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EcoFlow RIVER 2vsRIVER 3 (2026)

These two sit $10 apart ($189 vs $199), match on rated output (300 W continuous, 600 W surge), weigh within a tenth of a pound of each other, and share the same LiFePO4 chemistry and charge speed. The RIVER 2 even lists slightly more capacity on paper—256 Wh versus 245 Wh. But two facts the spec sheets hide decide almost everything: the RIVER 2 drains itself empty in days to weeks sitting on a shelf, and the RIVER 3 delivers more real energy at the outlet despite the smaller label. Add a faster UPS transfer, a genuinely quiet fan, and 100 W USB-C, and the RIVER 3 wins three of four common buyers for an extra ten dollars.

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Prices and availability change frequently
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Prices and availability change frequently
Spec EcoFlow RIVER 2 EcoFlow RIVER 3
Capacity 256 Wh 245 Wh
Rated output 300 W 300 W
Surge 600 W 600 W
Weight 7.7 lbs 7.8 lbs
Chemistry LiFePO4, 3,000 cycles LiFePO4, 3,000 cycles
AC recharge ~1 hr (57–60 min measured) ~1 hr (58 min)
Solar input 110 W 110 W (~2.6 hr)
AC ports 2× 300 W 2× 300 W (one two-prong)
USB-C 1× 60 W 1× 100 W
USB-A 12 W 2× 12 W
DC car output 100 W (12.6 V / 8 A) 126 W (12.6 V / 10 A)
UPS transfer 30 ms 20 ms
Noise 53–54 dB under load 30 dB
IP rating None IP54 (battery pack only)
X-Boost None 600 W (resistive loads only)
Expandable No No
Usable energy (AC outlet, full discharge) ~168 Wh ~210 Wh
Idle draw ~12 W ~5 W
Price $189 $199
$ per Wh (nameplate) $0.738 $0.812

Independent testing; not published by the manufacturer. The RIVER 2 publishes no noise figure; our research measured 53–54 dB under load. Usable energy and idle draw are measured figures that explain the real-world performance gap despite the RIVER 2’s higher nameplate capacity.

Shelf-ready emergency backup

  • Who it’s for: You charge it, store it, and grab it when the power goes out. It may sit untouched for weeks or months between uses.
  • Why the RIVER 3: The RIVER 2’s parasitic drain is its defining flaw—owners charge it, store it, and find it dead or near-dead when an outage actually hits, sometimes within a week. The only workaround is fully powering it off, which defeats any standby role and still doesn’t fully stop the loss. The RIVER 3 has no equivalent complaint: it coasts roughly 85 hours at full idle, and its low 5 W standby draw makes a unit you stored last month a reasonable bet rather than a gamble. It also delivers the energy you’ll actually need when it counts—210 Wh usable at the AC outlet versus the RIVER 2’s measured 168 Wh.
  • Why not the RIVER 2: Its ghost drain is reported across many owners and corroborated against competitors that hold charge for months. For shelf-ready backup, that behavior is disqualifying.
  • Catch (both units): This is a 300 W, ~250 Wh class. It backs up electronics, lights, a CPAP, a router—not a fridge, kettle, or space heater. If appliance backup is the goal, neither qualifies; size up to a RIVER 3 Plus or DELTA 3.

Always-on small UPS (router / modem / home server)

  • Who it’s for: It stays plugged into the wall full-time, holding up a networking stack or a small home server through brief outages.
  • Why the RIVER 3: Its sub-20 ms switchover held across modems, routers, switches, and servers with no reboots in independent testing, and owners have even scripted server shutdowns through it over Bluetooth. Its 5 W idle and live-draw display make it the better always-on citizen.
  • Why not the RIVER 2: It manages a slower 30 ms switchover, and some units randomly cut their AC or DC rail even while on mains—the opposite of what a UPS should do. Being permanently plugged in hides its parasitic drain, but the RIVER 3 still wins on the metrics that define a UPS.
  • Catch (RIVER 3): Its UPS mode does not filter surges. A spiky appliance—Keurig, microwave—on the same branch circuit can trip its overload protection and drop your load. The owner-confirmed fix is to put a surge protector between the wall and the RIVER 3.

Bedside, CPAP & quiet use

  • Who it’s for: It runs a CPAP overnight, or lives in a bedroom or quiet room where fan noise is a dealbreaker.
  • Why the RIVER 3: Its 30 dB rating held up in independent testing; one owner ran it in a bedroom while sleeping and couldn’t hear it, with the fan only audible during high-watt fast charging. On CPAP specifically, it ran an AirSense 11 (no humidifier) plus a phone and watch for 2+ days on a charge—helped by its low 5 W idle, and further extendable by running the CPAP off the 12 V DC output to bypass inverter overhead.
  • Why not the RIVER 2: Its fan was measured at 53–54 dB under load—think old PC—and it’s not a bedside unit while charging. The spec sheet hides this; the RIVER 2 publishes no noise figure. On CPAP, its parasitic drain means a unit charged days earlier may be near-empty at bedtime—a real safety gap for medical use.

Cheapest topped-off day charger

  • Who it’s for: A pure budget buyer who tops the unit off the night before every trip, uses it for phones, tablets, lights, and a laptop, cycles it constantly, and never relies on it sitting ready. The $10 genuinely matters.
  • Why the RIVER 3 is still the better buy: It delivers 210 Wh usable at AC versus the RIVER 2’s 168 Wh—so on real energy it’s actually better value despite the higher paper price per watt-hour (roughly $0.93 vs $1.13 per usable AC watt-hour). Its 100 W USB-C charges modern laptops far faster than the RIVER 2’s 60 W, and it’s quieter if you ever do charge it indoors.
  • Why the RIVER 2 survives here: This is the only segment where its disqualifying flaws—drain and noise—don’t fire under this exact usage. If it’s always freshly charged, the drain never bites. On price it wins by $10, and its fast 57–60 minute AC recharge is exactly what a charge-it-the-night-before buyer wants. Over USB and DC, both units close the gap (the RIVER 2 delivers ~217 Wh on that path), so a USB-only user loses less to the RIVER 2’s inverter overhead.
  • The honest split: If your budget is truly at the $189 line and every load is USB or DC, the RIVER 2 is fine. For anyone who can find the extra $10—most buyers—the RIVER 3 gives more usable energy, faster laptop charging, and a unit that doesn’t punish you the one time you forget to top it off.

True of both units — Both units: This is a 300 W class. Neither runs an appliance, a fridge, a kettle, or a heater, and X-Boost doesn’t change that. If your loads cross 300 W continuous—or surge past it on startup—you’re shopping the wrong tier, and the RIVER 3 Plus or a DELTA 3 is where to look.

The bottom line

The RIVER 3 is the better unit for nearly everyone, and the $10 premium is the easiest upsell in EcoFlow’s small-station lineup. It fixes the RIVER 2‘s defining flaw—the parasitic drain that leaves it dead on the shelf—delivers more usable energy despite a smaller label, runs silent enough to sleep beside, switches over faster as a UPS, and charges laptops at 100 W. The RIVER 2 survives in one narrow case: you want the rock-bottom-cheapest LiFePO4 EcoFlow, you’ll top it off before every use, every load is USB or DC, and standby readiness never enters the picture. Outside that lane, the extra ten dollars buys a meaningfully better and more dependable unit—and both our reviews, read independently, point the same way.