When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Learn more.
These two sit one rung apart in Jackery’s lineup, $100 apart in price, and a full battery generation apart in technology. The 600 Plus is the newer LiFePO4 unit; the 500 is older lithium-ion hardware that survives for one specific reason. The right answer is not the newer one wins — it depends entirely on what you plug into it. The decision forks on replenishment cadence for recurring users, a regulated 12-volt rail for sensitive devices, reliability for critical overnight loads, and recharge speed for outage windows.
| Spec | Jackery Explorer 600 Plus | Jackery Explorer 500 |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 632 Wh | 518 Wh |
| Rated output | 800 W | 500 W |
| Surge | 1600 W | 1000 W* |
| Weight | 16.1 lb | 13.3 lb |
| Chemistry | LiFePO4 | Lithium-ion NMC |
| AC recharge | 1.6 h | 7.5 h |
| Solar recharge | ~4.3 h nominal (2×100 W) | ~9.5 h nominal |
| Solar input | 200 W | ~58–65 W effective** |
| AC ports | 1× 120V | 1× 110V |
| USB-C | 2× PD up to 100 W | None |
| USB-A | Yes | 3× (30 W total) |
| 12V DC | Yes | 2× regulated 13.2–13.4V |
| UPS | Yes, 20 ms | Unknown |
| Warranty | 5 yr | 3 yr |
| Price | $429 | $329 |
| $/Wh | $0.679 | $0.635 |
*Our review documents startup surge tripping the inverter on devices rated near or under 500 W; the 1000 W surge spec is unreliable on high-startup or inductive loads. **Effective solar input derived from our review and research notes; spec field not recorded.
True of both units — Neither unit does 240 volts, neither is expandable, and neither runs a kettle, coffee maker, induction cooker, or hair dryer — both have a hard output ceiling well under those loads (800 watts and 500 watts rated). If your plan includes kitchen heating elements, both are the wrong unit and you should size up to a DELTA-class or Explorer 1000-class station.
The 600 Plus wins multi-day and recurring camping on replenishment and endurance: 1.6-hour recharge, 200 watts of solar, LiFePO4 longevity. It wins recurring or critical CPAP use on reliability — 5-year warranty, confirmed UPS, LiFePO4 — over the 500’s longer humidity-off runtime. It wins light home-outage backup on recharge cadence and confirmed UPS continuity, with standby retention as a caveat (store it with outputs off). The Explorer 500 wins regulated 12-volt fridge and sensitive DC loads on a single confirmed capability: a held-steady 13.2–13.4-volt DC rail our review verifies and owners prize, where the 600 Plus’s DC behavior is unconfirmed. The 500 is the runner-up for occasional ultralight CPAP camping (more humidity-off nights, lighter, cheaper) and for infrequent wall-charge-only campers chasing weight and price. The decision is not newer wins — it’s which unit’s confirmed strengths match what you plug into it and how you use it.