Lost power again? Don’t sit in the dark wondering when it’ll come back. Whether you’re home during a storm or vacationing across the country, you can track outages in real-time and protect your stuff. Here’s how to stay in the know.
Step 1: Get Cozy with Your Utility Company’s Tools
First things first—your power company probably has more resources than you think.
Find their outage map. Head to your utility’s website (yes, right now if you want) and bookmark their outage page. These maps show everything: affected neighborhoods, how many customers are in the dark, and those all-important restoration estimates. Some even show where repair trucks are working.
Download their app. Seriously, do this today. Most major utilities have apps that’ll ping your phone the second your address loses power. You can also report outages with a couple taps—way easier than calling and waiting on hold.
Sign up for alerts. While you’re at it, log into your account and turn on text or email notifications. Choose your poison: some folks want every update, others just need to know when power’s back.
Step 2: Tap into Community Resources
Your utility isn’t the only game in town.

Bookmark PowerOutage.us. This gem of a website pulls data from utilities nationwide. Planning a trip? Check if your destination has power. Curious about that big storm three states over? It’s all there.
Join local social media groups. Facebook groups, Nextdoor, Reddit—wherever your neighbors hang out online. When the lights go out, these groups light up with updates. “Power’s back on Oak Street!” “Utility truck just pulled up to Fifth Avenue.” Real-time intel from real people.
Step 3: Tech Up Your Home
Want to monitor your place while you’re gone? Technology’s got your back.
Smart plugs are your friend. Plug a lamp into a Wi-Fi smart plug. When it goes offline, you’ll know power’s out. When it reconnects? Power’s back, baby. Simple but effective.
Consider a UPS with smarts. If you’ve got important equipment (computer, medical devices, that vintage arcade machine), get an uninterruptible power supply that connects to your network. It’ll email you the instant it switches to battery mode.
Go cellular for critical monitoring. Wi-Fi devices are useless when your router’s dead. For true peace of mind, invest in cellular-connected power outage monitors like CabinPulse. They keep working even when everything else doesn’t.
Step 4: Monitor What Matters Most
Power’s out—but for how long? That’s the real question.
Stick a thermometer in your fridge. Wireless temperature sensors are cheap and brilliant. Set alerts for when your fridge hits 40°F or your freezer creeps above 0°F. You’ll know if food’s at risk without opening the door and letting cold air escape.
Watch your sump pump. Got a basement? A water sensor near your sump pump can save you from coming home to an indoor pool. Some even work without power.
Track sensitive spaces. Server room? Wine cellar? Grandma’s medication refrigerator? Any place where temperature matters needs power outage monitoring.
CabinPulse is trusted by large organizations and property owners in the US and Canada and has built-in temperature, humidity, air quality and power outage monitoring with a beefy backup battery – and you can add on wireless peripherals like water leak sensors and extra temperature sensors too.
Step 5: Have a Backup Communication Plan
Sometimes the internet’s down too. Old school still works.
Keep a battery radio handy. Local radio stations broadcast emergency info. Those hand-crank models? Chef’s kiss for extended outages.
Save important numbers offline. Screenshot your utility’s outage hotline or write it on actual paper. Your phone’s contacts won’t help when the battery’s dead.
Create a check-in system. Designate someone outside your area as the family contact point. Everyone checks in with them. It’s easier to call out of an affected area than within it.
Pro Tips
- Test your monitoring setup regularly. That smart plug’s no good if you don’t notice the notifications.
- Keep your phone charged. Portable battery banks are worth their weight in gold during outages.
- Know your neighbors. Sometimes the best monitoring system is the retiree next door who’s always home.
Remember: you don’t need every single monitoring tool. Pick what works for your situation. Apartment dweller? Maybe just the utility app and a smart plug. Own a home full of tropical fish? You might want the full arsenal.
Stay powered up, friends!






