Powerwall 3 vs Powerwall 2: what actually changed
Same 13.5 kWh, very different machine. The real differences between Tesla's two home batteries — and the one rule that trips people up.
If you're shopping for a Tesla battery in 2026, you'll almost certainly be quoted a Powerwall 3. But plenty of homes still run a Powerwall 2, and the two are more different than the names suggest.
The headline difference: the inverter is built in
Powerwall 2 is AC-coupled: it's a battery only, relying on a separate solar inverter (SolarEdge, Enphase, etc.). Powerwall 3 is DC-coupled with an integrated hybrid inverter — solar inverter, battery inverter, and transfer switch in one unit. That single change drives simpler installs, fewer boxes, less conversion loss, and solar strings that wire straight into the Powerwall.
Power output: roughly double
Powerwall 2 delivers about 5 kW continuous. Powerwall 3 delivers up to 11.5 kW continuous from a single unit. In practice, one Powerwall 3 can start and run far more of your home (AC, a heat pump) during an outage than one Powerwall 2.
Solar capacity and strings
Powerwall 3's built-in inverter accepts up to 20 kW of DC solar across multiple MPPT inputs, handling several panel strings on different roof faces — no separate string inverter. Powerwall 2 has no solar input of its own.
What's the same
- Usable capacity: both store about 13.5 kWh. PW3 doesn't hold more — it delivers it faster.
- Stackable: both support multiple units (4 Powerwalls ≈ 54 kWh).
- Backup: both do whole-home or partial backup.
The one rule that trips people up
You cannot mix Powerwall 2 and Powerwall 3 in the same system. Different chemistry (PW3 uses LFP), architecture, and control software — they won't operate as one. Have a PW2 and want more storage? You generally add another PW2. Starting fresh? You get PW3s.
Which should you care about?
Buying new, it's Powerwall 3 — that's what Tesla sells. Already own a Powerwall 2? It's still a perfectly good battery. Either way, the bigger lever on your savings isn't the hardware version — it's how intelligently the battery is charged and discharged against your rate plan. (That's the part SolDial automates, for both PW2 and PW3.)