When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Learn more.
The Bluetti Elite 30 V2 and the EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus are near-identical on paper — both around 288Wh, both 600W, both LiFePO4, both rated for 10ms UPS switchover, both 5-year warranty. The specification tie means the decision comes down to real-world behavior documented in independent reviews, and the right unit changes completely depending on your use case. There is no single winner across all buyers.
| Spec | Bluetti Elite 30 V2 | EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 288Wh | 286Wh |
| Continuous Output | 600W | 600W |
| Surge | 1500W1 | 1200W1 |
| Weight | 9.48 lb | 10.4 lb |
| Battery Type | LiFePO4 | LiFePO4 |
| AC Recharge Time | ~1.17 hr (70 min, 380W) | ~1.0 hr (375W) |
| Solar Recharge Time | ~2.2 hr @ 200W | ~1.5 hr @ 220W |
| AC Outlets | 2×, 120V | 3×, 120V (2 rear-mounted) |
| USB-C | 1× 140W, 1× 100W | 1× 100W |
| USB-A | 2× 15W | 2× 12W |
| 12V Car Outlet | 1× 10A | — |
| DC Barrel Ports | 2× 12V/5A | — |
| Solar Input Max | 200W | 220W |
| Expandable | No | Yes, to 858Wh |
| Price | $199 | $269 |
| Price per Wh | $0.69 | $0.94 |
1 Surge ratings use voltage-drop mechanisms (Power Lifting and X-Boost) that work only with resistive loads and fail on motors, compressors, and high-inrush devices — not true power ceilings. Both units should be treated as 600W for load planning.
True of both units — Neither unit is suitable for high-power appliances. The Elite 30 V2’s 1500W Power Lifting and the RIVER 3 Plus’s 1200W X-Boost are both voltage-drop mechanisms, not real power ceilings. They work only with resistive loads like incandescent lights and fail on motors, compressors, microwaves, hair dryers, space heaters, and air conditioners. Treat both as honest 600W units. If your load list includes any motor-driven or high-inrush appliance, neither of these is your unit — step up a full capacity tier.
The Bluetti Elite 30 V2 wins three segments: CPAP and bedside medical backup (on DC-port runtime margin and the absence of bedside odor or firmware reliability concerns), compact camping and van power (on lighter weight, dual high-wattage USB-C, included car charging, and lower price), and solar-fed set-and-forget backup (by elimination, because the RIVER’s unfixed solar-charging firmware defect is disqualifying, though the Elite’s own idle-drain and cold-charge limitations make this a qualified win). The EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus wins two: always-on home network and electronics UPS (on the absence of a low-load eco-mode shutoff trap and purpose-built wired-AC switchover reliability) and expandability (as the only unit that can grow to 858Wh, though the expansion economics favor buying bigger upfront). The same hardware flips between winner and runner-up because the deciding axis changes per use case — DC versus AC regime, stationary versus portable duty, trickle-load behavior versus mid-range draw, firmware reliability under solar versus wired operation, and expandability as a gate versus a non-requirement. No single unit wins globally, and declaring one the overall winner would mislead two-thirds of readers.