Why Generator Sizing Matters More Than You Think
25th January 2026
Inverter vs Conventional Generators: Which Should You Buy?
18th January 2026
Quiet Generators & UK Noise Regulations Explained
11th January 2026
Contact
Getting your generator size wrong is expensive. Too small and you’ll trip it every time the kettle boils. Too large and you’ve wasted thousands on capacity you’ll never use—plus you’ll burn more fuel for the privilege.
I’ve seen businesses buy 50kW units when 20kW would’ve done the job. That’s around £15,000 down the drain before they’ve even paid for installation.
Here’s the good news: sizing a generator isn’t rocket science. You just need to understand your actual load, not what you think you need.
Your generator doesn’t just power things—it starts them. And that’s where most people get caught out.
Running Load (Continuous Power) This is what your equipment draws during normal operation. Your fridge humming away, lights on, computer running. Simple enough.
Starting Load (Surge Power) This is the beast. Motors need 2-3 times their running power just to get going. Your 1kW fridge might pull 3kW for two seconds at startup. That two seconds will kill an undersized generator.
Peak Load When everything that could possibly start does start—at the same time. It won’t happen often, but your generator needs to handle it without crying.
Let’s work through this step by step. Grab a pen.
Walk around your property and write down everything you need to run during a power cut. Not everything you own—what you actually need.
Typical UK home essentials:
For anything with a motor or compressor, multiply the running wattage by 3. That’s your starting load. You don’t add this to the total—it’s the peak your generator must handle when that specific item starts.
Add up all the running loads. Then identify your highest single starting load. Your generator needs to handle the total running load PLUS that highest starting surge.
Here’s a worked example for a typical 3-bed UK semi:
| Appliance | Running Watts | Starting Watts | Notes |
| Boiler | 200W | 600W | Biggest surge item |
| Fridge | 200W | 600W | Second biggest |
| Freezer | 150W | 450W | |
| Lighting | 300W | 300W | LEDs, no surge |
| Router | 30W | 30W | |
| TV | 200W | 200W | |
| Total | 1,080W | 600W | Boiler surge |
Required capacity: 1,080W + 600W = 1,680W = 2kW minimum
I’d recommend a 3-4kW unit for this setup. Why? Because generators run most efficiently at 60-80% load, and you want headroom for the kettle.
Business power needs vary wildly. A corner shop and a joiners’ workshop aren’t even playing the same game.
You’re looking at:
A 10-person office typically needs 5-8kW continuous power with 10-12kW surge capacity.
Now we’re talking serious kit:
You’ll want a three-phase supply for anything over 15kW. More on that in our single-phase vs three-phase guide.
Never run a commercial generator above 80% of its rated capacity continuously. A 20kW generator should only supply 16kW max. This gives you:
Motors don’t just draw watts—they need reactive power too. That’s power factor. Most appliances are 0.8-0.9 PF. Industrial motors can be worse.
If you’re running lots of motors, add 20% to your calculated load. Just trust me on this one.
You don’t need to start your fridge, freezer, and boiler simultaneously. Stagger them. Wait 30 seconds between starts. Your generator will thank you.
That said, your generator MUST handle the largest single motor starting whilst everything else runs. That’s non-negotiable.
Planning to add a hot tub? Workshop equipment? Another fridge in the garage? Buy the bigger generator now. Upgrading later costs double.
Different fuels deliver different performance characteristics.
Petrol Generators Perfect for smaller loads (up to 7kW). Our Honda and Yamaha ranges excel here. They’re portable, start easily, and don’t mind sitting idle.
Diesel Generators The commercial workhorse. More efficient for continuous running, better for larger loads (10kW+). Check our diesel generator range for heavy-duty options from Cummins and FG Wilson.
| Application | Recommended Size | Best Fuel Type |
| Small flat (essentials only) | 2-3kW | Petrol |
| 3-bed house (full backup) | 4-6kW | Petrol/LPG |
| Large home (everything) | 7-10kW | Diesel/LPG |
| Small office (5-10 staff) | 8-12kW | Diesel |
| Workshop/light industrial | 15-30kW | Diesel (3-phase) |
| Retail unit | 10-20kW | Diesel |
Still unsure? That’s fine. Undersizing costs you in downtime. Oversizing costs you in capital and running costs.
For standby installations, check our standby generator range with models from CAT, SDMO, and Pramac.
Leisure users heading to campsites or onto boats should explore our leisure generator options—they’re sized specifically for caravan and marine applications.
The right generator isn’t the biggest one. It’s the one that matches your actual load with enough headroom for real-world operation. Calculate honestly, add 20-30% for safety, and you’ll be sorted.