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These are the closest spec twins in the 2kWh class. Both are $799, both deliver around 2,050 Wh from LiFePO4 cells, both are 120V-only (no 240V split-phase), both support UPS operation, both rate 1,000W solar input, and both carry 5-year warranties. On paper there is almost nothing to choose between them. The decision therefore comes down to how each one behaves in practice and on two or three hard capability differences the spec sheet hides. This page resolves the 2kWh buyer population into five real situations and names which unit wins each — and why.
| Spec | Bluetti Elite 200 V2 | Anker SOLIX F2000 |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $799 | $799 |
| Capacity | 2,073.6 Wh | 2,048 Wh |
| Rated output | 2,600W | 2,400W |
| Surge output | 3,900W* | 2,800W** |
| Weight | 53.4 lb | 67.2 lb |
| Portability | No wheels | Integrated wheels + telescoping handle |
| Chemistry | LiFePO4, rated 6,000 cycles to 80% | LiFePO4, rated 3,000 cycles to 80% |
| AC recharge time | ~1.5 hr full / ~1 hr to 80% | Under 2 hr full / under 1 hr to 80% |
| Solar recharge time | ~2.4 hr at rated input | Not published |
| AC outlets | 4× 120V | 4× NEMA 5-20 + 1× NEMA TT-30 (RV) |
| USB-C | 2× 100W | 3× 100W |
| USB-A | 2× 15W | 2× 12W |
| 12V car ports | 1× 12V/10A | 2× 12V/10A |
| Solar input | 1,000W max (60V ceiling) | 1,000W max (11–60V MPPT, 20A cap above 32V) |
| UPS switchover | 15ms | 20ms |
| Expandability | None | Up to 4,608 Wh with BP2600 |
| Price per Wh | $0.39/Wh | $0.39/Wh |
*Resistive Power Lifting mode only, not motor-start headroom. **Does not reliably start motor loads; documented to collapse on window A/C, 20A welder, and circular/miter saws. A blank spec means we did not record that figure in our research, not that the feature is absent.
True of both units — Neither unit starts high-inrush motor loads reliably. The Elite’s 3,900W figure is Bluetti’s Power Lifting mode — a resistive-load voltage-drop trick for kettles, heaters, and hair dryers, not motor-start headroom. The F2000’s 2,800W surge is documented in our review to collapse on a window A/C, a 20A welder, and circular/miter saws. Treat both as resistive-load stations. Neither is a whole-home unit; both are 120V single-phase only.
Spec-for-spec and dollar-for-dollar these are twins, so buy for behavior, not the data sheet. Buy the Bluetti Elite 200 V2 if it will sit as emergency insurance (Segment 1), run sensitive electronics daily (Segment 3), or get carried to weekend camps (Segment 5) — its low idle, 96% efficiency, 6,000-cycle battery, and 15ms UPS win the dormant, daily, and carried roles. Buy the Anker SOLIX F2000 if it lives with an RV (Segment 2: the TT-30 outlet and wheels are decisive) or if you’ll grow past 2kWh (Segment 4: it’s the only one of the two that expands) — just keep it cycled or set a monthly top-off reminder so its standby drain never catches you out. If your real need is 240V appliances, a well pump, or whole-home circuits via a transfer switch, neither of these qualifies — both are 120V single-phase only.