pump.
The problem? They never actually calculated their real energy consumption. They guessed.
A proper load audit is the foundation of every successful off-grid system. It tells you:
- How much battery storage you need (not just want)
- What size solar array will actually keep you powered year-round
- Which inverter capacity is right for your peak loads
- Where you can save thousands by making smart efficiency upgrades first
- Your realistic budget based on actual needs, not marketing hype
This guide will walk you through conducting a real load audit—the kind that professionals use for system design. You'll learn the step-by-step worksheet method, see real examples for different living situations (apartment dweller planning ahead, small suburban lot, and rural homestead), and understand exactly how your audit results drive every component choice and budget decision. By the end, you'll have a complete, accurate picture of your energy needs and a solid foundation for building a system that actually works.
1. Understanding Energy vs. Power: The Critical Difference
Before you start your audit, you need to understand two terms that are constantly confused but mean completely different things: power and energy.
Power (Watts)
Power is the rate at which energy is used or produced at a specific moment. Think of it like speed in a car—how fast you're going right now. It's measured in watts (W) or kilowatts (kW, where 1 kW = 1,000 W).
Example: A hair dryer might use 1,500 watts when it's running. That's its power draw.
Energy (Watt-Hours)
Energy is the total amount of power used over time. Think of it like distance traveled—how far you've gone. It's measured in watt-hours (Wh) or kilowatt-hours (kWh, where 1 kWh = 1,000 Wh).
Example: That 1,500-watt hair dryer used for 10 minutes (0.167 hours) consumes 250 watt-hours of energy (1,500 W × 0.167 h = 250 Wh).
Why Both Matter for Off-Grid
Your load audit tracks both because they determine different parts of your system:
- Energy consumption (Wh/day) determines battery bank size and solar array size — you need enough storage and generation to handle your daily total
- Peak power demand (W) determines inverter size — you need an inverter that can handle your highest simultaneous load
You could have a low daily energy use (2 kWh/day) but still need a big inverter if you occasionally run a 3,000-watt well pump. Conversely, you might have a modest peak load (1,200 W) but high daily consumption (8 kWh/day) if you run many small devices all day long. Both scenarios require different system designs.
2. The Two-Phase Approach: Current vs. Future Load
Here's where most people make their second mistake: they only calculate their current lifestyle's energy use. But if you're planning to go off-grid, your lifestyle will change—sometimes dramatically.
Phase 1: Current Lifestyle Audit
Start by documenting your energy use as it exists today. This gives you a baseline and helps you understand your patterns. If you're currently grid-connected, check your utility bills for the last 12 months.
Phase 2: Future Off-Grid Lifestyle Audit
Now think about how your life will change. Will you replace appliances, change routines, eliminate power-hungry devices, or add new loads? Your future load audit should be realistic, not aspirational. Be honest about what you'll actually do.
3. The Load Audit Worksheet Method
Now let's get into the actual process. This worksheet method is used by professional solar installers and ensures you don't miss anything.
Worksheet Columns Explained
| Column | Purpose |
| Device/Appliance | Name of the device (be specific: 'refrigerator' not 'kitchen stuff') |
| Watts (W) | Power consumption when running (check label, manual, or measure) |
| Quantity | How many of this device you have |
| Hours/Day | Average hours per day it runs (be realistic, not aspirational) |
| Days/Week | How many days per week it's used (7 for daily items, less for occasional) |
| Wh/Day | Calculated energy consumption: W × Qty × Hrs/Day × (Days/Week ÷ 7) |
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Inventory Every Device
Walk through your home and list every single thing that uses electricity. Don't guess at the big stuff and skip the small stuff—those small loads add up.
Step 2: Find the Wattage
For each device, find its power consumption from appliance labels, manuals, Kill-A-Watt measurements, or online research.
Step 3: Estimate Usage Hours
Estimate realistic usage hours. For continuous loads, use duty cycles. Be honest about actual usage, not ideal usage.
Step 4: Calculate Daily Energy
Wh/Day = Watts × Quantity × Hours/Day × (Days/Week ÷ 7)
Step 5: Sum Total Daily Load
Add up all Wh/Day values to get total daily consumption.
Step 6: Calculate Peak Load
Identify your highest simultaneous power draw. Add 20-25% safety margin for motor surges.
4. Blank Load Audit Worksheet Template
Use this template to conduct your own load audit. Make copies for current and future lifestyles.
| Device/Appliance | Watts (W) | Qty | Hrs/Day | Days/Wk | Wh/Day |
| TOTAL DAILY LOAD: | _____ Wh |
5. Example 1: Apartment Dweller Planning Ahead
Scenario
Sarah lives in a 2-bedroom apartment but dreams of buying rural land and building an off-grid cabin within 2-3 years. Current usage: 15 kWh/day.
| Device/Appliance | Watts | Qty | Hrs/Day | Days/Wk | Wh/Day |
| Refrigerator (avg draw) | 150 | 1 | 24 | 7 | 3,600 |
| Window AC (summer) | 1,200 | 1 | 8 | 7 | 9,600 |
| LED lighting (various) | 10 | 8 | 5 | 7 | 400 |
| Laptop computer | 50 | 1 | 8 | 7 | 400 |
| Internet modem/router | 15 | 1 | 24 | 7 | 360 |
| TOTAL (SUMMER): | 15,989 |
Future Off-Grid Plan:
| Device/Appliance | Watts | Qty | Hrs/Day | Days/Wk | Wh/Day |
| DC Refrigerator (avg) | 50 | 1 | 24 | 7 | 1,200 |
| LED lighting | 10 | 6 | 5 | 7 | 300 |
| Laptop computer | 50 | 1 | 8 | 7 | 400 |
| Internet (cellular modem) | 10 | 1 | 24 | 7 | 240 |
| Water pump (12V) | 60 | 1 | 1 | 7 | 60 |
| TOTAL DAILY LOAD: | 2,766 |
System Sizing:
- Battery: 800 Ah at 24V (19,200 Wh usable)
- Solar: 1,000W array
- Inverter: 3,000W
- Budget: $4,550-6,400
Key Insight: By eliminating electric HVAC and using efficient appliances, Sarah reduced her load by 82% (from 15 kWh/day to 2.77 kWh/day), making off-grid feasible with a modest system.
6. Example 2: Small Suburban Lot
Scenario
Mike and Jennifer own a 1,200 sq ft home with two kids. Current usage: 30 kWh/day. They want to go off-grid while maintaining modern comforts.
Planned Changes
- Mini-split heat pump (replaces electric heat/AC)
- Propane tankless water heater and range
- Gas dryer, Energy Star refrigerator
- Better insulation
Resulting Load: 19-24 kWh/day (summer/winter)
- Battery: 1,200 Ah at 48V LiFePO4
- Solar: 10 kW array
- Inverter: 6,000W split-phase
- Total Budget: $35,500-49,500 (including efficiency upgrades)
Key Insight: Strategic efficiency investments reduced load by 35-47%, saving $10,000-20,000 in solar/battery costs while maintaining comfort.
7. Example 3: Rural Homestead
Scenario
Tom and Linda live on 20 acres with chickens, garden, workshop. Current 3 kW system struggles in winter. Planning expansion for EV charging and larger workshop.
Load: 14 kWh/day (summer) to 33 kWh/day (winter worst-case)
Design load: 28-30 kWh/day with load management
- Battery: 2,400 Ah at 48V LiFePO4 (115 kWh)
- Solar: 15 kW array
- Inverter: 10,000W split-phase
- Total Budget: $47,400-61,200
Key Insight: Replacing heat lamps with radiant panels and using timers reduced winter load by 40%. Load management (not running welder while charging EV) prevents oversizing.
8. How Load Audit Results Drive System Design
Battery Bank Sizing
Battery Capacity (Wh) = Daily Load × Days of Autonomy ÷ Depth of Discharge
- Days of Autonomy: 2-3 days typical, 3-5 for cloudy regions
- Depth of Discharge: Lead-acid 50%, LiFePO4 80-90%
Solar Array Sizing
Array Size (W) = Daily Load ÷ (Peak Sun Hours × System Efficiency)
- Use lowest month's peak sun hours (check NREL PVWatts)
- System Efficiency: typically 75-85%, use 0.80
Inverter Sizing
Inverter Rating = Peak Load × 1.25 (safety margin)
System Voltage
- 12V: Under 1,500 Wh/day
- 24V: 1,500-5,000 Wh/day
- 48V: Over 5,000 Wh/day
9. Budget Planning from Your Audit
Cost per kWh/Day Rule
- Lead-acid systems: $1,500-2,500 per kWh/day
- Lithium systems: $2,500-4,000 per kWh/day
Efficiency-First Strategy
Every 1 kWh/day reduction saves approximately:
- $330-520 in total system costs
Smart efficiency investments often pay for themselves through reduced system sizing needs.
Smart Efficiency Investments
- Heat pump instead of resistance heat: saves 50-70%
- Propane water heater: saves 3-5 kWh/day
- Energy Star refrigerator: saves 1-2 kWh/day
- LED lighting: saves 0.5-1.5 kWh/day
10. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake #1: Forgetting Phantom Loads
Devices that draw power 24/7 when 'off': cable boxes, modems, microwaves, chargers. Typical total: 1.2-4.8 kWh/day.
Mistake #2: Using Nameplate Ratings
Refrigerators don't run constantly. Use actual measurements or duty cycles (refrigerator: 33-50% runtime).
Mistake #3: Optimistic Usage Estimates
Use actual current usage as baseline. Only reduce by what you're genuinely committed to changing.
Mistake #4: Ignoring Seasonal Variation
Do separate audits for summer, winter, shoulder seasons. Size for the highest season.
Mistake #5: Missing Future Loads
Make a 5-year plan. Build in 20-30% capacity headroom or plan for modular expansion.
Mistake #6: Underestimating Peak Loads
Track your highest-use period. Add motor surge requirements (3-5× running watts).
Mistake #7: Skipping Measurements
Invest $25 in a Kill-A-Watt meter. Get actual data, not guesses. The difference can be 50-100%.
11. Taking Action: Your Next Steps
This Week
- Gather 12 months of utility bills
- Order a Kill-A-Watt meter ($20-40)
- Start your device inventory
This Month
- Complete current lifestyle audit
- Identify efficiency opportunities
- Complete future lifestyle audit
Next 3 Months
- Calculate system requirements
- Create preliminary budget
- Check NREL PVWatts for your location
A weekend spent on a careful load audit can save you $10,000-30,000 in system costs and prevent years of frustration.
Good luck with your off-grid journey!