Whole-home standby generator installation costs $5,000–$15,000 in the US, including the generator (~$3,000–$8,000), transfer switch, electrical, and gas hookup. Generac and Kohler dominate the residential market. Most installs take 1–3 days. In Poland expect PLN 18,000–55,000; in the Netherlands €5,000–€15,000.
Generator cost by size
| Capacity | Covers | Installed cost (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| 8–10 kW | Essentials (fridge, lights, well pump) | $5,000–$8,000 |
| 14–18 kW | Whole house, small AC | $7,000–$11,000 |
| 20–24 kW | Whole house, central AC | $9,000–$14,000 |
| 26 kW+ | Large home with multiple AC zones | $12,000–$20,000+ |
Cost in the Netherlands
Typical install is €5,000–€15,000. The Dutch grid is reliable, so residential standby is less common — more often installed in rural farms or commercial properties. Battery-based backup (Tesla Powerwall) is increasingly preferred for residential.
What affects the cost?
- Fuel type — natural-gas connections are cheap; propane needs a tank ($1,500–$4,000)
- Transfer switch — automatic (ATS) costs $400–$800 more than manual
- Distance from gas line/panel — long runs add trenching and conduit
- Pad and weather protection — concrete pad and enclosure add $500–$1,200
- Permits and inspection — most municipalities require gas + electrical permits
How to save
- Off-peak install — late winter and early spring offer 10–15% discounts
- Bundle gas hookup with other work if your home isn't on natural gas yet
- Consider battery backup instead for shorter, more frequent outages
- Right-size — most homes don't need the maximum capacity their lot supports
Local