The average US power outage now lasts 12.8 hours. Follow this hour-by-hour action plan to protect food, stay warm, and keep your family safe until power returns.

Last winter, Winter Storm Fern knocked out power to 750,000 homes across the Mid-Atlantic and Carolinas. Some families had their lights back within hours. Others waited more than three days.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the average American power outage now lasts 12.8 hours — a figure trending upward as grid infrastructure ages and weather events intensify. Knowing what to do during a power outage — and when to do it — makes a significant difference.
Check your circuit breaker first. If only part of the house is dark, it's likely a tripped breaker. If neighbors are also dark, it's a utility outage. Check your utility's outage map for estimated restoration.
Power often returns with a brief surge. Unplug sensitive electronics — computers, TVs, gaming consoles. Leave one light on so you know when power is restored.
Plug in your essentials: phone chargers, an LED lamp, and any medical devices. The EcoFlow Delta 2 Max (2,048Wh) can run a CPAP for over 20 hours and charge smartphones dozens of times.
A refrigerator maintains safe temps for about 4 hours with the door closed. Every opening accelerates that clock. A full freezer stays safe for 48 hours, half-full for about 24.
Do not eat food that has been above 40°F (4°C) for more than 2 hours. When in doubt, throw it out.
Send a brief status update to family while cell signal is still good. Then conserve: enable low-power mode, turn off WiFi and Bluetooth. The Bluetti EB70S (716Wh) is an excellent mid-range station — compact, capable of running a small fan, charging multiple devices, and powering LED lighting.
Avoid candles — they're a fire hazard. LED lanterns and battery-powered lights are safer and more efficient. A headlamp keeps your hands free.
If the outage extends beyond 4 hours, use a cooler with ice to hold critical items — insulin, medications, fresh proteins. If outdoor temps are below 40°F, a shaded outdoor space can serve as a natural cooler.
The Midland ER310 receives NOAA Weather Radio and SAME county alerts. It runs on AA batteries, hand-crank, and solar. Cell networks are often overloaded — emergency radio is the most reliable real-time information source.
In winter, a home loses roughly 1–2°F per hour without heat. By hour 8, consolidate to one or two rooms and close doors to unused spaces. Layer up. A sleeping bag rated to 20°F makes an enormous difference.
Once an outage passes 8 hours, stop assuming power will return "soon." Begin treating this as a multi-day situation. Making conservative decisions now prevents a scramble later.
Check remaining power station capacity. If below 50%, prioritize: medical devices first, communication second, lighting third. Deploy solar panels if conditions allow.
Extended outages disproportionately affect vulnerable neighbors — elderly, medical dependencies, young children. A brief check-in is meaningful.
Staying home is usually better. Relocate if: a household member needs power for medical reasons, indoor temps drop below 50°F for extended periods, or there's a safety risk like flooding or CO.
Keep a written log of consumption and remaining supplies. Ration power station capacity. Plan meals from your emergency food supply.
After 24 hours, some municipal water systems may lose pressure. Fill bathtubs and large containers as a precaution. Rule of thumb: 1 gallon per person per day.
Check whether community charging stations are open — libraries, shelters, and community centers often provide power during extended outages.
A closed refrigerator maintains safe temps for approximately 4 hours. Full freezer: 48 hours. Half-full freezer: about 24 hours.
For most households, 500–1,000Wh handles essentials (phone charging, LED lighting, small fan). For CPAP or mini-fridge, step up to 1,500–2,000Wh.
No. Gas generators must be outdoors, at least 20 feet from any door, window, or vent. CO poisoning kills dozens of Americans every year during outages. Portable power stations are completely safe indoors.
EIA data (2024–2025) shows approximately 12.8 hours — and rising. Major storms can produce multi-day outages. Plan for at least 24 hours.
A 12-hour power outage is manageable if you know what to do in each phase. The first hour sets the tone: check your breaker, unplug electronics, activate your power station. Hours 1–4: conserve food and charge devices. By hour 8: shift to extended outage mode. Beyond 12 hours: stay calm, stay warm, stay informed.
The difference between a difficult night and a genuine hardship comes down to two things: a reliable power source and a way to get information.
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