Search “best whole-house generator” and you’ll drown in ranking lists that crown a winner, slap a score on it, and move on. They’re mostly useless, because the “best” generator isn’t a model — it’s a set of decisions matched to your house, your fuel situation, and your corner of Greater Houston. A 14 kW unit that’s perfect for a Spring townhome is hopelessly undersized for a 4,500-square-foot place in Katy with two AC systems and a pool.
This isn’t a review, and there are no invented star ratings — just a framework for making the call yourself, plus the questions worth pushing an installer on. Use it with the sizing guide when you start getting quotes.
First decision: air-cooled or liquid-cooled
Every residential standby falls into one of two engine families — this is the fork in the road.
Air-cooled generators use a fan to cool the engine — a lawn mower idea scaled up. They top out around 24-26 kW and cost meaningfully less to buy and install. For most Houston homes, even big suburban ones with good load management, an air-cooled unit in the right kW tier is the sweet spot.
Liquid-cooled generators use a radiator and coolant loop like your car’s engine. They’re built for larger continuous loads (typically 27 kW and up, into the 30s and 40s for residential), run more efficiently under heavy demand, and last longer because the engine stays cooler. They also cost more — sometimes a lot more — and need more clearance and a bigger pad.
The honest rule: most homes don’t need liquid-cooled, but the ones that do — very large square footage, three-plus AC tons, a workshop or well, an owner who wants headroom — are genuinely better served by it. Don’t get upsold into a radiator you’ll never tax, and don’t let anyone cram an air-cooled unit onto a load it can’t carry through a Houston August.
Sizing tier: the AC surge is the whole game here
In much of the country you size a generator to the running watts of your appliances and call it a day. On the Gulf Coast, the dominant factor is the air-conditioning startup surge — the big gulp of current a compressor pulls the instant it kicks on. Get it wrong and the generator nuisance-trips every time the AC and dryer start together.
Rough tiers for Greater Houston, remembering that real sizing is a calculation, not a guess:
- Smaller / essential-load homes (~14-18 kW): A modest home with one AC system, or an owner fine with backing up essential circuits rather than the whole house.
- Typical suburban home (~20-24 kW): The common landing spot for a single-AC or moderate two-AC home in The Woodlands, Cypress, or Pearland, especially with load shedding managing the surges.
- Large home / multi-AC (26 kW air-cooled into liquid-cooled territory): Big square footage, two or three AC systems, pool equipment, well pump — push the top of air-cooled or step into liquid-cooled.
These are starting points, not promises. A good installer does a real load calculation on your actual panel. Our sizing calculator and sizing guide get you in the ballpark first.
Fuel: CenterPoint gas or propane
Your fuel choice is partly made for you by what’s available on your street.
With natural gas service from CenterPoint Energy — common across Houston, Sugar Land, and the inner suburbs — the generator taps an effectively unlimited supply and can run for days during an extended outage without refueling. The catch is gas pressure and meter capacity; your installer has to confirm the line can feed both your appliances and the generator at full draw.
If gas isn’t on your block — common in parts of Montgomery County, Brazoria, and rural stretches — propane is the standard answer. It runs clean and stores well, but you’re limited by tank size, so the tank has to be sized for the multi-day outage this region actually produces. The full trade-off is in the natural gas vs propane guide and the fuel overview. After a widespread event, gas pressure usually holds while gas stations run dry — one more reason permanent standby beats a portable you keep feeding.
Brands: think in categories, not rankings
You’ll hear the same names — Generac, Kohler, Cummins, Briggs & Stratton — and the internet will tell you one is objectively “best.” That doesn’t survive contact with reality: each occupies a category, and any of them, properly sized and installed, will serve a Houston home well. Roughly how they’re positioned:
- Generac is the residential volume leader, with the widest model range and deepest dealer and parts network — which means easy service and fast parts.
- Kohler is generally positioned as a premium build, with a reputation for solid engineering across its air- and liquid-cooled lines.
- Cummins brings serious engine pedigree, especially in larger liquid-cooled units.
- Briggs & Stratton rounds out the field with competitive residential offerings.
No scores here, because the badge isn’t where your reliability comes from — which brings us to the part that actually matters.
What matters more than the badge
Whether your generator is still starting reliably in year eight has less to do with the nameplate than with three things.
- Local install quality. A correctly poured pad, sized gas line, clean transfer-switch wiring, correct clearances, and a passed inspection. A great generator installed badly is a bad generator. This is the biggest variable, and the whole reason we connect you with one vetted, licensed local contractor instead of a national 800-number.
- Right-sizing. An undersized unit nuisance-trips and works itself to death; a wildly oversized one wastes money and can carbon-foul from light loading. The match to your real load is everything.
- Local service and warranty. A long factory warranty is only as good as the nearby servicer who honors it. Ask who does the annual maintenance, how fast they respond after a storm, and whether warranty work is handled in town.
And one specific to our geography: in a flood zone, elevation is non-negotiable. Harris and the coastal counties have plenty of properties that took water in Harvey and Ike. A flooded generator is a total loss and a hazard, so pad height and equipment elevation matter far more than the logo on the enclosure. Make sure your installer designs for your flood risk, not a generic slab.
Putting it together
The “best” whole-house generator is correctly sized for your AC-driven load, fueled by what’s available on your street, elevated for your flood risk, and installed to code by a licensed Texas pro who’ll still answer the phone after the next Beryl-scale outage. Pick the category that fits, then spend your energy vetting the install — that’s where the real differences hide. See how the process works and get matched with a local installer who can run the load calculation on your actual home.