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The APC Back-UPS BE425M delivers reliable 425VA/255W battery backup and surge protection through 6 outlets, ensuring uninterrupted connectivity for routers, modems, and small office electronics. Its compact, wall-mountable design fits tight spaces, while a 3-year warranty and $75,000 equipment protection guarantee enhanced device safety. Ideal for millennials managing smart homes or remote work setups, it offers up to 15 minutes of runtime at moderate loads, with easy battery replacement options for extended use.









| ASIN | B01HDC236Q |
| Amperage | 16.0 |
| Battery Cell Type | Sealed Lead Acid |
| Battery Charge Time | 8 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #8 in Computer Uninterruptible Power Supply Units |
| Brand | APC |
| Built-In Media | UPS |
| Color | Black |
| Connector Type | NEMA |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (11,201) |
| Enclosure Material | other |
| Form Factor | Tower |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00731304329343, 00731304329374 |
| Input Voltage | 120 Volts (AC) |
| Item Dimensions | 10 x 5.5 x 4.1 inches |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 4.13"D x 9.98"W x 5.52"H |
| Item Type Name | Uninterruptible Power Supply UPS |
| Item Weight | 5.7 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | APC |
| Maximum Power | 225 Watts |
| Mfr Part Number | BE425M |
| Model Number | BE425M |
| Number of Outlets | 6 |
| Output Current | 16 Amps |
| Output Voltage | 120 Volts |
| Output Wattage | 225 Watts |
| Power Plug Type | Type B - 3 pin (North American) |
| Runtime | 4 hours |
| Specification Met | No |
| Surge Protection Rating | 180 Joules |
| UPC | 731304329374 731304329343 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 120 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 3 years limited warranty |
| Wattage | 225 watts |
L**T
Being Honest
Many of the negative reviews imo aren't really understanding that this is a cheap UPS. If you want a UPS that auto turns off your PC during outages, has longer batter life, can handle higher voltage, etc, then you're 100% looking at the wrong UPS! This UPS does exactly what it claims. It's a small UPS you should use more as a surge protector and to handle small power outages. It's cheap for a reason, though when you actually get a hold of it, I was impressed by the quality it felt like in this price range. I've bought various UPS's over the years. Some are very expensive, where some I got for $50 like this. When I buy cheap ones like this, it's usually to handle my home lab switches or router. I use this for things that don't take much power. If you have a low end PC or a laptop, this would also be perfect for you. By low end, I majorly mean your GPU doesn't hog a butt load of energy. If you're using 2 GPU's, or you have something like a 3090, then you may need to think about getting a UPS that can handle something bigger. But this in my opinion is a fantastic UPS. It delivers quite dang well for this price range. Seriously, it's a really good UPS and I think this is the 4th one I've bought so far. Not that any have broke, I just have a lot of UPS's (I run a business with servers, have a home lab, and more). And I've ran these little UPS's through the ringer. One of them in particular, I've definitely run more than I should. I put a server on one of them that also has 2 GPU's in the server that mines at the same time (might as well since it's on 24/7 anyways). I'm definitely capping out what this thing was built to handle, yet it handles it like a champ. Again, not saying that this is what you should use this one for haha. But I've been quite happy with this UPS. But again, most the negative reviews I've seen are people complaining about aspects of this UPS that in my opinion, aren't aspects in any UPS you'll get within this price range. For example, my file server doesn't use that much electricity. But it's mission critical that it never shuts down and that it automatically turns off before the UPS dies. I spent I think like $300 to $400 on a UPS for that server. When I got that expensive UPS, I ran various tests, was quite unhappy, returned it, and replaced it with another within the same price range. I get being picky, I really do, but I also understand the difference in pricing. When I spend $300+ on a UPS, I am looking for various features, battery life, and more. But this UPS imo offers a ton of qualities beyond the small price tag. So, this was majorly me ranting about the few who disliked the UPS because they expected more, but know I've bought various of these, I'm incredibly happy with them, and for 99.99% of people, I think they'd be perfectly happy with this.
S**6
Perfect little UPS for router backup...WITH a few modifications!
For years I have used older or larger versions of Schneider UPS. This one is just what I wanted to run my 20 watt router during outage. However, I am not satisfied with a UPS that runs only an hour or two. True that most outages here last only a few minutes so that is great, but I live in hurricane country and need something that will last through my nightly TV viewing at least. The battery in the small unit I purchased CAN BE REPLACED or expanded easily if you have the skills and secure storage location. You can find one on Amazon or eBay for $16 or so. Is that so much?? Let's face it, you can't expect little AGM batteries to last forever, esp. if they cycle, but I find the Mighty Max brand bought here on Amazon has an amazing life and number of cycles. i even use one in my Prius which outlasts the OEM x 4. To open the case there are four little Phillips head screws on bottom.. The connections are the standard for this type battery, and you just slip off and install a new battery. See pics. I just clipped off the connectors and wired the unit to two of the OLD Mighty Max 34ah AGM batteries I had collecting dust. In parallel, of course, to maintain the same 12 volts. Obviously if you mistakenly wire them in series you will double the volts and damage the unit most likely. So for no extra money I turned this $49 UPS into one that is better than a $200 UPS for my small load. Of course, I would never try to put a bigger load on it and don't advise overloading the inverter in this unit. Don't do this if you are not a good electrician or have kids or animals or other potential accident victims around and don't have secure storage. But I have used similar for years and works fine and lasts a long time. The expanded UPS in my picture is safely in the attic, and the Mighty Max AGM batteries I use won't leak and are stable. I will sell the unused little battery that came with it on eBay to someone who needs a replacement. Replacement frequency all depends on time, temperature, how many cycles the unit experiences, depth of discharge etc. Some users may get a longer life than others. The other good thing about this is that the little UPS uses only 6 watts standby. That's great as I count every kwh I use. Do you want phantom loads constantly drawing a lot of energy for nothing. So what if internet goes out for a minute. Go have some tea and relax!! Unless you have something really critical connected. If so, you need to take steps to make sure your UPS is strong enough to handle the load for as long as necessary. BTW, in some of my earlier "expanded" UPS systems I was using a Schneider UPS, and those models actually had a socket for adding an expensive auxiliary battery which I adapted in a manner similar to what I created here on this little unit so it is not an original idea but not strictly taboo either....I guess we will see! My unit is set to not beep when power goes off which keep me from being disturbed at night if there is a brief outage.
S**R
Provides power to my modem
Got this UPS for my modem. If the power went out for even 1 second, it would cause the modem to go offline and had to wait for it to log back in. Now the UPS provides power when the power briefly stops and comes back on.
S**N
Fine, but annoying at end of life
Bought 2 for PCs and printer in my house. Worked fine for about 2 years then one started beeping continuously once in a while and needed a hard reboot to stop. Still worked fine most of the time until close to the 3 year mark and then wouldn't stop alarming while powered. Got a different backup at that point. The second one died at the 3 year mark in the same way. Seems from the comments that this is a pretty standard amount of time for them to live.
Z**C
I bought one unit of Schneider Electric APC UPS 425VA UPS on May 2024 89.99$. I use it to prevent Internet outage with increasing frequent brownouts and short blackouts. I connect one router and one access point to this UPS. I test the UPS the same day when it arrives. For this, I cut the power upstream to the UPS. It does immediately switch to battery and with no impact on the two devices. Internet is still connected. While on battery, the green indicator light flashes. I hear no alarm. It might have something to do with the settings. I leave the battery on for about one minute then I turn the power back on to the UPS. The green LED no longer flashes. All is well. No interruption occurs for both of my devices. I conclude this is a good product. Working as intended and as expected. Edit: working as usual after one month.
R**K
Muy bueno, resistió 2 hrs, sin corriente eléctrica, aunque no tengo muchas cosas conectadas, solo un WiFi y un teléfono de baterías, pero es bueno para cuando baja la corriente, me quede sorprendido.
A**R
Have two of these and one higher capacity model. All have been great. If you don't have one (or more) consider all the potential uses, weighed against the climate and utility conditions you live in. I have one for the internet modem/router, because this newer prettier modem doesn't have its own battery. Second one for the cordless phone base, garage door monitor. These three items could all be one one box, but they're just too far apart. The larger one runs gigabit switches, USB switches, cordless phone charger, two laptops (though they both have pretty new batteries in them anyway, but for the surge protection). I don't plug PC monitors in because (and I don't know for sure) they use more power and you can generally live without them in a crisis. Choose which devices you think need the UPS, and those that just need surge protection. You 'can' plug devices into a $5 surge protection wall wart, but I trust a box like this, from a reputable company, to do a better job --- for all I know the wall wart would catch fire if a blip came through. Classic example for me was a cable box (years ago) that had been blitzed because a jolt had come through and arced inside the box. Of course, you can plug anything you want into it once a power failure occurs, so there's where you can charge your cell phone, etc. I've blabbered too long about something that is so essential in our ridiculously electronic lives, just buy one and try it out.
J**B
Hasta el momento una excelente compra
G**Z
El ups funciona excelente, al estarse usando usando solo para un módem y un access point que consumen poco, la duración de la batería ha sido muy buena pues cortes eléctricos de 15 minutos los ha soportado sin problema.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago