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Buy it if you own an EcoFlow River or Delta power station and want a portable panel that consistently delivers near its rating, sets up fast, and packs away into a vehicle or closet. The integrated angle guide, dual kickstands, and high real-world output are upgrades over the prior generation, and the included XT60i cable means it works out of the box.
It’s a mistake for ultralight backpackers — at over twelve pounds it’s a car-camping and emergency-prep panel, not a trail panel — and for anyone who camps primarily on snow, sand, or other reflective surfaces, where the bifacial 220W earns its premium.
This is a mid-lineup foldable panel aimed at people who already own an EcoFlow power station. For River and Delta owners who want strong output without paying for bifacial cells they’ll rarely benefit from, it’s the right pick. The decision goes sideways only if you camp on reflective surfaces (the 220W bifacial) or need ultralight portability (the 110W), and it goes wrong entirely if you’re trying to backpack with it.
Strong. In good direct sun, owners and bench tests consistently land in the 125–150W range against the 160W rating, with occasional spikes above rated — one owner hit 178W in partly cloudy Hawaii afternoon sun, and a bench test measured 135–136W on a sunny day into a Delta 2. That’s materially better than the rough 80% real-world figure typical of portable panels, and it’s the single best reason to buy this one.
Yes, with one compatibility nuance. Larger Delta units ingest the panel’s full output without issue. A River 2 will safely clip the panel’s 9.1A short-circuit current down to its 8A limit — pairing still works, you just cap out around 107W rather than the panel’s peak.
It carries an IP68 rating and owners report it shrugging off cloudy, hazy days and water exposure, plus one survived tree-limb impact undamaged. But there’s no independent controlled wet-weather test specific to this model, and at least one owner built a cover rather than trust continuous rain exposure. Treat it as splash- and rain-resistant, not as proven for permanent outdoor immersion.
For car camping and RV use, easily — it folds compact, stores under a bed or couch, and owners report family members including children carrying it. For backpacking, no. Over twelve pounds rules it out for anyone counting ounces.
The kickstand is mild steel and at least one owner bent it while repositioning, then worried it would damage the folded panel. The warranty is only twelve months — short for the category and far shorter than EcoFlow’s own power stations. Neither is a dealbreaker for the target buyer, but both are real.
This is the core buyer. If you already run a Delta 3, Delta 2, or River 2 Pro and want solar that delivers close to its rating, sets up in a minute, and travels in your vehicle, this is the most sensible panel in EcoFlow’s current portable line. The XT60i cable is in the box, the angle guide makes optimal positioning trivial, and the dual kickstands are a setup upgrade over the prior generation’s case-as-stand.
Owners relied on it through hurricane aftermath to keep a River 2 Max topped up under lingering clouds. It functions well on cloudy and hazy days. One caution specific to this use: if you pair it with an EcoFlow station and conditions drop to low light, the station’s charging cutoff produces zero output rather than a trickle — a behavior to plan around, not a panel fault.
Light enough to carry and stow without complaint, fast enough to top a mid-size station between sessions, and rugged enough for field abuse. The integrated kickstands make sun-chasing easy from a campsite. Just store it with the original foam if you reposition it often, to keep the kickstand off the panel face.
Two things separate this from its same-brand neighbors. First, real-world output that lands close to the rating — the 125–150W band in good sun, with spikes above 160W, is the headline, and it materially beats the output expectations many buyers carry from other brands’ inflated panel ratings. One owner explicitly chose it over generic “200W” panels that deliver 50–120W in practice. Second, the integrated solar angle guide and dual kickstands. On the prior generation, owners had to buy the angle guide separately and wrestle a case-as-kickstand that stood crooked and tipped in wind. Here both are built in: the shadow-dot indicator makes optimal angling a daily-use ritual rather than a novelty, and the bolted kickstands stand straighter and set up faster. A side-by-side comparison establishes these as the defining upgrade over the older 160W. The included XT60i cable — which the older 110W omitted — rounds out the value.
The kickstand is mild steel and bends. At least one owner bent it while repositioning on the Gulf Coast and then worried the bent stand would damage the folded panel, mitigating by storing it with the original foam. Evidence here is thin relative to the praise, so treat it as a real-but-not-widespread durability question rather than a confirmed failure mode — but if you expect to reposition frequently in wind, it’s worth knowing.
The warranty is short. Twelve months is brief for a solar panel and well under the multi-year coverage on EcoFlow’s power stations and on the 125W bifacial modular panel.
It is not a backpacking panel. Over twelve pounds rules it out for ounce-counting trail use — that’s the failing side of the portability story, and those buyers should look down the lineup to the lighter 110W (see the camper/overlander profile for where the weight is fine).
It misses bifacial gains on reflective surfaces. Single-sided cells mean snow, sand, and light concrete don’t add the rear-side bounce the 220W bifacial captures.
Single-sided design for a lower price. Giving up bifacial cells is exactly what keeps this below the NextGen 220W bifacial in price. For most campsites and yards that’s the right call — bifacial only pays off on reflective ground — so you’re trading a niche gain for everyday value.
The River 2 clipping nuance is non-obvious. The panel’s 9.1A short-circuit current exceeds the River 2’s 8A input limit. The station clips it safely without damage, so pairing works — but you won’t see the panel’s full peak through a River 2, and the EcoFlow app displays the XT60 connection as “DC input” rather than “solar input,” which has confused owners into thinking something’s wrong. Larger Delta units take the full output and show it correctly.
Against the cross-brand field, the NextGen 160W sits at a slightly lower wattage tier than the 200W panels from Jackery, Anker, and Bluetti — but it offsets that with output that lands unusually close to its rating and an angle-guide-plus-kickstand setup that works. Its weak spot here is the twelve-month warranty, which the Jackery 200W and SolarSaga line beat handily with five years. Ecosystem decides this. If you run EcoFlow gear, this panel’s plug-and-play fit and high real-world delivery keep you in-house. If you’re a Jackery, Anker, or Bluetti owner, the matched panel in your own ecosystem is the cleaner buy, and the Jackery 200W in particular pairs more power and a longer warranty.
| Panel | Rated W | Efficiency | Weight | Warranty | Key difference vs NextGen 160W | Choose instead if | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jackery SolarSaga 200W | 200W | 25% (TOPCon bifacial) | 14.3 lbs | 5 yr | More rated power, bifacial, far longer warranty | You run a Jackery station and want bifacial gain plus multi-year coverage | Check Price |
| Anker SOLIX PS200 | 200W | 23% | 16.3 lbs | — | Higher rated power, heavier, lower efficiency | You’re in the Anker ecosystem and want more headroom per panel | Check Price |
| Bluetti SP200L | 200W | 23.4% | 17.2 lbs | 1 yr | More rated power, heavier, MC4 native | You own a Bluetti station and want a matched 200W foldable | Check Price |
| Anker SOLIX PS100 | 100W | 23% | 10.6 lbs | 1.5 yr | Lower output, lighter, cheaper tier | You want a smaller, lighter single panel for a compact station | Check Price |
If you want the lightest, cheapest single panel and don’t need the output, the 110W saves weight. But the 160W delivers substantially more power for a modest step up in price, and it includes the XT60i cable in the box — the older 110W doesn’t. For most River and Delta owners the 160W is the better value; the 110W only wins if ultralight portability is the priority.
The 220W bifacial is the right move only if you regularly set up on snow, sand, or light concrete, where the rear-side cells capture reflected light the single-sided 160W can’t. On grass, dirt, or a typical campsite that bifacial advantage mostly evaporates, and you’d be paying more for capability you won’t use. If your ground is reflective, go up; otherwise the 160W is the smarter spend.
Yes. The panel’s 9.1A short-circuit current exceeds the River 2‘s 8A input limit, but the River 2 safely clips it — owners measured around 107W into a River 2 under clear sky, which nearly maxes that station’s solar input. Don’t be alarmed that the app labels it “DC input” instead of “solar input”; that’s a known display quirk, not a problem.
On cloudy and hazy days it keeps producing — owners report it topping up stations through overcast conditions, and one relied on it through hurricane aftermath. In low light, though, EcoFlow power stations have a charging cutoff that produces zero output rather than a trickle. That’s a station-side design choice, not a panel failure, but emergency-backup buyers should know that heavy overcast can mean no charge at all, not just a slow one.
No independent source has measured cell-level efficiency, so treat 25% as a manufacturer spec rather than a verified fact. What is verified is the output: the panel consistently delivers a high fraction of its 160W rating in good sun, which is the number that actually matters for charging. Judge it on watts, not on the efficiency figure.
The ETFE coating and one owner’s tree-limb survival point to physical robustness, but the model is too new for long-term durability data, and the warranty is only twelve months. The mild-steel kickstand is the part most worth babying — store it with the foam packing if you reposition often.
The NextGen 160W is the panel EcoFlow owners should reach for first. It does the one thing a portable panel is bought to do — put real watts into your station — better than its rating would suggest, and it pairs that with a setup experience that’s been improved over the last generation. The short warranty and the bendable kickstand are real, and the weight rules it out for backpacking, but none of that bites the buyer this panel is built for: someone with an EcoFlow station who camps from a vehicle or keeps it for outages. If that’s you, and you’re not chasing bifacial gains on reflective ground, this is the one to buy.