

💦 Pump up your water game—portable power that won’t quit!
The TRUPOW DC 12-Volt 1/10HP Mini Portable Electric Utility Pump delivers a robust 330 gallons per hour flow rate and can pump water up to 39 feet high. Designed with durable chrome-plated bronze hose connectors and a compact battery-powered 12V DC motor, it’s ideal for household water transfer tasks like draining waterbeds, clogged sinks, and aquariums. Includes a 6-foot hose and a water suction attachment that removes water down to 1/8 inch, making it a versatile, reliable tool for quick and efficient water management.





























| Brand | TRUPOW |
| Color | Black |
| Material | Stainless Steel |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Product Dimensions | 8.8"L x 7.5"W x 9"H |
| Style | 12V DC |
C**P
Good pump, moves more water than I expected
First of all, this pump is not submersible. I accidently got it wet and I had to completely dry it out to get it to stop tripping my ground fault circuit breaker. Be careful when useing the shallow water attachment so you don't get the pump motor wet. Other than that, it works great. I useed the included hose on the input side and about 50' of garden hose on the outlet side and it delivered about 5 gal. per minute with a lift of about 5 feet. I used it to drain the last few inches of water from my in-ground pool. Works great. UPDATE: After using this pump a few times it failed. Two problems with this unit: The impeller hardnes up and drags n the housing. I guess that’s why they give you a spare impeller. I(f you plan on using it for a long time, I suggest you take the cover off the pump housing and keep the impeller in a cool dry place. Secondly, the pump housing corrodes very easily and drags the impeller so it doesn’t pump. Again, after use open up the pump and to lubricate it and clean it and let it dry out or it won’t last very long.
C**E
Mighty little pump!
Bought this to empty a waterbed and it performed perfectly. Read the directions and prime it before plugging it in. Easy to do and it best for impeller life. This thing emptied the mattress much quicker than I expected, very happy with it!
A**.
A fine product that is loud as heck
I honestly don't know why anybody would say this thing is not loud. Maybe they are only using it outside where it's out of the way? I used this pump for my water heater and it was incredibly loud. Aside from that it worked really well. I took amazon's suggestion and bought the filter kit for it as well as the hose adapters which definitely came in handy. The pump comes with a six foot hose so decide if you will need an extra hose or not while you're on amazon. Pro tip: Use a surge protector or radio controlled on/off plug with this product for easy power toggling, otherwise you'll have to unplug it every time which may or may not be annoying depending on the job. Cheers!
A**R
4.9 star overall rating is accurate.
Works well, very good value, no brainer.
G**O
Stopped working, but I fixed it [instructions below]
2023: This is essentially the same pump I've had for 20 years. After burning through two sets of brushes over time, I decided to replace with new, as it's hard to source replacement brushes and impeller. It appears that different companies obtain the basic pump from the original manufacturer and rebrand it, as I've seen exactly the same pump here and there, with different brand names. Works fine -- I use it as an auxiliary for my main sump. Also useful if your washer or dishwasher is broken and you have to pump out the retained water. 2025: Just short of two years old, it wouldn't move water after 6 months being idle. And the motor was turning slowly. Opening the pump body, I found it full of gelatinous goo (don't know the source, as I only pump clear sump water). I cleaned out the chamber and impeller, greased it all with silicone grease, and reassembled. Still wouldn't move water, and looking in I could see the impeller turning super slowly. Removing the cover plate, it spun fast. My conclusion: the original gasket (top left in the photo) was too thin, and the cover plate was squeezing the impeller so hard it couldn't spin freely. I tried silicone grease on the front and back plates, but that didn't help. Finally I cut two gaskets from an automotive gasket sheet, and used the two together to give more clearance. It worked -- started up at full speed and began moving water after a small prime poured down the outlet hose. Also it's quieter than it used to be, which I suspect is either because the motor isn't working as hard, or the impeller friction is reduced, or both. Beyond that, I'd recommend that if your pump is going to be idle, you open it up and dry and grease the walls of the chamber and all the parts.
K**H
Motors fine, the worst way to transfer water
As above . based on the provided fittings that came with the pump (intended for use with 3/4" gardenhose threads) and as suggested and shown in their ads, You'll be pulling your hair out just trying to prime this heavy albatross. I'm sure in the right application its a wonderful motor but at least start with a motor whose in/f1.5 " diamter But to make it work.....the suction hose end needs to be very short. My attempts mostly failed because suction hose end was either too long with too much resistance along with inevitable leak leaks at connections more airlock are inevitable (resistance to errrrrr or too weak would collapse due to the one speed motor suctioning thru a garden hose, but even a strong walled hose failed unless it was unrealistically short~2-3 ft max. Even then priming is no small effort, unless you have 3 people stopping up each end while you fill the entire length. You need a running flowing garden hose to fill the prime chamber and both suction and discharge tubse.....NOT a cup of water down the hatch like they show i'm sorry to report. Noisy as he_ _ and slower than stink. Inefficient andwhat takes maybe 20 min using 1.5" diameter spa tubingThis is counter productive to start after priming, but would fail to pump if too long. keep the prime the prime eve. THis was absurdly expensive for being above ground failed sump pump.
S**Y
Seems well built and has decent power for a small motor.
I drained my home water heater in about 20-25 minutes with this. Works well. Has standard hose fittings. Not a submersible pump.
D**.
Very Satisfied with this Pump
I LOVE this pump completely! I needed a pump to remove water from my dry-treatment crawl space that gets some water in it after heavy prolonged rains here in Maryland. It was a pain using my 3 gallon wet vac crawling in and out of the crawl space entry several times. With this pump I crawled in once, sucked the water out and was done. What took an hour or more before took 10 minutes with a lot less aggravation. I used a 50 foot hose with about a 2 foot elevation and the pump worked great. I solved the no switch problem on the pump by purchasing a 3 prong grounded switch rated at 125 volts here: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B01M7V6U2Q/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_g1kiDbTGXA1FZ and I was also really happy I ordered a hose filter to protect the pump as there was some debris I needed to clean out twice for maximum pumping power. The filter I purchased here: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B00190OF9M/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_DdliDbZZTBXPW is an inexpensive way to protect the pump and worked great. For my purposes I just used the provided feed hose to suck up the puddled water because of the uneven surfaces that prevented the included flat suction attachment from working efficiently. I highly recommend this pump for the price and value. Oh, I didn't think it was as loud as some people thought, but it is only for sporadic use and not continuous. Also, the pump didn't get hot as long as water was flowing through it.