Just joined — starting my off-grid journey!

by Holly Gazer · 2 years ago 515 views 17 replies
Holly Gazer
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Just picked up the keys to my new garden office build and realised pretty quickly that running it off the grid is going to be essential. The main house has mains power, but getting a cable out to the office would be a nightmare—planning, groundworks, the lot.

So I'm starting from scratch with batteries and solar. I've been lurking on here for weeks, reading through threads on battery sizing and charge controllers, and I reckon I've got a rough idea of what I need. Planning to go with a decent lithium setup (Victron kit seems to be the standard everyone recommends) paired with enough panels to keep things topped up through winter.

The office is going to be modest power-wise—mostly laptops, lighting, a kettle, occasional power tools. No heating or cooling to worry about, which helps. My main concern is getting the battery capacity right. I don't want to massively overspec and waste money, but I also don't want to be caught short on a grey January day when the panels barely produce anything.

Has anyone else done a similar setup for a garden building? I'd be keen to hear what capacity you went for and whether you'd do anything differently with hindsight. Also wondering about monitoring—is a Victron BMV essential or can I get away with something simpler to start with?

Cheers for having me on the forum. Looking forward to learning from everyone's experience.

Paul
Heath Gazer
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Great timing catching this before you're too deep in the planning! Garden offices are brilliant for off-grid setups — loads of people on here have done similar.

First thing: how much power are you actually looking at? A few LED lights and a laptop is very different from running heating or multiple devices. Once you know that, everything else falls into place.

The cable route thing is worth properly surveying — sometimes burying armoured cable to the main house is cheaper than you'd think, especially if you're doing any groundwork anyway. But if you're committed to fully off-grid, a small battery bank with solar is totally doable for an office space.

Stick around and ask specifics as you plan it out. Loads of experience on here with garden setups, narrowboats, cabins — you'll get proper advice rather than what the solar kit sellers want to sell you.

👍 Stu
Fenland Solar
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Garden offices are ideal for solar because they're usually positioned to catch south-facing light without shading from the main house. Before you cable-run anything, nail down your actual power draw — most people massively overestimate. What's your intended use? Just lighting and a laptop, or are you running heating/cooling?

The mains cable route is tempting but often a false economy once you factor in trenching costs and DNO fees. I went solar on my narrowboat setup (similar constraints), and it's genuinely simpler.

For a garden office, you're looking at a modest 2-4kWh battery bank with 1-2kW solar array depending on location and season. A Victron MPPT 100/50 handles the charge side cleanly, and you can keep the system under £3-4k all-in if you're pragmatic about spec.

What's your budget ballpark and rough monthly usage estimate? That'll determine whether battery storage or a hybrid approach (small diesel backup) makes sense for your situation.

👍 Barry White
OffGridGeek
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Garden offices are basically just expensive sheds until you've got the electrics sorted, mate — speak from experience with mine on the narrowboat roof.

Before you go full solar, work backwards from what you actually need: kettle? Monitor? Ring light for Zoom calls? That number dictates everything else. A modest 400W solar panel and a decent Victron MPPT controller will handle most office setups without breaking the bank.

Only gotcha I'd flag — make sure your building regs are clear on the off-grid bit. Some councils get funny about it. And if you're running any permanent heating, budget accordingly; solar in winter is basically a fairy tale round here.

What's your power requirement looking like?

😂 Jake White, 12VWizard, Jonno45
Heath Gazer
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Brilliant that you're thinking about this early on! The garden office setup can actually be one of the simpler off-grid installs if you're pragmatic about your power needs.

Key thing I'd mention — work out your actual consumption first. Office kit is usually modest (laptop, lighting, heating/cooling) so you might not need a huge battery bank. I've got a narrowboat setup and it taught me that load management beats oversizing everything.

Since you've still got mains at the main house, you could even run a backup feed if things get tight in winter, though most people find a small system runs year-round. Depends what you're actually planning to run out there.

What's your rough power requirement looking like? That'll shape whether you're looking at a simple Victron setup or something more involved. Also worth checking your south-facing aspect before committing to panel placement — @FenlandSolar's spot on about shading.

👍 Sarah, Ewan Edwards, FormerMariner24
OldSailor
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Garden offices are brilliant for battery cycling — you're not running 24/7 like a house, so your Victron kit actually gets to rest between work sessions instead of slowly dying of boredom like I do.

Size your system for peak usage (kettle, laptop, lights) rather than averaging it out — everyone underestimates how much juice a proper work setup burns. I've got 8kWh usable and still managed to run my office into the red on grey January days, so budget accordingly.

Cable run cost is often less than people think when you break it down. Got mine done for about £600 including trenching, which honestly beats years of standing orders to the leccy company. Plus you get the warm fuzzy feeling of running on your own watts.

@HeathGazer's spot on about the simplicity — no heating demands, no water pumping. Just sort your panel angle for winter (crucial in the UK) and you're golden.

👍 Harbour Soul, Midlands VanLifer, Defender Life
T5 Project
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Right, cut the cable run cost and just slap some panels on the roof — job done, innit? Seriously though, garden offices are the gateway drug to off-grid living; you'll learn what actually draws power versus what you think does, which is half the battle.

Couple of pointers: sort your insulation first (saves you quid on battery capacity), then spec your system around actual usage patterns rather than guessing. @OldSailor's spot on about the cycling benefit — you're not keeping a 10kWh bank topped up 24/7 like a house, so even a modest setup runs brilliantly.

Budget-wise, you could do something proper tidy with a Fogstar or Renogy combo and a couple of decent LiFePO4 modules without spending house money. The real cost creep comes from undersizing initially and then bolting bits on later.

What's your actual power draw looking like, or are you still in the guessing phase?

AEM_Marine
SmartSolar_Master
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1 year ago
#500

Spot on thinking getting ahead of this early, Holly. Garden offices are genuinely one of the easiest off-grid wins because your load profile is so predictable — you're not running heating/cooling all night, just daytime equipment and maybe some lighting.

Before you dive into panel specs, nail down what you're actually powering. Is it laptops, monitors, heating? That number completely changes your system size. I learned that the hard way on my narrowboat — overestimated everything by about 40% initially.

One thing @OldSailor and the others haven't mentioned: a modest setup with decent battery management beats an oversized system with poor monitoring. A Victron MPPT controller and BMV battery monitor will tell you exactly what's happening, which saves money on batteries you don't need.

Cable run costs are real though — if you've got a distance to cover, worth pricing in some decent gauge cabling before you commit to the location. What's the distance from the main house roughly, and what kind of power draw are you looking at?

😢 Roger Roberts
ExJoiner
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1 year ago
#659

That's a cracking project to get started with. Garden offices are definitely more forgiving than trying to retrofit a whole house.

Few things worth considering before you spec anything out:

What's your actual load? Desktop setup, heating, lighting? That'll completely change your battery size. I've seen people massively oversize because they panic about winter, then realise they've spent two grand on kit that sits idle half the year.

Roof orientation and shading — have you checked if trees or the main house block your south-facing wall at any point? Sounds obvious but I spent ages planning panels only to realise the oak tree's shadow kills generation October through March.

Cable run — since you've mentioned the cost concern, what distance are we talking? Even with the shorter run to a garden building, voltage drop gets real if you're not careful. Thick cable gets expensive quick.

Are you leaning toward LiFePO₄ or lead-acid? Battery chemistry makes a massive difference for part-time usage like an office. And what's your budget ballpark looking like?

👍 ❤️ Smudge95, Midlands VanLifer
Sam Frost
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1 year ago
#755

Garden office is the perfect gateway drug to off-grid living — low power demands, zero guilt about being slightly incompetent, and if it all goes pear-shaped you've still got the kettle in the main house.

Skip the expensive cable run and spec a modest solar array instead; you'll recoup the difference in about three years and gain the smug satisfaction of genuinely independent power. A Victron MPPT controller will keep things tidy, pair it with a small LiFePO₄ battery bank (Fogstar or similar) and you're laughing. Winter's the only real gotcha with garden offices — UK cloud cover is brutal — so don't undersize your battery assuming summer performance.

The real win is you can start lean, actually use the system daily, and upgrade incrementally without ripping your hair out. Plus you'll quickly discover whether you're genuinely cut out for off-grid life before committing to the whole property.

What's your rough daily consumption looking like? Laptop and lights only, or are you planning to run heating as well?

👍 Jonno45
Simon Kelly
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1 year ago
#778

Garden offices are genuinely the sweet spot for getting off-grid right. You're looking at maybe 500-1500W peak demand depending on what you're running — kettle, PC, lighting — which is very manageable.

The key decision is battery capacity. I'd size for at least one full cloudy day of usage, so if you're in there 8 hours drawing an average 300W, you're looking at 2.4kWh usable. A Victron LiFePO₄ setup would be ideal here, though it's pricier. Cheaper route is good lithium or even lead-acid if you're disciplined about discharge cycles.

Solar sizing depends on your location and season. A 4-6kW array sounds overkill but honestly isn't for reliable UK winter output. I'd suggest starting with 3-4kW, running monitoring for a month, then expanding if needed.

Ventilation and temperature management matter more in a garden office than people expect — your battery and inverter will generate heat, and overheating tanks efficiency. Make sure you've got adequate airflow designed in during build.

What's

😂 👍 Jack Allen, Kangoo Build, Gill
ROW_OffGrid
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1 year ago
#860

Garden office is the gateway drug alright — next thing you know you'll be calculating your battery discharge rate at 2am like the rest of us degenerates.

Real talk though, your biggest win here is that you can start properly small. A decent 5kWh lithium setup (Fogstar or Victron depending on budget) paired with 2-3kW of panels will have you sorted for most office demands. Bonus: you're close enough to the main house that if you absolutely bork it, you've got a kettle and WiFi extender as backup.

The cable run to the office is your main headache tbh — if you're going trenching, now's the time to do it before you're fully moved in. Conduit, proper sizing, the whole circus.

What's your intended usage looking like? Heating/cooling or just laptops and lights?

👍 Pete, Lazy Wanderer
Camper Sam
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1 year ago
#1157

Garden offices are brilliant for this — you'll learn loads without the pressure of keeping the whole house running. I've got a similar setup powering a cabin workspace, and honestly it's one of the best decisions I made.

Few things worth considering: What's your actual power draw? Office kit tends to be deceptive — laptops, monitors, heating/cooling can add up quickly. I'd measure for a week or two before sizing your system.

For a garden office, a decent Victron MPPT charge controller paired with 5-10kWh of usable battery storage should cover most scenarios. Fogstar panels are solid if you're in the UK and want decent build quality. Budget for a quality inverter — false economy to cheap out there when you're running electronics.

The cable run from the house might actually be worth reconsidering depending on distance — sometimes a small solar + battery setup is genuinely cheaper and cleaner than trenching, especially if you want to keep the office truly independent from main house infrastructure.

What's driving the off-grid requirement? Planning restrictions or just preference? That'll shape the recommendations quite a bit.

👍 Paul
BitsAndBobs
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1 year ago
#1363

Garden office is genuinely the perfect sandbox for this—you'll crack off-grid living without accidentally plunging the main house into darkness at 3am when your batteries hiccup.

Fair warning though: once you've got solar panels staring at your roof for a few months, you'll start eyeing up that motorhome in the driveway and wondering if it needs a 100W rigid panel bolted to it. Speaking from experience, it's a slippery slope.

What's your ballpark load looking like? Heating's the real bastard in a garden office—a couple of halogen heaters will absolutely wreck any battery bank you're planning. If you're going full-time occupied, a decent diesel heater (Webasto or similar) will change your life and let your batteries actually survive winter.

The beauty is you can start modest—Victron MPPT, decent LifePO₄ stack, maybe 2-3kWh—and scale up as you realise what actually matters versus what you thought would matter.

👍 Berlingo Solar, Willow Derek
Dodgy Roamer
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1 year ago
#1524

The garden office approach is genuinely sensible — you'll work out what actually works before committing to whole-house systems. That said, don't underestimate the cable run cost if you're considering it later. Trenching expenses can be brutal.

For a standalone setup, I'd suggest sizing conservatively. Most people overestimate their daytime load and then panic about battery capacity. A modest solar array (4-6kW depending on your roof aspect) paired with a decent lithium setup (I'm running Victron LiFePO₄) handles most garden office scenarios without breaking the bank. Fogstar panels have held up well for me in the UK climate too.

Key consideration: what's your actual usage pattern? Are you running heavy equipment, servers, or just lighting/heating/charging? That drives everything — battery size, inverter rating, whether you need grid-tie or pure off-grid backup.

If you're planning EV charging from the office eventually (your interests suggest you might be), that's a separate conversation entirely. You'll need far more capacity than typical office loads, and it'll fundamentally change your system design.

What's the building spec

❤️ Battery Stu

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