How Many 280Ah LiFePO4 Cells for 48V System?

48V LiFePO4 battery system using 280Ah prismatic cells

If you’re planning a 48V energy storage system, this is usually one of the first questions:

How many 280Ah cells do I actually need?

The short answer is simple.
But there are a few details that make a big difference in real projects.

First thing to know: 48V isn’t really 48V

Most “48V” LiFePO4 systems are actually:

  • 51.2V nominal voltage

Why?

Because each LiFePO4 cell is about 3.2V

So the standard setup is:

  • 16 cells in series (16S)
  • 3.2V × 16 = 51.2V

That’s your base pack.

So how many 280Ah cells do you need?

For a basic 48V system:

  • You need 16 cells
  • Each cell is 280Ah

That gives you:

  • 51.2V / 280Ah battery pack

What’s the total energy (kWh)?

This is what most buyers actually care about.

Total energy = Voltage × Capacity

  • 51.2V × 280Ah ≈ 14.3 kWh

That’s a standard single pack.

What if you need more capacity?

This is where parallel comes in.

Example:

If you want around 28kWh:

  • 2 packs in parallel
  • Each pack = 16 cells

Total cells:

  • 32 cells (16S2P)

Quick reference

  • 14kWh → 16 cells
  • 28kWh → 32 cells
  • 42kWh → 48 cells

Same structure, just adding parallel groups.

16 LiFePO4 battery cells connected in series

Typical setups in real projects

1. Home solar storage

  • Usually 10–20kWh
  • → 16 to 32 cells

2. Small commercial systems

  • 30–60kWh
  • → 32 to 64 cells

3. Larger installations

  • 100kWh+
  • Multiple racks / parallel systems

At this point, consistency between batches becomes very important.

A few things that are easy to overlook

1. Not all 280Ah cells behave the same

Even with the same spec:

  • capacity can vary
  • internal resistance can differ

That’s why matching matters (this is where many systems fail later).

2. BMS selection

Your battery management system needs to match:

  • 16S configuration
  • Current requirements

A weak BMS will limit performance, no matter how good the cells are.

3. Expansion planning

A common mistake:

  • Start with one pack
  • Add more later from a different batch

This often leads to imbalance.

If you plan to expand, it’s better to:

  • reserve same-batch cells
  • or plan parallel structure upfront

Why 280Ah is commonly used

You’ll see 280Ah cells in a lot of storage systems for a reason:

  • Good balance between size and energy
  • Fewer cells compared to smaller capacities
  • Easier pack assembly
  • Lower overall connection complexity

That’s why it’s widely used in:

Typical 280Ah cell reference

Most systems are built using cells with specs like:

  • 3.2V nominal voltage
  • 280Ah capacity
  • Prismatic design
  • Long cycle life

If you need a reference for this type of cell:3.2V 280Ah LipePo4 Battery Cell

Final thoughts

If you’re building a standard 48V system:

  • Start with 16 cells (16S)
  • Then scale capacity by adding parallel packs

The math is simple.
The real challenge is making sure all cells work well together over time.

That’s where sourcing and consistency matter more than just specs on paper.

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