Anker Solix F1200 (PowerHouse 757) 1229wh/1500w $599 (Was $1,999, 70% off) @ Anker Solix AU

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OzbargainF1200
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Hi OzBargainers,

We’re back with another limited offer from Anker SOLIX AU.

This time it’s the Anker SOLIX F1200 (PowerHouse 757) — a portable power station built for home backup, camping, outdoor use and emergency power needs.

👉 Anker SOLIX F1200 (PowerHouse 757) - 1,229Wh | 1,500W

RRP: $1,999 AUD
OzBargain Exclusive Code: OzbargainF1200
Final Price: $599 AUD

⚠️ Important Checkout Tip: Our website may sometimes apply an auto-discount at checkout. Please make sure to remove any auto-applied discount first, then enter the code OzbargainF1200 to get the OzBargain price.

Quick Specs:

Capacity & Output: 1229Wh / 1500W AC.
Battery Tech: LFP batteries rated for 3,000 cycles.
Build: Industrial-grade electronics with unibody drop-proof design.
Temperature Control: Smart temperature management.
Fast Charging: HyperFlash™ AC charging to 80% in around 1 hour.
Solar Input: Up to 600W max solar recharge.
Ports: 13 ports in total.
UPS Function: Uninterruptible Power Supply with official certification.
Warranty: 5-Year Full-Device Warranty.

Use Case:
A versatile portable power solution for home backup, camping, road trips, outdoor use and emergency preparedness.

⏳ Terms & Stock Limit:
We have capped this code to strictly 100 units only.
This is available stock and not a pre-order.
Once the allocation is exhausted, the code may expire.

Feel free to ask any questions in the comments!

For those also looking at the larger F2000 model, that OzBargain offer is currently scheduled to end on 31 May:
https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/959217

(Disclaimer: I am a store representative of Anker SOLIX AU.)

Anker Solix Referrals

Referral: random (8)

Referee: 10% off.
Referrer: 10% back of referee's purchase.

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Comments

Search through all the comments in this post.
  • Does it have Australia plugs?

    • yeah weird as. The main pics have I think US plugs then when you scroll down it is AU plugs.

      • Yes — this is the AU version with Australian-spec plugs.

        Thanks for flagging the image inconsistency as well. We’re already working on updating the images to make that clearer.

        • OP, please make this with a swappable battery. The internals are more valuable than the cells. Let us change it like a AA battery.

          Will sell like hotcakes. Wack proprietary box around it like Makita and DeWalt do and charge double. Cost would be under $150, charge me $300 and I'd gladly buy a few with my F1201

    • Should be, Australian spec electronics mean they passed local certification process

      • Wouldn’t be a first to see dubious regulatory makers on a website, but I think anker are somewhat more trusted than your average no name charger brand.

    • The lower picture has two AU ports compared to the six US ports, so the current description of "13 Ports for All" is based on the US model, whereas it seems to be 9 Ports for AU. I assume AU model will be sent anyway, just slightly misleading page.

    • I was thinking the same. Quite useless without the AUS power points/wall sockets.

  • Internal fan? Trying to find one use as office UPS but do not want more fan noise.

    • not sure this would be good as a UPS right ? Switch over might be a bit too slow to keep computers up.

  • this or dji power mini 1000

    • Depends on your use.

      • What’s the different use cases

  • Use this as a UPS?

    • Not for electronics. 20ms switching time is too high

      • can you use it as an interrupted power supply? as in power goes out, router +wifi resets and then after 20ms good to go? or is it bad for the electronics?

        • If your electronics have no 'on/off' button
          or if the device is 'permanently on',
          then it should be fine,
          ie. when power restores, the device should come back up.

        • my dji power 1000 has a similar 20ms time, and none of my devices go down in that 20ms. they all stay running. windows pc, switches, printer, nbn ntd and unifi udr7.

          • @Quarter Pounder: 20ms switching time on devices like the Anker F1200 will work on 99% of appliances, it could cause computers to reboot during a power outage. Desktop power supplies rely on internal capacitors to briefly hold up power during a fluctuation, but under heavy loads—like gaming or video rendering—this stored energy drains in less than 16 milliseconds, meaning the computer runs out of juice before the power station's inverter can kick in. In contrast, a dedicated computer UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) operates with a much faster standby switching time of typically 4 to 10 millisecond

  • I'm concerned this is old stock you're clearing. Got a ballpark on what date were the cells in these were manufactured?

    • Hence the clearance.

      • (undeclared)

  • Still got the 2022 award up on the the page and the design style is different than the rest, so I am guessing this is an older model.
    Not bad for the price and hopefully those batteries have not self-discharged too much

  • Does it have Bluetooth?

  • Hmmm tempting. Is it overkill to get this as a UPS for router etc. when you already have a home battery?

    • Yes.

    • Never can have too many power sources, except this would be no good as UPS for network / electronics. 20ms switching time

      • currently running my server/routers on a dji power 1000, i think that is the same. Works ok in a simulated power outage

  • Hmm tempting to get this and retire the DCDC charger and 12v battery box etc for camping

  • seems to be oos now

  • Missed out.

  • Legit question, not looking to get neg'd to oblivion - why when these come up, do people ask if these power banks that come up can operate as UPS's? Why not buy a UPS?

    I feel like they're different products. If I want a UPS I buy a UPS, if I want a portable battery I buy one and leave it in the corner waiting for a power-outage or I charge it when going camping?

    • These can come in cheaper, and last longer than typical ups's for running computer gear. with a ups i might get 20 mins of use, but with a 1kw power station 4-5 hours

      • If the power's out, I'm probably not looking to get one last game of Call of Duty in…

        • Haha not my use case but would defo work!

        • I was going to ask if it can run Crysis for 4-5 hours.

        • Cheaper to switch to the gaming laptop than buy a unit like that

      • problem is a UPS has a quicker switchover so if you are hoping to stop your computers rebooting its not going to help here.

    • I am that person you're talking about. Because:
      1, it's cheaper
      2. I live in the city where power-outage is rare, maybe once a year or even less, so I don't want to invest hundreds in an UPS. Portable battery can be used in other scenario as well.
      3. power last longer (few hours vs 20 mins) and multiple devices (Desktop+NAS+NBN box + router)
      4. battery last 10 years
      5. I can control the battery remotely through wifi+app, that's great if there is a power outage when I am out of town for weeks. When app notification tells me power is out, first thing I do is check my cameras and see if it's a burglary. Is there people trying to cut my main power. Then I will shut down my NAS, use Google remote desktop to stop some task on my desktop computer, to minimize power usage. And when power is back on, I can turn on my NAS again remotely.

      • Golden IRL usage comment.

    • Sealed Lead-Acid (VRLA/AGM): The standard in consumer and entry-level enterprise UPS units. They yield 100–200 cycles at 100% depth-of-discharge, and 300–400 cycles at 50%.

      Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO4): Increasingly used in high-end or portable UPS systems. They offer vastly superior lifespans, handling 2,000 to 3,000+ cycles before dropping to 80% capacity.

    • OK, well I have been schooled :-) Thank you all for educating me.

      Playing devils advocate though, these batteries are designed to have devices plugged in to them and then be switched on.

      UPS's on the other hand are designed to protect our precious devices by conditioning the power going in to them day-to-day and strictly upholding continuity when there is a power outage to avoid damage and orchestrating a graceful shutdown.

      So I guess… if you have a computer you care about with expensive equipment, I still think a UPS is a different product compared to one of these. If you have an old e-sports rig you don't care if it dies, but you'd rather roll-the-dice and have more game time during a blackout, fair enough?

      Actually I'm not really convinced this is a good idea after I typed that out :D Get a UPS if you want a UPS, once the power goes out go get this power-bank and plug it in!

      • If compatible, a CPAP machine.

        You don't want your battery run down if the power goes down longer term. If you ran your device only on the battery, it would not recharge.

        By using UPS and if they have bypass, and sufficient response time, you don't get woken up and then be unable to get back to sleep.

        Then have enough juice to go longer or possibly look for a recharge point if no solar.

      • These units put out pure sinewave and monitor for fluctuations (maybe not all do that?). To get that in a UPS you have to spend at least $280 for the lowest capacity 540W 900VA. After a few years when you lose power and it then tells you the battery is no good you have to then buy a replacement lead acid battery. The power stations with <10ms UPS are better in all ways except one - no surge protection. They should have a longer lifetime, have more capacity for when the power goes out, higher wattage outpute, app monitoring/control and of course you can take it camping etc.

  • Oos

    • It's weird, normally the stock will last but the code will expire after 100 purchases.

  • Too big and heavy to recharge at work each day?

    • Yeah was wondering whether I can use this to charge at the office, then take home to print money.

  • Does this have TOU?

    • I looked it up this is released in 2022, this is an older model than C1000/2000 gen 1 (2023), so most likely not. Solix gen 2 released in 2025.

  • Can someone flip this into profit straight to prove this is a decent deal? Anyway I love the fast charge.

  • A 1500W Anker

    I'm impressed…

    • Danke. You never cease to amaze me, jv.

  • I missed. Any stock available?

    • Yes — there is still stock available.

      There was a temporary stock status issue on the website, but this has now been corrected and the product should be available again.

    • Look likes its available again.

  • Can these slow charge through USB c?

    • Or DC input of some sort

      • This unit does not charge through USB

  • Can this be charged directly with a couple of spare solar panels I have?

    • Did you even open up the link, it says you can

  • is 1229wh about 100k Mah?

    So should power a few iphones for a few days if needed?

    • i would expect it to power a few iphones for more than a few days.

      it is 1.2kW, with the average phone battery size being 0.20wh or 0.0002kW.

      • Iphone is about 0.04kw, not 0.0002

        • Oops got the conversion wrong, its 20wh, or 0.02kW for the iPhone 17 pro max.

      • iPhone 3.7v*4000mah ~= 14.8wh

        • cool, so abouut 80 full charges. That's pretty good!

    • You’ll get around 100 charges of an iPhone

  • Thanks OP, just purchased one. :)

  • Would jump on a deal for the c2000

  • Is there anyway to get true specs and or manual for this product as the description and website have misleading information that seems to mix up aus specs and us specs?

  • just reading up on this. Discharge Efficiency is really bad. 53%.
    So charging it to full you lose almost half that power in losses in the conversion.

    https://www.trustedreviews.com/reviews/anker-solix-f1200-pow…

    • Thanks for raising this.

      A single quoted figure like 53% doesn’t really reflect the overall discharge efficiency of the unit across normal use cases, as efficiency can vary depending on the output type, load condition and test method.

      Based on our internal testing, the AC inverter discharge efficiency for this model is around 91% on average, which is in line with the expected level for this category. Charging conversion efficiency is also broadly in line with comparable products in the segment.

      Different ports and different operating conditions can produce different results, so we’d be cautious about treating one figure in isolation as representative of the whole unit.

      • Might be round trip efficiency they are mentioning?

        91% on how many amps out?

        If 91% on 1500w, you're running a 135w heater in that inverter. Hope it's got fans.

        For $599 I'm not sure what people are complaing about.

      • Any answer on the age of the cells?

  • My AI says:

    The F1200 is showing its age — its 1,500W continuous output is significantly lower than the DJI Power 1000 V2's 2,600W, and it only offers a single 60W USB-C port versus DJI's dual 140W USB-C ports. Its larger 1,229Wh capacity is a plus for runtime, but the DJI Power 1000 V2 can be expanded to 11kWh, making the capacity gap irrelevant at scale. The F1200 is also notably heavier at ~17.5kg.

    Where the F1200 still holds up is its 10-year lifespan claim and rugged aluminum frame. It's a solid, proven workhorse — but for a new purchase in 2026, the DJI Power 1000 V2 offers better output, expandability, and modern USB-C charging, while the DJI Power 1000 Mini wins on portability at a lower price. The F1200 is only worth considering if found at a significant discount.

    • It has 2 USB-C ports. 100W and 60W. DJI is also $100 more

  • A couple of quick questions on this:
    The web page shows 1500 W and 1800 W as output ratings. Is there a reason for the two different figures? Asking for my moccamaster coffee machine - heating element draws 1450W.

    Thinking about buying two of these versus buying the one larger unit (F2000) referenced in the description - redundancy, can take one to charge elsewhere, can run CPAP in one room and fridge in another during a power cut. Any thoughts / suggestions from the brains trust on this idea?

    • Looking at the online manual it says 1500W. Manual is probably correct. Some power station reviews show some units give max output but others struggle. Best to look up a review for this one if you are needing it that close to max.

    • I wondered the same about differences in output and after digging it seems 1800w is the max total output from the device. This includes 1500w from the AC inverter + 120w from the 12v cig socket and the remaining 180w the sum of the USB outputs.
      It SHOULD run your coffee machine in theory, assuming it only has a tiny pump to dribble water through and there's no additional pump/compressor pulling big power.

      • Personally I would get at least an 1800W inverter power station as a lot seem to struggle with certain

        model coffee machines. A lot surge way above their rated usage for a split second which many

        power station struggle with (coffee machine makes strange sounds which may reduce lifespan) or worse,

        not at all. I have a friend who has a 2400W power station and a small Aldi pod coffee machine even

        makes a strange sound, but does work lol (not sure for how long that will last though lol.

  • 12v 100Ah Lifepo4 on eBay $200
    1500w inverter $150
    40A AC to DC charger with mppt $125

    $599 complete set, warranty, good looks.
    Bargain checks out!

    • Need to add bit more for decent cables and fuse/breaker, possibly a box, but certainly a good and maybe

      even Better option for some.

  • Has this expired? Code no longer works.

    • Appears so

    • It’s live again now — the code and stock allocation have been restored.

  • Hi Rep, bought FRIDGE. Order couldn't be delivered to a PO box. Updated address as per your email requesting, but it was Cancelled. Please, PLEASE send the fridge, we do not want a refund or $25 coupon! Our emails are being ignored:-( Order is Order R1209015574S

    TicketANKER-TNS1524693817

  • Update: The code and stock allocation for this deal have now been restored, so the offer is live again while stocks last.

    • Hi rep, any chance the 300DC will go on sale?

  • Thanks Anker, bought one.
    Appreciate your deals.

  • Website say's it's Bluetooth app enabled, but the one i received last week doesn't have Bluetooth.

  • Clarification for AU F1200 Specs

    Hi everyone, just to clarify some conflicting information that may have appeared on the website:

    The Anker SOLIX F1200 sold in Australia the correct specs for the AU version are:

    Max solar input: 300W
    No Bluetooth support
    There is also a 600W solar input version of the F1200, but that is an upgraded model that was sold in North America only, not in Australia. That version has also been discontinued.

    Some AU website content previously showed 600W solar input and Bluetooth for the F1200, but those details do not apply to the AU model currently being sold. We are in the process of having that information corrected.

    Thanks for your understanding, and please feel free to ask if you have any questions about the AU version.

    • Thanks for clarifying these spec details here, but this Is a commen practice with power stations and mostly left

      online Not corrected. Please request this mistake to be rectified in the right Anker advertising/web department

      as the difference between 300W and 600W solar input can be a Real Problem for some.

      That discrepancy put me of getting that AU model.

      • Thanks for the feedback — completely understand your concern.

        We've now had the product page updated so the AU F1200 specs reflect the correct information. You're absolutely right that the difference between 300W and 600W solar input can be important when deciding which model to buy.

        Appreciate you raising it.

        • Good work and thanks. I love your products and dedication to keeping up quality.

          Sure I will buy an Anker Power Station if sharp price within the near future or so.

          This Solix F1200 would really suit my mums needs for power outages/storms as no solar needed.

  • Bought this as it is similar in price to the DIY option!

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