Generators · March 9, 2026
Standby Generator vs. Renting One: Which Makes Sense for You?
Backup power comes in two flavors: own it or rent it. The right call depends less on price and more on how often you'll need it — here's how to think it through.
Texas weather has a way of reminding everyone how much we depend on the grid. Whether it's a summer load-shed, an ice storm, or a transformer that simply gives up, the question comes up fast: do I buy a standby generator, or just rent one when I need it? Both are good answers — for different situations.
A standby generator makes sense when…
- You can't tolerate downtime — a home with medical equipment, a business that loses product or revenue when the power's out, or a site that runs critical equipment.
- Outages happen often enough that renting repeatedly adds up.
- You want it automatic — a permanently installed standby unit with a transfer switch kicks on by itself, no hauling or hookup required.
A standby install is an upfront investment, but it's there the moment you need it, every time, with no scramble.
Renting makes sense when…
- The need is occasional or temporary — a jobsite, an event, a seasonal use, or a one-off outage.
- You want power and light without owning and maintaining equipment.
- You need flexibility — a bigger unit for one job, a light tower for another.
SCI rents generators at $275/day and light towers at $125/day (fuel not included). It's a clean way to cover a short-term need without a capital purchase.
Sizing matters more than people think
The most common mistake is guessing at size. Too small and it won't carry your load; too big and you've overspent and you're burning extra fuel. The right move is a quick load calculation — adding up what actually has to run — before you buy or rent. We do that as part of any generator conversation.
Don't buy a number off a box. Buy the power your place actually draws.
The bottom line
If you need backup power rarely, rent it and skip the maintenance. If downtime costs you real money or comfort, a properly sized and installed standby unit pays for itself in peace of mind. Either way, get the sizing right and the install done by a licensed electrician — a transfer switch wired wrong is dangerous to you and to the line crews working to restore power.
Not sure which way to go? Call SCI at (979) 543-7887 and we'll walk through it with you — no pressure, just a straight recommendation.