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Part of UPS applications → Work-from-home desks

What UPS should I buy for a home office?

Home office sizing chart for desktop/laptop + monitor + router + optional NAS—pick kVA, set backup policy, and verify minutes in one workflow.

Best for: Work-from-home, freelance, and small team office desks. Not ideal for: Whole-building backup or compliance-grade electrical design.

Recommended UPS size for home office (by setup)

Quick answer: laptop desk → 650 VA; desktop desk → 1000 VA; desktop + NAS → 1500 VA (screening values).

Home office setup → UPS VA screening chart
SetupTypical loadBuy this UPS sizeTypical backup (screening)
Laptop + monitor + router~120-200 W650 VA / ~400 W15-35 min
Desktop + monitor + router~220-350 W1000 VA / ~650 W12-30 min
Desktop + dual monitor + NAS~350-500 W1500 VA / ~900-1050 W10-25 min
Small office cluster (2 desks + network)~600-900 W3000 VA10-20 min stock battery

Measure your home office load

Which UPS for your home office deployment?

Deployment -> UPS purchase decision
DeploymentTypical devicesRecommended UPSTopologyNotes
Remote meeting deskLaptop + monitor + router650 VALine-interactivePrioritize internet continuity
Desktop workstationDesktop + monitor + router1000 VALine-interactive, AVRAdd headroom for spikes
Content / creator deskDesktop + dual monitors + NAS1500 VALine-interactive or onlineProtect local storage workflows
Unstable grid areaAny home office profileBy measured kWOnline preferredReduce transfer-related interruptions

Home office UPS buying checklist

  • Measure peak watts during real work (video calls, sync, export jobs)
  • Keep router/ONT on same UPS if internet continuity matters
  • Add 20-30% headroom for desktop and display spikes
  • Define backup policy: save and shutdown vs longer remote-session continuity
  • Test graceful shutdown for desktop and NAS after install
  • Check runtime chart at your real measured load

Home office UPS sizing workflow

Follow this sequence; runtime presets are step 4 only.

  1. Measure protected load

    Roll up desktop/laptop, monitor(s), router, and optional NAS on one branch.

    UPS Load Calculator
  2. Pick UPS kVA

    Convert kW with realistic PF and reserve headroom.

    UPS Capacity Calculator
  3. Set battery Ah target

    Size battery for your minutes policy.

    UPS Battery Calculator

Example: laptop, desktop, and desktop + NAS roll-ups

Roll up steady and peak watts for the same branch you plug into the UPS—include router and ONT if meetings must stay online.

Home office load roll-up examples (W)
SetupPC / laptopDisplaysRouter + ONTNAS (optional)Total (approx.)
Laptop desk45 W (dock + laptop)35 W monitor18 W router + 12 W ONT~110 W
Desktop desk180 W tower (workload)45 W monitor18 W router + 12 W ONT~255 W
Desktop + NAS200 W tower2 × 40 W = 80 W20 W router55 W 4-bay NAS~355 W
Video-call peak220 W desktop (camera + export)50 W20 W65 W NAS sync~355 W+

Preset links in step 4 use ~0.18 / 0.30 / 0.45 kW with headroom above these steady totals—re-measure during your own peak work before purchase.

Recommended backup time for home office

  • 10–15 minutes: Save open documents and shut down cleanly—minimum for single-user desks without generator backup.
  • 15–30 minutes: Common work-from-home default; covers most utility blips and lets NAS flush writes before shutdown.
  • 30–60 minutes: Unstable grids, frequent sag, or must stay on video calls through short outages—size larger Ah and verify at measured peak load.
  • 60+ minutes: Rare for desk UPS unless you also protect WAN gear for long ISP outages—consider separate network UPS policy or generator planning instead of oversized desk batteries.

Key variables for home office UPS

  • Workload peaks: rendering/export/video calls can raise load above idle.
  • Network continuity: router/ONT inclusion changes real outcomes for remote work.
  • Display count: dual monitors add meaningful steady watts.
  • Storage behavior: local NAS sync jobs extend high-load periods.
  • Battery aging: expected minutes drop over lifecycle.

Common home office UPS sizing mistakes

  • Only sizing PC power and forgetting monitor/network devices.
  • Using idle watts instead of real peak work load.
  • No shutdown policy so minutes target is undefined.
  • No headroom causing frequent overload alarms.
  • No post-install test of runtime and graceful shutdown.

UPS battery sizing for home office

Most home office users target 15–30 minutes for orderly save and shutdown. If you must remain online through short outages, size toward 30–60 minutes and verify using real measured load.

Example: 0.30 kW (desktop + monitor + router) on 1000 VA / 48 V 100 Ah often screens ~15–25 minutes before age derate—enough for USB shutdown if you test at video-call peak watts, not idle desktop draw.

Assumptions and disclaimer

Values are planning estimates (efficiency ~0.8, safety factor ~0.7). Real minutes vary by battery age, temperature, and actual load profile. Confirm with manufacturer runtime charts before purchase.

Related guides

Frequently asked questions

What size UPS do I need for a home office?

Most home office desks screen between 0.15 and 0.45 kW (PC/laptop dock, monitor, router, optional NAS). Typical starting points are 650 VA to 1500 VA depending on measured watts and backup minutes target.

Is 650 VA enough for home office?

Often enough for laptop + monitor + router under about 0.2 kW. Desktop towers, dual monitors, and NAS usually need 1000 VA or more to keep headroom.

How long should UPS last for work from home?

Many users target 15-30 minutes to save work and shut down cleanly. If outages are frequent, 30-60 minutes may be worth planning with larger battery Ah.

Should router and ONT be on the same UPS?

Yes if you need internet continuity for meetings or remote access. Include router/ONT watts in the same protected branch when sizing.

Desktop vs laptop UPS sizing difference?

Laptop-only desks are usually much lower load, while desktop towers with dual monitors and NAS can be 2-3 times higher. Size from measured load, not assumptions.

Can one UPS run PC, monitor, and NAS?

Yes if total watts stay below output rating and you reserve surge headroom. Many mixed home office branches fit 1000-1500 VA depending on real measured load.

Do I need pure sine wave UPS for home office?

For active-PFC desktop PSUs, pure sine wave is usually safer and can reduce transfer issues. Laptop adapters are often less sensitive, but mixed desks still benefit from cleaner output.

How to avoid overloading a home office UPS?

Measure peak watts during real work, include all network gear, keep 20-30% capacity headroom, and run a battery test after installation to validate your shutdown window.

Is line-interactive UPS enough for a home office desktop?

Often yes for laptop and standard desktop desks with AVR and surge protection. Choose online UPS when you have frequent voltage sag, sensitive active-PFC PSUs, or need cleaner output during transfer.

How do I set graceful shutdown for a home office PC and NAS?

Use the UPS vendor USB or network shutdown agent on the PC, enable NAS auto-shutdown in DSM/QTS or equivalent, and test that both devices power down before battery depletion at your measured load.

Related UPS scenarios

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