Prime Big Deal Days: Best Portable Power Station Deals Still Available After the Sale

A wall outlet you can carry with you — and the shelf isn't bare yet.
A few Prime Big Deal Days discounts on portable power stations remain live after the main sale ended.

In the quiet aftermath of a major retail event, a few discounts on portable power stations linger like embers after a fire — modest in number but meaningful for those who missed the rush. These devices, which offer the promise of electricity untethered from the wall, have become quiet essentials for campers, remote workers, and households preparing for the unexpected. The window is narrowing, but for now, the opportunity remains.

  • Amazon's Prime Big Deal Days has closed, but select power station deals from Anker and EcoFlow are still live — a second chance for late shoppers.
  • Discounts range from a modest 7% on a compact Anker 60,000mAh unit at $140 to a significant 31% cut on the EcoFlow Delta 2 Max, dropping it from $1,899 to $1,319.
  • The Anker SOLIX lineup adds further options, with savings on some configurations reportedly reaching over $4,000 for high-end home backup systems.
  • Best Buy and Walmart are running competing discounts, meaning the best price on any given model may not be on Amazon — comparison shopping is essential.
  • These remaining deals are temporary, and buyers new to the category are advised to prioritize capacity, output ports, and brand reliability before committing.

The sale is over, but not entirely. A handful of portable power station deals from Amazon's Prime Big Deal Days are still active, offering a second window for anyone who missed the event or is only now considering a purchase.

Portable power stations have quietly become practical essentials — for campers, remote workers, and homeowners who'd rather not be caught unprepared during an outage. At their simplest, they are large rechargeable batteries with multiple output options, capable of running everything from phones to small appliances, and in some cases, rechargeable via solar panels.

On the modest end, an Anker unit with 60,000mAh capacity sits at $140, down from $150 — a small but reasonable discount on a device already considered good value. It includes a pop-out light and charge display, making it a sensible choice for backpackers or light-use buyers. At the premium end, the EF EcoFlow Delta 2 Max offers 2048Wh of capacity at $1,319, reduced from $1,899 — a 31% drop that brings a genuinely capable off-grid machine into more accessible territory. Anker's SOLIX lineup rounds out the remaining offers, with savings on select configurations reaching into the thousands.

For first-time buyers, the guidance is straightforward: prioritize capacity, confirm the right mix of output ports for your devices, and stick to brands with proven track records — Anker, EcoFlow, Jackery, and Bluetti among them. Amazon isn't the only place to look; Best Buy and Walmart are matching prices, so a quick comparison across platforms could make a real difference. The shelf isn't bare yet, but it won't stay stocked for long.

The sale banners have come down, but a handful of deals are still sitting on the shelf. Amazon's Prime Big Deal Days event wrapped up earlier this month, and while the bulk of its portable power station discounts have expired, a few worthwhile offers are still live for anyone who missed the window or is just now thinking about picking one up.

Portable power stations have become a practical staple for a wide range of people — campers, remote workers, homeowners bracing for outages, and anyone who has ever watched a phone die in the middle of nowhere. At their core, these devices are large rechargeable batteries with multiple output ports, essentially a wall outlet you can carry with you. The better ones support AC plugs, USB-A, USB-C, and can even be recharged via solar panels.

Among the deals still standing is an Anker unit with a 60,000mAh capacity, currently priced at $140, down from $150. The discount is modest — about 7% — but the device was already considered solid value before the markdown. It includes a built-in pop-out light and a display screen for monitoring charge levels, which makes it a sensible pick for backpackers or anyone who wants something light and functional without spending heavily.

At the other end of the spectrum, the EF EcoFlow Delta 2 Max is the kind of machine that changes what's possible away from the grid. With a 2048Wh capacity, it can power a meaningful array of devices simultaneously — think a full camping setup with lights, a small appliance, and multiple charging devices running at once. It's not something you'd carry on your back, but loaded into a vehicle for a weekend trip or kept at home as a backup, it earns its place. The current price is $1,319, down from $1,899, a 31% reduction that makes it considerably more accessible than it was a few weeks ago.

Anker's broader SOLIX lineup is also part of the remaining offers, spanning from the heavy-duty F3800 home backup unit to the compact SOLIX C300 DC, with solar panel bundles available as well. Savings on select SOLIX configurations reportedly reach as high as $4,334, though those figures apply to the upper end of the product range.

For anyone approaching this category for the first time, the choice can feel overwhelming. The practical starting point is capacity — measured in watt-hours for larger units or milliamp-hours for smaller ones — and the general guidance is to buy as much as you can reasonably afford, since you'll almost always find a use for the headroom. After that, the output ports matter: make sure the station has the right combination of AC outlets, USB-A, and USB-C connections for the devices you actually own. If outdoor use is the plan, checking for water resistance ratings is worth the extra minute.

Brand reliability carries real weight here. A power station that fails during an emergency, or worse, creates a safety hazard, is worse than no power station at all. The names that have built consistent reputations in this space — Anker, EcoFlow, Jackery, and Bluetti — are the ones most buyers return to, and for good reason.

Amazon isn't the only place to look. Best Buy and Walmart have been running competing discounts to capture the same shopping traffic, which means prices across retailers have been nudging downward. Anyone still in the market should check all three before committing, since the lowest price on any given model may not be where you'd expect it. The remaining deals won't last indefinitely, but for now, the shelf isn't entirely bare.

If you've been waiting to stock up on portable power, now's the ideal time — whether for outages, emergencies, or off-grid living.
— Digital Trends editorial, paraphrasing Anker SOLIX promotional context
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why do these post-sale stragglers matter? The event is over.

Model

Because most people don't shop on day one. They see the headline, think about it for a week, and then go looking — and usually find nothing. These leftovers are for that person.

Inventor

Is a 7% discount on the Anker unit actually worth calling a deal?

Model

On its own, no. But the point is the device was already priced well before the sale. The discount is a small bonus on something that was already a reasonable buy.

Inventor

What's the real use case for something like the EcoFlow Delta 2 Max at that size?

Model

Think vehicle camping, or a household that loses power a few times a year and wants to keep the fridge and some lights running. It's not a backpack item — it's infrastructure you can move.

Inventor

The article mentions solar panel compatibility. How significant is that?

Model

It's the difference between a device that runs out and one that keeps going. If you're off-grid for more than a day or two, recharging from the sun changes the math entirely.

Inventor

Why does brand matter so much here compared to, say, buying a cheap phone charger?

Model

Because the failure modes are different. A bad phone charger is annoying. A poorly made high-capacity battery can overheat or fail in ways that are genuinely dangerous.

Inventor

Is there a type of buyer who should just skip this category entirely?

Model

Someone who only ever loses power for an hour once a decade and has no outdoor hobbies. For everyone else, there's probably a use case waiting to reveal itself.

Inventor

What should someone do if they're not sure which capacity they need?

Model

Err up. You'll find reasons to use the extra capacity. You won't find a way to wish you'd bought less.

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