Navarre sits on a narrow ribbon of land between the Gulf and Santa Rosa Sound, tucked
halfway between Pensacola and Fort Walton Beach. That waterfront setting is exactly why
people move here — and exactly why the power is fragile. There’s a lot of overhead line
strung through pine and along the water, and it doesn’t take a major hurricane to bring
branches down on it. Summer squalls off the Gulf knock out circuits all season long.
Most of Navarre is served by FPL — the
former Gulf Power, now folded into Florida Power & Light — while some homes farther
inland toward Milton run on the Escambia River
Electric Cooperative (ERECO). A standby generator doesn’t care which one feeds your
meter. It watches the incoming line and takes over the instant it drops.
The other reality of Navarre living is well water and septic. Plenty of homes outside the
denser subdivisions depend on an electric well pump, and when the grid goes down so does
the water — no showers, no flushing, no AC. That’s a hard way to ride out a multi-day
outage in Gulf Coast humidity.
A permanently installed standby unit closes that gap. It senses the outage, starts on its
own — usually within seconds — and keeps the essentials running for as long as the grid
stays down.
See how installation works →