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CPAP machine connected to a portable power station on a nightstand during a power outage
🔌 Medical Power Backup · Hurricane Prep

Keep Your CPAP & Oxygen
Running When the Power Goes Out

A hurricane outage is dangerous for anyone who depends on powered medical equipment. A CPAP user without therapy is exhausted by morning. An oxygen patient has hours, not days. A ventilator patient has minutes. This is how to keep the machines running, who to call before the storm, and the exact batteries and power stations that actually do the job.

🚨
The Risk — Why a Storm Outage Is Different for You
For anyone on powered medical equipment, an outage is not an inconvenience

The power goes out at 9 p.m. By 2 a.m. the CPAP user is wide awake, gasping. By the time the sun comes up, the oxygen patient's saturation has been climbing the wrong way for hours. This is the part of a hurricane that the news never shows — and it is entirely preventable.

For most households a hurricane outage is uncomfortable. For anyone on powered medical equipment, it is a clinical event. A CPAP user without therapy collects sleep debt fast and is exhausted, slow, and at higher accident risk by morning. An oxygen-dependent patient has hours, not days, before saturation drops to dangerous levels. A ventilator patient has minutes. And in Florida the heat compounds everything — the people most affected are usually the same ones least able to tolerate a hot house.

The good news: every one of those situations has an off-the-shelf fix, and the cost is small compared to a single ER visit. The work is choosing the right battery or generator before the storm, getting on the right registries, and rehearsing once so you know exactly what to do at 2 a.m.

⚠️ Outages routinely last days, not hours

Plan for at least 72 hours of medical-equipment runtime on your own, and have a step-up plan (a special-needs shelter or a friend with a generator) for anything longer. Utility "estimated restoration" times are optimistic in the first days after a major storm.

📞
Before the Storm — Get on Every List That Helps You
Three calls that can move you to the front of the line

Three pieces of paperwork, done weeks before storm season, make every later step easier:

1. Your utility's medical priority registry. Most power companies maintain a list of customers on life-supporting equipment and prioritize their addresses when restoring service. Call your utility and ask to be added — they will usually want a brief letter from your doctor.

2. Your county's special-needs shelter registry. County emergency management runs shelters specifically for people who require powered medical equipment, refrigerated meds, or skilled-nursing oversight during an evacuation. Registration closes as a storm approaches, so do it pre-season.

3. A current doctor's letter describing your equipment and oxygen flow rate. Keep a printed copy with the equipment. It speeds up shelter intake and helps any first responder who walks into your home.

💨
CPAP — The Easiest to Solve
A small power station gets you a full night, with margin

A modern CPAP without the heated humidifier or heated tubing draws roughly 30 to 60 watts. That is small. A 300-watt-hour portable power station runs it the entire night, often two. A 1000Wh unit runs two or three nights. The single most effective thing you can do for runtime is turn off the heated humidifier and heated tube — they can triple or quadruple draw.

Two equipment options to choose from. A dedicated CPAP battery like the Medistrom Pilot 24 is purpose-built, lightweight, and connects straight to the DC input on most machines (no inverter loss). A portable power station like a Jackery or EcoFlow is heavier but powers everything else too — fans, phones, a small fridge — and recharges from a wall outlet, car, or solar panel once power is back.

If you do nothing else: buy one portable power station rated 300Wh or larger, charge it at the start of every storm watch, and confirm your CPAP runs from it before the storm hits. A two-minute test now beats a panicked midnight at 2 a.m.

🫁
Oxygen Concentrators — Higher Draw, Different Plan
A continuous-flow concentrator needs serious power

Oxygen is harder than CPAP because the machines draw far more. A typical continuous-flow home concentrator pulls 300 to 600 watts continuously. A small power station that runs a CPAP for a night runs a home concentrator for an hour. The realistic options:

  • A large power station (2000Wh+) for short bridges. Will run a home concentrator several hours — useful while a generator is being started or refueled, or for a brief outage.
  • A generator for sustained outages. A 2000W inverter generator runs most home concentrators continuously and can recharge a power station at the same time. See our guide on keeping that generator from being stolen → — it is the most-stolen item after a storm.
  • A portable pulse-dose concentrator as a backup unit. Far easier on power (50–150W on pulse), often runs from a 500Wh station for several hours. Talk to your supplier about a backup unit before the season.
  • Pre-arranged cylinder refills. Your oxygen supplier can deliver extra E-cylinders or a liquid backup before a storm. Call now, not during the watch — they prioritize first calls and run out fast.

Whatever you choose, write down your liters-per-minute setting and your equipment model on a card kept with the unit. A shelter intake nurse or a neighbor with a generator can help only if they know what you need.

🔋
How to Choose a Portable Power Station
The three numbers that actually matter

Most marketing focuses on the wrong specs. The three numbers that determine whether a station will actually keep your equipment running are:

1. Capacity in watt-hours (Wh). Equipment watts × hours of run = Wh you need. A 40-watt CPAP × 8 hours = 320Wh. Add 25% buffer for inverter loss and cold mornings. So a 400Wh station is comfortable for one CPAP night; 1000Wh gives margin for two nights plus phones and a fan.

2. Continuous AC output (watts). Must exceed your equipment's actual draw, including startup surge. A 500W output unit easily handles a CPAP; a home oxygen concentrator wants 1000W+ output with 2000W surge.

3. Recharge options. Wall, car 12V, and solar input. The ability to recharge from a car or solar panel while the grid is down is the difference between three days of runtime and indefinite runtime.

Prefer LiFePO4 (lithium iron phosphate) chemistry if it is in budget — far more charge cycles, safer in heat, and holds a charge longer in storage between storms. Test the station as soon as you buy it — run your actual CPAP from it for a full night and see what percentage you have left in the morning.

Generators for Medical Use
Sized right, run safely, paired with a battery

For multi-day outages on continuous-flow oxygen or a ventilator, you need a generator. The choice is between a portable inverter generator (quiet, fuel-efficient, 2000–3500W, runs the medical gear plus a fridge) and a whole-home standby generator on natural gas or propane (auto-starts, runs everything, professional install).

Three rules, no exceptions:

  • Outside only, and far from the house. At least 20 feet from any window, door, or vent. Never in a garage, screened porch, or carport — carbon monoxide kills the people you are trying to protect.
  • A battery-powered CO alarm inside the home, always. Test it at the start of every storm season.
  • A small UPS or battery on the equipment itself. Brief generator restarts (refueling, switching tanks) will not interrupt therapy if a UPS bridges the gap.

And lock it down — a running generator that announces "I have power" to the whole neighborhood is the most-stolen item after a storm. See our full generator-security guide →.

← Back to the elderly & power-outage care hub

Frequently Asked Questions
CPAP, oxygen and medical power, answered
How long can a CPAP run on a portable power station?
A typical CPAP without a heated humidifier draws 30 to 60 watts, so a 300Wh portable power station runs it roughly one full night. A 1000Wh unit runs two to three nights. Turn off the heated humidifier and heated tubing to extend runtime significantly.
Can a portable power station run an oxygen concentrator?
A continuous-flow home concentrator draws 300 to 600 watts continuously, which is too much for a small power station. You generally need a 2000Wh or larger station, or a generator, plus a doctor-approved backup plan. Portable pulse-dose concentrators are far easier on power and can run from a 500Wh station for several hours.
Should I register on the special-needs list before a storm?
Yes. Most utilities maintain a medical priority list for restoring power first, and counties keep a special-needs shelter registry for people who require powered equipment. Register weeks before the season, not after a storm is named — registrations close as a storm approaches.
What is the safest way to run a generator for medical equipment?
Outdoors only, at least 20 feet from any window or door, with a working battery-powered carbon monoxide alarm inside the home. Never run a generator in a garage or screened porch. Pair the generator with a small UPS or battery on the equipment itself so brief restarts do not interrupt therapy.
Do I have to talk to my doctor before storm season?
Yes — for two reasons. You need a current doctor's letter for the utility's medical priority registry and the county special-needs shelter, and you should confirm any pulse-dose oxygen settings, backup-cylinder plan, or alternative equipment your supplier can pre-stage.