








A mini-tower UPS with line interactive topology, the CyberPower PFC Sinewave CP1500PFCLCD provides battery backup (using sine wave output) and surge protection for desktop computers, workstations, networking devices, and home entertainment systems requiring active PFC power source compatibility. The CP1500PFCLCD features an advanced multifunction control panel with a color LCD to quickly confirm status and alerts at-a-glance. The screen tilts for easy viewing when the UPS is placed in a low position such as under a desk. Two USB charge ports (one Type-A and one Type-C) power portable devices such as mobile phones and tablets, even during a utility power failure. The CP1500PFCLCD uses Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) to correct minor power fluctuations without switching to battery power, which extends battery life. AVR is essential in areas where power fluctuations occur frequently. The CP1500PFCLCD comes with a three-year warranty (including coverage of batteries) and a $500,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee.
1500VA/1000W PFC Sine Wave Battery Backup Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) System designed to support active PFC and conventional power supplies; Safeguards computers, workstations, network devices, and telecom equipment
12 NEMA 5-15R OUTLETS: Six battery backup & surge protected outlets, six surge protected outlets; INPUT: NEMA 5-15P right angle, 45 degree offset plug with five foot power cord; 2 USB charge ports (1 Type-A, 1 Type-C) quickly charges mobile phones and tablets
MULTIFUNCTION, COLOR LCD PANEL: Displays immediate, detailed information on battery and power conditions; Color display alerts users to potential issues before they can affect critical equipment and cause downtime; Screen tilts up to 22 degrees
AUTOMATIC VOLTAGE REGULATION (AVR): Corrects minor power fluctuations without switching to battery power, thereby extending the life of the battery
3-YEAR WARRANTY – INCLUDING THE BATTERY; $500,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee and FREE PowerPanel Management Software (Download)
7 reviews for CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD PFC Sinewave UPS Battery Backup and Surge Protector, 1500VA/1000W, 12 Outlets, AVR, Mini Tower; UL Certified
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$24.99

Dan Q –
A Technician’s Favorite for a Reason: Clean Power, Quiet Operation
The CyberPower CP1500PFCRM2U is one of the few UPS units that feels perfectly matched to small-business racks. It provides clean sinewave output, predictable voltage regulation, and a compact 2U form factor that fits neatly under a firewall/switch stack without creating a cable-management crime scene. The build quality is solid, the display is straightforward, and nothing about the unit feels flimsy or compromised. It’s an honest, dependable UPS that does exactly what it claims.Where it really shines is in typical SMB deployments. With a firewall, switch, router, and modem attached, you can expect roughly an hour of runtime—more than enough to bridge short outages, ride out flickers, or handle those “power went out but the office is still open” scenarios. That hour window gives you time to gracefully shut down sensitive gear or let cloud-dependent offices keep working long enough for the lights (or generator) to come back. It’s not a marathon UPS, but it’s absolutely a stability anchor for day-to-day business operation.Operational behavior is excellent: no whining about PFC loads, no weird dips, and no thermal drama. Hot-swappable batteries keep long-term maintenance simple, and CyberPower’s management software is just functional enough to automate safe shutdowns without making you regret opening it. For the size, price, and consistency, this unit hits the sweet spot for small offices, home labs, and small server closets. It’s a dependable favorite—and one of the easiest UPS recommendations to stand behind.Pros• Clean sinewave output and PFC-friendly• About 1 hour runtime for typical SMB racks (FW + switch + router + modem)• Solid thermals and quiet operation• Hot-swappable batteries for easy maintenance• Excellent fit for small racks and compact deployments• Very stable under inconsistent building powerCons• Not designed for extended outages beyond the 1-hour window• LCD is practical, not modern• Heavy during mounting• Too small for large multi-server environments
CWestin –
Absolutely AMAZING value! A great Pure Sine Wave Back-UPS Unit!
I purchased this unit for my Mid-2011 27″ iMac / 2.7GHz i5 Quad-Core / 1 TB Hard Drive / 16 GB RAM (Self Upgraded) / 512 MB Video/Graphics.The main reason I purchased this unit is, well, because in my opinion, if you have a desktop computer you absolutely NEED some sort of battery back-up unit, because power failures/outages WILL happen. Not to mention, brown-outs, where the voltage drops to an unusable level. The only time I would really say that you don’t absolutely need a battery back-up is if you have a laptop, as they have built in batteries obviously, which will prevent it from doing a hard destructive shut-down with loss of power. Though if it were me, I would still purchase a battery back-up, because most of them feature AVR (automatic voltage regulation), which levels out the power output without having to resort to using the battery’s power supply. For example, if you have a high load being drawn on that circuit, or for some reason your voltage drops some (not too much of course), this unit (and some others) will compensate for that and give you a more constant amount of voltage. In my area, here in Florida it’s pretty common to have outages, especially during storms and such. The most common outage is a very quick 1-2 second outage, and then the power will come back on. Which isn’t great at all, it actually sucks, very much.I had JUST purchased my iMac and I was shopping around for Back-UPS units, when my house had a quick outage, and my brand new 27″ iMac did a hard shut down. Which gave me sort of a kick in the pants and coaxed me to purchase one VERY soon and ship it VERY fast. I was considering the APC Smart-UPS units, but they were outrageously expensive. Yes I realize that you pay for what you get, in some cases, but I just didn’t want to spend $500-$600 on a battery back up. I absolutely needed a unit that provided Pure Sine Wave power when on battery power, because the newer iMacs all have PFC (Power Factor Corrected, I believe that’s what the abbreviation stands for) Power Supply, and your average Back-UPS units like the APC models that you find at Staples, Office Depot and Wal-Mart absolutely will not work with computers that have these power supplies. This is because those Back-UPS units provide a “Stepped Approximation to a Sine Wave” when they are running on battery power”, and newer computers, both Macs and PCs, with the PFC Power Supplies will NOT run them when it’s running on battery power.I was debating on whether or not to purchase one of these CyberPower units, because I’ve seen a couple bad reviews on them, but a very large majority of the reviews were in fact very positive and the people had nothing but good words to write about these units. I think a majority of the issues come from the items being mishandled during the shipping process. I witnessed this when the customer service lady at UPS basically body slammed my Back-Ups unit onto the table right in front of me as I was picking up packages. They really don’t care, because you could see what the item was, as it was shipped in the manufacturer’s product packaging. Which is absolutely fine so long as someone doesn’t use it to kick a field goal, as the manufacturers product packaging box is double walled cardboard, with a very generous amount of foam and extra cardboard spacing inside. Even with the super body slam, my unit worked absolutely wonderfully, no fan noise or anything.The build quality of these units isn’t QUITE as great as the APC tower type units that you’ll find at Staples and such, the outer skin on the CyberPower tower units is slightly thinner than the APC units, though it’s still sturdy and not at all flexible or pliable. Everything else is absolutely wonderfully built. If you shake it there are no rattles, when you press on various body panels on it, none of them are loose or incorrectly fitted, receptacles are nice, and everything is great. Menu/interface functionality is great, easy to navigate and very intuitive. The buttons are solid when pressed also.One very large advantage that this unit has over it’s non Pure Sine Wave APC counterparts that you’ll find in stores is that these units are SMALL. Nice, small, and compact. I would say about half the size of those APC tower units. Making it possible to place it on your desk if you would like, next to your computer tower (if your computer has one) or somewhere else on the floor. It will not take up much room at ALL. It will maybe take up as much room as a single size 11 shoe will, that’s it.The performance of this unit is great. I witnessed a couple times where the power dropped some and this unit properly compensated for it without having to kick over to battery power. There were quite a few times where household power was lost all together and this unit provided a perfect, instant, flawless transition to battery power and if it weren’t for the click from the unit and the light sound of the fan kicking on, you wouldn’t know it switched to battery power. Unless of course your computer notifies you when you are running on battery back-up, which my iMac did. I had my unit set on the highest sensitivity, and it was perfect. Sometimes with other units you will have an issue with the units being far too sensitive to have it on high sensitivity and really protect your computer and fast, and you will constantly hear the unit turning on and turning off, which was the case with the APC non-Sine Wave unit I purchased from Staples a couple years ago for another computer, and I had to leave that one set to medium sensitivity.The unit comes with software that you can use to set up automatic shut downs via different determinations such as the amount of time your computer is running on battery back up, how much charge the battery has left, and other parameters. THOUGH, and this is very important! With newer Macs, you absolutely do NOT need to install this provided software, or use any other kind of third part software. This is because you can go into System Preferences, and into Energy Saver, and once you have the Back-UPS unit connected to your Mac via the USB cable, your Energy Saver settings will automatically give you options to set up the Back-UPS unit and set up automatic proper shut downs by different parameters, like battery charge left, time running on battery and such. So these CyberPower units REALLY integrate very well with Macs, which is a very large plus.Bottom line is, if you are looking for a very nice Back-UPS unit for your computer that has a PFC Power Supply, and you don’t want to spend $500 or more, then you really MUST look into this unit. It is absolutely amazing, and the price is amazingly ridiculously amazing (if that makes any sense, lol). CyberPower also has higher watt rated models, up to 2000VA I believe, my unit was a 1000VA, which is like 600w or such, and when it switched to battery power, it would give me a run time of 34 minutes, which is great, considering I was running quite a few programs and such at the time. So if you have a similar set up, you will have no problem getting adequate time to properly do everything you need with this model. If you have a much higher end gaming computer or such, I would possibly go with the 1350VA, 1600VA or 2000VA model. I am about to order a new Late-2012 27″ iMac (the new thin models) with the i7 Quad-Core / 3 TB HDD / 8 GB RAM (I’ll be upgrading it to 32GB myself, which you can’t do with the 21.5″ models, oddly enough) and 1 GB Video/Graphics, and for this one I plan on purchasing the 2000VA model, which will do me just fine.ALSO, ANOTHER VERY IMPORTANT WARNING. If you have a laser printer, or anything else that has a very high current draw, DO NOT, I repeat do NOT plug the printer into the battery back-up provided side of the unit. Plug it into the Surge Protected Only side, or better yet, a completely separate surge protector strip, which is what I did. Because when you turn on the laser printer, or start printing, you will see the voltage drop on the display of you Back-UPS unit quite a bit.
Mich Montoya –
Excelente y con sus 600 watts suficiente para lo que lo requiero, sobre todo por la onda senoidal pura, que es un requisito indispensable para mi, es un equipo sobrio y elegante, la pantalla muy útil, proporciona información clave, puede quedarse encendida todo el tiempo, o puede apagarse al minuto, a elección del usuario, lo utilizo con una pantalla LG Oled Evo de 65” C5, un Xbox Series X y un módem con internet de 1Gb, el consumo varía con todo encendido entre 200 y con carga gráfica alta unos 350 watts, por el tipo de onda, no mete ruido a los equipos, es muy silencioso, el tiempo de respaldo con lo que estés trabajando o reproduciendo, marca entre 9 y 19 minutos, tiempo más que suficiente para apagar los equipos de manera correcta y segura, con el puro módem trabajando, la batería proporciona hasta 170 mins de respaldo, vale cada centavo, recomendado.
&Q9oRV –
Según la pantalla led del artículo, a carga completa sostiene mi ordenador durante 4-6 minutos en una sesión ordinaria de juegos, 18 minutos cuando no hace nada.Ryzen 7 5800x a 70w (De acuerdo con AMD Adrenalin software)Radeon RX 9070 a 165wDos monitores a 30 y 40wRouter WiFi de 10wLa carga es definitivamente un poco elevada para este UPS, pero funciona bien, llevo usándolo una semana y no ha presentado problemas, aún cuando el GPU utiliza 200w que es su rating máximo.La fuente de poder es una Cooler Master MWE V2 650w Gold, cuenta con APFC, por lo que es relevante usar un UPS con onda senoidal no simulada. Como prueba, desconecté el UPS de la pared y el equipo no presentó ningún problema, el cambio a batería fué muy rápido incluso bajo la carga antes mencionada.Buen producto
William –
The product worked for awhile. It prevented some surges.Unfortunately, the battery is either garbage or it was defective in my case. It died in 1.5 years of normal use.When I did a “self-test” it literally cut the power to everything and printed an error code “E21”.I never used the battery itself, except in one short power outage.
Kazzita –
Lo compré principalmente para mi computadora(9070XT/ i5-14600K), la misma consume poco más de 500w en carga, por lo que es adecuado. No hace ruido, salvo cuando pasa al modo AVR, lo cual es casi imperceptible a menos que le estés prestando demasiada atención. El software de Cyberpower funciona bastante bien, probé el apagado automático y funcionó sin problemas.En resumen: Buena compra, vale totalmente la pena si tienes pensado usarlo en tu PC o algún equipo igual de sensible, lo agarré en oferta del 10/10, en precio regular está carísimo, si no te urge, espera a las ofertas.
Arturo –
Un amigo que trabaja en sistemas eléctricos me recomendó conseguirlo, cuesta más que un nobreaker convencional, pero en definitiva valió la pena, ya me ha salvado en al menos 3 ocasiones a mi y a mi computadora