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Milwaukee Roll-On 7,200W Power Station Launches April 30: Silent Jobsite Power Without a Generator

April 24, 2026 3 min read Updated June 12, 2026
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Milwaukee Tool is set to ship the Roll-On Power Station on April 30, 2026, a wheeled, battery-powered jobsite power supply rated at 7,200W peak / 3,600W continuous with 6.0 kWh of capacity. It is designed to run two power tools, a battery charger, and site electronics simultaneously, with zero exhaust fumes and near-zero noise.

Milwaukee’s pitch is direct: for work in occupied spaces, enclosed environments, or noise-restricted neighborhoods, a generator is often more hassle than it’s worth. Built to replace it is exactly what the Roll-On does.

What the Specs Actually Mean on a Jobsite

Seven kilowatts peak handles simultaneous tool loads comfortably, a circular saw and a chop saw running at the same time while a bank of M18 batteries charges in the background. At 6.0 kWh, capacity is significantly larger than consumer-grade battery stations (which typically top out around 1-2 kWh), putting this in the same tier as serious jobsite infrastructure.

  • Peak output: 7,200W
  • Continuous output: 3,600W
  • Capacity: 6.0 kWh
  • Simultaneous loads: Two tools + charger + electronics
  • Emissions: Zero
  • Noise: Near-silent vs. gas generator
  • Availability: April 30, 2026 at Home Depot and milwaukeetool.com

Pricing has not been officially announced. Milwaukee’s contractor-grade battery infrastructure products typically range from $1,000 to $2,500, so expect this to sit at the higher end of that range.

Where This Fits in Milwaukee’s M18 Push

Milwaukee has been systematically expanding M18 beyond hand tools. Its platform now covers everything from outdoor power equipment to jobsite lighting to forced-air heaters. It’s the most infrastructure-heavy product in that expansion, not a tool itself, but what keeps everything else running.

This also matters for contractors who’ve already committed to M18 batteries. Existing M18 investment isn’t threatened here; this extends the platform to cover the generator slot on the jobsite.

If you’re evaluating where Milwaukee fits against other platforms, our battery platform comparison for 2026 breaks down the full ecosystem differences between Milwaukee, DeWalt, Makita, and Ryobi. For pro-grade cordless combos built around M18 FUEL, see our best pro combo kit picks.

When Gas Still Wins

Gas generators will remain the right call in some situations, extended outdoor work where recharging isn’t practical, or very high continuous loads that exceed 3,600W. But for most residential remodeling, finish carpentry, HVAC, and commercial interior work, the constraints of a gas generator (ventilation requirements, fuel logistics, noise ordinances, carbon monoxide risk) are genuinely solved by a product like this.

It ships April 30. Check availability at Home Depot or milwaukeetool.com.

Source: SlashGear, New Milwaukee Tools & Accessories Arriving In April 2026

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