Waiting for a better deal is a real gamble.
For anyone who has been watching the price on Anker's compact solar power station, today is worth a second look. Best Buy has the Anker SOLIX C300X DC Portable Power Station bundled with a 60-watt foldable solar panel marked down to $236.99 with free shipping — but only for today, as part of its rotating Deals of the Day program.
The same bundle surfaced at this price about two weeks ago in an identical one-day window, so the deal has some precedent. Outside of Best Buy, Anker's own website currently lists it at $270, down from a regular $330. Amazon carries only the grey version of the unit, and that one is running $13 higher than today's Best Buy price. Looking back across 2025, most discounts have landed around $250, with a brief dip to $220 in February. The all-time low — $190 — came during Black Friday. Today's $237 lands as the third-best price of the year and fourth-best on record, sitting $47 above that Black Friday floor.
The C300X DC is built around a 90,000mAh lithium iron phosphate battery, a chemistry that tends to hold up better over hundreds of charge cycles than standard lithium-ion. It puts out up to 300 watts of continuous power across seven ports: a 120-watt car socket, three USB-C ports rated at 140 watts, 100 watts, and 15 watts respectively, and two USB-A ports at 12 watts each. Two of those USB-C ports are bidirectional, meaning they can charge the station itself at up to 140 watts while simultaneously powering a device — a genuinely useful feature when you're trying to top everything off at once.
What distinguishes this unit from heavier competitors is its size. Anker describes it as book-sized, and the company claims it runs about 30 percent smaller than the industry average for stations in this output class. It ships with a shoulder strap, making it practical to carry to a campsite or toss in a bag for a long travel day. There's also a built-in pop-up light with three brightness settings — a small addition that proves its worth when you're fumbling around a tent after dark or navigating a power outage at home.
The bundled 60-watt solar panel folds flat for transport and connects directly to the station, giving it a path to recharge without a wall outlet. For day trips, weekend camping, or as a backup during grid outages, the combination covers most personal device needs — phones, laptops, small appliances — without requiring a generator or an extension cord.
Settings and power monitoring are handled through Anker's companion app, which lets you track output levels and adjust port behavior without digging through physical menus.
For those still comparing options, Anker is also running a broader Labor Day sale through August 30, though the brand has a history of quietly extending these promotions under a new name after the stated end date. Jackery, EcoFlow, and Bluetti are all running competing sales that begin expiring tonight and continue through the weekend — enough overlap that it's worth a quick comparison before committing. Today's Best Buy deal, however, closes at midnight.
Notable Quotes
The station is roughly 30 percent smaller than the industry average for its output class, and ships with a shoulder strap for hands-free carry.— Anker product specifications
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What actually makes this deal worth paying attention to, versus the usual noise around gadget sales?
The price history is the thing. This bundle has only been cheaper twice all year, and the lowest it's ever gone was $190 during Black Friday. At $237, you're not at the floor, but you're close enough that waiting for a better deal is a real gamble.
Why does the battery chemistry matter — LiFePO4 versus regular lithium-ion?
Longevity, mostly. LiFePO4 cells tend to survive far more charge cycles before degrading. For something you're going to run down and recharge repeatedly over years, that adds up to a meaningfully longer useful life.
The bidirectional USB-C ports keep coming up. Is that actually useful in practice?
More than it sounds. If you're at a campsite and the panel is charging the station, you can still fast-charge a laptop through the same port simultaneously. You don't have to choose between topping up the station and keeping your devices alive.
How does the size compare to other power stations in this output range?
Most 300-watt stations are chunky — closer to a small cooler. This one is described as book-sized, with a shoulder strap. That's a meaningful difference if you're actually carrying it somewhere rather than just leaving it in a truck bed.
The built-in light seems like a minor feature. Is it worth mentioning?
It's the kind of thing you don't think about until you need it. A power outage at 2 a.m., or trying to find something in a dark tent — having a light that runs off the station itself, with adjustable brightness, is more practical than it sounds on a spec sheet.
What's the risk of waiting for a better price?
The all-time low was $190, but that was Black Friday — months away. The next time this hits $220 or below is unpredictable. If you need it before fall, today's price is defensible.