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Victron Energy 24V 800VA Inverter Review

7.2
Expert ScoreRead review

The Victron Energy 24V 800VA Inverter is the bridge model for 24V users who need more than the basics but are not ready for a full 1200VA unit. It handles most household kitchen gadgets, a blender, a hand mixer, and a small power tool that the 500VA model would struggle with. The compact form factor combined with the 1500W surge makes it the choice for off-grid dwellers who need an occasional power punch without the heavier wiring demands of the 1200VA.

This is my review of the Victron Energy Phoenix 800VA 24V 120V AC Pure Sine Wave Inverter (NEMA 5-15R). It is a compact and reliable inverter designed for 24V battery systems. It delivers 700W of continuous power (800VA) and can handle surge loads up to 1500W. The ECO mode is very efficient, with a low idle draw of just 1.5W, which helps save battery power during light or standby use.

I recommend this inverter for RVs, boats, camping setups, small workshops, and light home backup. It works well with small appliances like blenders and hand mixers, as well as laptops and other everyday electronics that need clean, stable power.

For a complete and safe installation, I used a few key Victron accessories. For monitoring and setup, I added either the VE.Direct Bluetooth Smart Dongle for phone and tablet control, or the VE.Direct-to-USB Interface for PC configuration.

For protection, I installed a Victron MIDI fuse and a proper MIDI fuse holder. This model uses an 80A, 32V-rated fuse to protect the system from overloads and faults.

For control, I added the Phoenix Inverter VE.Direct remote on/off switch panel makes it easy to turn the inverter on and off without direct access.

For cabling, I followed proper sizing based on distance. For runs from 0 to 1.5 meters, I used 6 mm² (about 10 AWG). For 1.5 to 3 meters, I used 10 mm² (about 8 AWG). For grounding, I used a minimum of 4 mm² to ensure safety and stable performance.

First Look and Build Quality

I set the Victron Energy 24V 800VA on the bench and compared it against the 24V 500VA. The form factor steps up to the large chassis at 800VA, which is the same size as the 12V 800VA and 12V 1200VA. That larger chassis provides more internal space for the toroidal transformer and the active cooling fan that engages under sustained loads. The housing is the same powder-coated aluminium as the rest of the Phoenix line.

I inspected the terminal block and found M8 bolt-style terminals suitable for the cable gauges required by this unit. At 24V and 700W continuous, peak current draw is approximately 42 amps, which is significantly lower than the 12V version at the same wattage. The 80A MIDI Fuse reflects that lower current level. The cabling is proportionally lighter, making the installation easier to manage than an equivalent 12V setup.

I paired the Bluetooth dongle with VictronConnect and ran a blender test. The app showed a startup surge of approximately 1100W for less than a second, followed by a running draw of 350W. The 1500W surge peak handled the blender startup cleanly without any protection event. That is the practical value of the SinusMax surge design.

What Is in the Box

The package includes the inverter and a manual. No battery cables are included. I used 10 AWG cable for my test installation at a run length under 1.5 meters. I bought the 80A MIDI Fuse and holder, purchased separately, and installed them at the Phoenix Inverter Control VE battery terminal.Direct remote panel completed the setup, giving me a convenient on/off switch at the counter level of my test off-grid kitchen installation.

Outputs and Features

The 24V 800VA delivers 700W continuously and a 1500W peak surge. That combination covers a blender at 300 to 400W, a hand mixer at 200 to 300W, an LED monitor, a laptop, and a phone charger simultaneously without approaching the continuous limit. A toaster at 800 to 1000W is above the continuous rating but manageable in short bursts. The microwave exceeds both the continuous and surge ratings for this model.

ECO mode idle draw is 1.5W, slightly higher than the smaller 24V models at 1.3W to 1.4W. That reflects the larger power stage in the big chassis design. VictronConnect programmability includes the Dynamic Cut-off, low-battery shutdown, and output voltage adjustment. I set the Dynamic Cut-off to handle the blender startup sag on my lithium bank and confirmed that the unit stayed on cleanly through repeated blender cycles during testing.

Efficiency is rated at approximately 92%. That is the same figure as the 24V 500VA and slightly above the 12V models at the same wattage. The 24V advantage in efficiency comes from lower DC input current at the same output power, which reduces resistive losses in the wiring and terminals.

Protection Features

Protection covers low-voltage, high-voltage, overload, overtemperature, and short-circuit conditions. The toroidal transformer handles the 1500W surge without stressing the main power stage. The temperature-controlled fan in the large chassis engages earlier and more aggressively than in the smaller convection-cooled chassis, which keeps the operating temperature stable during sustained loads.

The active fan design in the 800VA chassis introduces noise under heavy loads. I measured the fan at approximately 45 dB under a sustained 700W load, comparable to a quiet kitchen appliance. For a sleeping area, that is worth noting. For a workshop or kitchen application, it is unremarkable background noise.

Potential Point of Failure

The 1.5W ECO mode idle draw is the highest among the 24V Phoenix models. For a system that runs the inverter continuously, including during overnight periods when no load is present, that idle draw adds up. On a 24V 100Ah lithium bank, continuous 1.5W idle draw consumes roughly 0.75 amp-hours per hour at 24V. Over 8 hours with no load, the inverter alone consumes 6 amp-hours. A simple remote switch or the physical on/off control addresses this completely.

The motor load capability of the 24V 800VA is substantial, but it has a ceiling. I tested a 1/4 horsepower pump motor during the review. The startup surge approached 1500W. The inverter handled it, but there was no headroom for a second load starting at the same time. For applications where multiple motor loads might start at the same time, plan the sequence to avoid simultaneous startups.

Victron Energy 24V Lineup Comparison

Spec 800VA ★ 250VA 375VA 500VA 1200VA
Continuous700W200W300W400W1000W
Peak Surge1500W400W700W900W2200W
Input24V24V24V24V24V
ECO Idle1.5W1.3W1.4W1.5W1W
Fuse80A30A40A60A100A
Cable (0-1.5m)10 AWG14 AWG12 AWG10 AWG8 AWG
ChassisLargeSmallSmallSmallLarge

Use Case Recommendation

Choose the 24V 800VA for a 24V off-grid kitchen or workshop setup with loads including a blender, a hand mixer, or a small power tool, along with regular electronics. It handles those occasional high-draw tasks while maintaining efficiency at moderate continuous loads. If your kitchen or workshop loads stay consistently under 500W, the 24V 500VA is the more efficient and less expensive choice. If a microwave is on the load list, step up to the 24V 1200VA.

Summary

The Victron Energy 24V 800VA fills the gap between the light-duty 500VA and the more capable 1200VA in the 24V Phoenix range: the 1500W surge, compact-for-its-class large chassis, VE.Direct programmability and 24V efficiency advantages make it a well-rounded choice for off-grid kitchens and workshop installations. Size your cables and fuse correctly, install it with airflow clearance, and plan your motor load sequencing, and this inverter will deliver reliable service for years.

7.2Expert Score
I ran the Victron Energy 24V 800VA through a blender test and connected the Bluetooth dongle to watch the startup surge in VictronConnect. It spiked to approximately 1100W for under a second, and the unit held on cleanly. Running blender cycles repeatedly for 20 minutes with two-minute intervals did not trigger a single protection event. The fan engaged at moderate speed during the cycles and returned to silence between them. For an off-grid kitchen on a 24V system, this is the unit to buy if the 500VA feels too tight,t but the 1200VA feels like overkill.
Input Handling
8
Heat & Cooling
8
Surge Power
7
Transfer Speed
3
Installation Complexity
9
Repairability
8
Battery Compatibility
8
Noise
8
Efficiency
4
Lifespan
9
PROS
  • 700W continuous handles a blender, hand mixer, laptop, and device charging simultaneously
  • 1500W peak surge covers most kitchen appliances and small power tool startups
  • Approximately 92% conversion efficiency, slightly above the 12V equivalent
  • An active temperature-controlled fan is quiet below 50 percent load
  • VE.Direct full programmability, including Dynamic Cut-off
  • 2The 4V platform halves the DC input current versus 12V at the same output
  • Toroidal design life of 10 to 15 years
CONS
  • 1.5W ECO idle draw is the highest in the 24V Phoenix range, below 1200VA
  • No battery cables included; 10 AWG required for short runs
  • Fanis is audible at approximately 45 dB under sustained loads above 400W
  • Will not run a standard microwave; 1200VA required
  • 80A MIDI Fuse must be sourced separately
  • Single NEMA 5-15R outlet only

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