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expiredBekahlun990 posted Aug 21, 2025 09:52 AM
expiredBekahlun990 posted Aug 21, 2025 09:52 AM

Costco Members: Ecoflow Delta Pro Ultra 18 KWH Whole-Home Power Solution

+ Free Shipping

$7,600

$9,000

15% off
Costco Wholesale
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Deal Details
Costco Wholesale has for their Members: Ecoflow Delta Pro Ultra 18 KWH Whole-Home Power Solution on sale for $7,599.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member BraveBook3184 for sharing this deal.
  • Note: Batteries ship separately.
Features:
  • Scalable 18 kWh 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

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • $1,400 manufacturer's savings is valid 8/21/25 through 8/31/25. While supplies last.
  • This sale price is $100 lower than this previous Frontpage Deal which received over 30 Thumbs Up.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Rated 4.4 out of 5 stars from over 90 customer reviews.

Original Post

Written by Bekahlun990
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Costco Wholesale has for their Members: Ecoflow Delta Pro Ultra 18 KWH Whole-Home Power Solution on sale for $7,599.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member BraveBook3184 for sharing this deal.
  • Note: Batteries ship separately.
Features:
  • Scalable 18 kWh 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

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • $1,400 manufacturer's savings is valid 8/21/25 through 8/31/25. While supplies last.
  • This sale price is $100 lower than this previous Frontpage Deal which received over 30 Thumbs Up.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Rated 4.4 out of 5 stars from over 90 customer reviews.

Original Post

Written by Bekahlun990

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Top Comments

obtuseness
42 Posts
24 Reputation
We'd need to know your power usage to estimate if this would work, but I'm going to guess it's not big enough for what you want. 4300sqft is a lot of house and I'm going to guess you have 2 (or more) AC units. And Texas is hot.

Another factor is if your appliances are gas or electric, if you have an electric range/stove/water heater/dryer that's going to be a good chunk. Best thing you can do is look at your power bill and see how much power you're using in a month and divide by 30 to get an idea of how long 18kwh will last you. For my 2500 sqft home in Florida, I typically use about 90-100kwh a day in summer, so this would only last a few hours.

As far as how to recharge it when there's no grid, your options are basically solar panels, a generator, or maybe a v2h electric vehicle
GumboChief
15 Posts
22 Reputation
Yes, but you'd also need the Ecoflow Smart Home Panel 2, to do it "automatically". Otherwise you'd have to flip a big switch twice a day. Also, SHP2 has a reputation for being buggy. Don't know if it's gotten better. You should check reddit or something.
travis1982
62 Posts
22 Reputation
Foolish... As a solution for power outages. To reduce power bills if you have solar or to capture cheaper night time power rates, they're quite good.

Generator: good for outages, but otherwise little utility and expensive to operate.

Solar + battery: expensive to implement but proven savings over their lifetime and good for power outages (though less flexible than generator)... Also cool your roof so some passive savings in cooling months.

I have a gen, still want solar with a gen input for extended outages.

45 Comments

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Aug 21, 2025 02:17 PM
896 Posts
Joined Oct 2003
TacoAug 21, 2025 02:17 PM
896 Posts

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Quote from PaulP6715 :
the common way people refer to the pipe that brings natural gas to your house for the past 50 years?
Utility-provided nat gas is available at less than 50% of US households, and dropping. Tanks are in use at around 10%, but they are not generally sized to hold near enough to support a generator.
2
4
Aug 21, 2025 02:27 PM
18 Posts
Joined Jan 2015
kuramaltAug 21, 2025 02:27 PM
18 Posts

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Quote from z4m :
Could someone please point me to some reliable sources or help me better understand if I can use this as a system to power a 4300 sq ft home during the day using battery backup and recharge them during the night using cheaper rates.

My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.

Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time.

Thanks much in advance.
It depends on your use case. Just sharing my thought process.
A. In my slightly larger Northeast home, three units could cover a summer day (outages usually <24 hrs), but at ~$32k it's not worth it.
B. For a fail-safe and capability of extended run setup, I can pair it with trifuel generator, but ~$35k—overkill for me.
C. A standby generator runs ~$10-15k, lasts 10–20 years, and while it's a single point of failure, the risk is low. I'd rather accept that risk and add a small portable battery for essentials like the sump pumps.
But I don't have good off-peak rates. Depends on your off-peak discount, the math may work. I would go with B if the math works.
2
Aug 21, 2025 03:12 PM
3,356 Posts
Joined Sep 2013
PaulP6715Aug 21, 2025 03:12 PM
3,356 Posts
Quote from Taco :
Utility-provided nat gas is available at less than 50% of US households, and dropping. Tanks are in use at around 10%, but they are not generally sized to hold near enough to support a generator.
You wrote 'what's a 'gas line?'

I responded with what a gas line is.

You then wrote utility-provided natural gas lines only reach 50% of American households.

So what?
2
Aug 21, 2025 03:28 PM
78 Posts
Joined Jun 2025
MilfhouseAug 21, 2025 03:28 PM
78 Posts
Quote from z4m :
Could someone please point me to some reliable sources or help me better understand if I can use this as a system to power a 4300 sq ft home during the day using battery backup and recharge them during the night using cheaper rates. My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages. Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time. Thanks much in advance.
if you save 15¢ using night energy only and leverage 90% of the battery capacity every day, you going to save 90% x 18kwh x 0.15¢/kwh = $2.43 a day. So its going to be $7600 / $2.43 a day = 3127 days to come to 0. Thats 8.5 years WITHOUT any financing / depreciation. Since we have 5% risk free interest in the US, you have $7980 for the first year and it adds up (maintanance, installation cost).
Long story short: It is not worth it.
I would think about installing some solar panels if I were you. Everybody got them nowdays in my home country.
Aug 21, 2025 04:00 PM
1,074 Posts
Joined Jan 2004
KSilver2000Aug 21, 2025 04:00 PM
1,074 Posts
Quote from jmackd :
These things are foolish. For less money you can get a whole house ~20-22kw generator hooked up to your natural gas line and never have to worry about time limits and charging
Some people live in homes that either don't have space in the backyard or live in a community that won't allow for a generator. But, nice that you can't think of why some people might want a home battery.
1
Aug 21, 2025 04:14 PM
26 Posts
Joined Apr 2006
Universal9gsmAug 21, 2025 04:14 PM
26 Posts
Avoid… read the horror support stories. The company shows its true color when things don't work.
1
Aug 21, 2025 04:18 PM
5,256 Posts
Joined Oct 2011
juggarAug 21, 2025 04:18 PM
5,256 Posts

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I have to wonder how warranty works on something like this, what does a long term outlook look like? $7.6k plus tax is a lot of money and you're going to want to get at least 5 years out of this I would imagine. Almost makes more sense to do a V2H situation with a cheap EV like an Equinox EV lease. At that point you get 85 kW capacity and can get a 3 year lease for 7000-10000.
I just dont know about these super expensive battery packs when leasing an EV with V2H is genuinely a better option with WAY more capacity. I feel like V2H is a much better solution if someone is serious about battery backups because automotive battery packs are larger than even a massive home backup system, one that would cost you $30k+.
Last edited by juggar August 21, 2025 at 10:21 AM.
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Aug 21, 2025 04:38 PM
124 Posts
Joined Mar 2006
asahi7777777Aug 21, 2025 04:38 PM
124 Posts
I have this system and the SHP2. I highly recommend you keep ALL boxes until you know everything works. Even if it all works, I'd keep the boxes for another 3-6 months to be 100% sure.
I had a problem from the very beginning, and it took EcoFlow 5 MONTHS to get me replacements, and this was with priority. They (Costco and EcoFlow) use FedEx to deliver, at least in my area, and I think that probably contributed to the problems due to how rough things were handled, as evidenced by the condition of the boxes I got. I like the hardware, but their firmware updates had version dependency issues. Often times, the SHP2 or DPU would get a firmware update that would break communication to the other system, and you'd have to wait a few days for a fix or email them to roll back your system.
EcoFlow's support is also extremely slow. I wouldn't say terrible quality, since they did try to solve my issues. It's just that they require lots of pictures and videos, and tons of testing to figure things out. But with this system being a critical piece of infrastructure, I think their support is completely inadequate. If you can use a multimeter, then I think you can "win" at support, but be prepared to work in a live panel.
For the average person, I don't recommend the SHP2 + DPU combo. If you only need the DPU, then it might be ok.
Aug 21, 2025 04:49 PM
2,990 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
smarttAug 21, 2025 04:49 PM
2,990 Posts
Quote from BeigeTable8880 :
Also, he claims that a 22kw generator, installed, would cost less than $7600? I'm not so sure about that claim. On top of that you're going to be paying $80 - $100 per day to run it, assuming natural gas is even flowing. This totally removes the 'run it during the day to save with lower rates at night' use case.
I'm 100% sure that claim is false.
Aug 21, 2025 05:45 PM
3,584 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
ZeloAug 21, 2025 05:45 PM
3,584 Posts
Quote from z4m :
Could someone please point me to some reliable sources or help me better understand if I can use this as a system to power a 4300 sq ft home during the day using battery backup and recharge them during the night using cheaper rates.

My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.

Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time.

Thanks much in advance.
Quote from BeigeTable8880 :
Hi. Fellow Texan here. This unit will NOT meet all of your demands during the spring, summer, fall (AC months). I suspect you have a total of at least 10 tons of AC. Just running your AC will overload this system, not to mention the surge needed to get it running. With that said, this is a good turn-key system to run some of your load during outages and during the day. Don't let anyone tell you it will run your entire home. You asked for some reliable sources to learn from. Google William Prose, he is a good place to start and should help you to fall into the DIY solar rabbit hole. Smilie With a $7600 budget you could come very close to buying a DIY setup that will meet your needs.
@BeigeTable8880 beat me to it, check out DIYSolarForum.com [diysolarforum.com] and Will's YouTube channel [youtube.com].
Aug 21, 2025 05:49 PM
63 Posts
Joined Mar 2020
BeigeTable8880Aug 21, 2025 05:49 PM
63 Posts
Quote from PaulP6715 :
You wrote 'what's a 'gas line?'I responded with what a gas line is.You then wrote utility-provided natural gas lines only reach 50% of American households. So what?
He was just trolling you, pay him no mind.
Aug 21, 2025 07:19 PM
1 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
WittyPiranha6915Aug 21, 2025 07:19 PM
1 Posts
Quote from z4m :
Could someone please point me to some reliable sources or help me better understand if I can use this as a system to power a 4300 sq ft home during the day using battery backup and recharge them during the night using cheaper rates. My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time. Thanks much in advance.
dont forget that charging is approximately 80 percent efficient and converting to use the electricity is 80 percent efficient so you are loosing 40 percent of your electricity to heat. Unless the rate is more than 40 percent less you will be loosing money. That is not figuring the price of the system.
Aug 21, 2025 07:45 PM
896 Posts
Joined Oct 2003
TacoAug 21, 2025 07:45 PM
896 Posts
Quote from BeigeTable8880 :
He was just trolling you, pay him no mind.
I'm not trolling. My point remains the same, most people do not have access to a utility provided natural gas line. Most who do are in densely populated urban centers. None of those are conducive to using a natural gas generator for backup power. It's a niche product for a niche market and not a simple substitute for this product at all.
5
Aug 21, 2025 07:56 PM
104 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
x7alerAug 21, 2025 07:56 PM
104 Posts
Quote from z4m :
Could someone please point me to some reliable sources or help me better understand if I can use this as a system to power a 4300 sq ft home during the day using battery backup and recharge them during the night using cheaper rates. My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time. Thanks much in advance.
Will Prowse on Youtube.

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Aug 21, 2025 07:57 PM
63 Posts
Joined Mar 2020
BeigeTable8880Aug 21, 2025 07:57 PM
63 Posts
Quote from WittyPiranha6915 :
dont forget that charging is approximately 80 percent efficient and converting to use the electricity is 80 percent efficient so you are loosing 40 percent of your electricity to heat. Unless the rate is more than 40 percent less you will be loosing money. That is not figuring the price of the system.
Modern inverters are generally 95% - 98% efficient at converting DC from panels or battery storage to AC power.

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