Your critical systems absolutely need to stay running just long enough to either execute a clean, automated shutdown of everything essential or seamlessly switchYour critical systems absolutely need to stay running just long enough to either execute a clean, automated shutdown of everything essential or seamlessly switch

How Long Should Your Critical Infrastructure Stay Online During an Outage?

2025/12/17 13:35
3 min read
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Your critical systems absolutely need to stay running just long enough to either execute a clean, automated shutdown of everything essential or seamlessly switch over to a secondary power source. The goal is zero data corruption and sticking to your Service Level Agreements (SLAs). The shortest time you need is super specific—it can be 5 minutes for an immediate shutdown or up to 30 minutes if you’re waiting for a generator to kick in. This whole timeline comes down to the capacity and health of your UPS batteries.

Defining the Business Continuity Window

Figuring out the ideal backup runtime isn’t just an IT decision; it’s a cold, hard business calculation. For a SaaS provider, every single second of downtime instantly equals lost money, potential breaches of those SLAs, and serious damage to your brand reputation.

Calculating the Critical Runtime

How much time you need completely depends on your specific disaster plan:

  • Scenario 1: Controlled Shutdown (Minimum Runtime): This shortest time frame (around 5-10 minutes usually) is only needed to safely power down things like virtual machines, databases, and operating systems (think Linux servers). It prevents data corruption but still means you’ll be down for a while.
  • Scenario 2: Generator Startup (Mid-Range Runtime): If you rely on a diesel generator, the battery backup has to keep power flowing long enough for that generator to notice the outage, fire up, sync its output, and take on the full load (that usually takes 15-30 minutes).
  • Scenario 3: Failover or Ride-Through (Maximum Runtime): For the absolute highest-availability setups (like what cybersecurity firms or high-frequency trading platforms use), the backup might need to last until the main power is fully stable or until the workload can be completely handed off to a backup cloud region elsewhere.

The Role of Power Quality vs. Power Quantity

A dependable backup system does more than just give you power quantity (that’s the runtime); it actively manages power quality, and that is absolutely vital for sensitive IT hardware.

Protection Against Micro-Outages and Spikes

Most power problems aren’t those long, dramatic blackouts; they’re actually those quick little blips, spikes, or drops in power. These tiny “micro-outages” are awful for server components and can trash your database integrity. The immediate, super-clean power that an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) delivers acts like a filter for all those messy anomalies. It gives your gear stable power quality, which prevents a tonne of unnecessary wear and tear on all your sensitive equipment.

Ensuring Seamless Continuity

Figuring out the right runtime is a big-picture strategic call that connects what your tech can actually do with the risk your business is willing to take on. It means knowing the exact time you need to fix the issue and making sure the hardware covering that time is maintained perfectly.

Your Next Step in Uptime

If you’re not totally sure your current backup setup can meet your critical application recovery time objective (RTO), you should definitely get a full power audit done. This will calculate exactly how much load your system is pulling and confirm the health and runtime capacity of your entire uninterruptible power system setup.

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