On Amazon an electric wheelchair battery is $71.30. That is a 35AH 420 watt hour AGM battery.
https://www.amazon.com/Rechargeable-Battery-Replaces-Wheelchair-Centennial/dp/B008D5YG3G/
It is not sufficient for a fridge. A goal zero 400 watt hour battery is not sufficient. It is much more money at $450 and that doesn't include solar either. It is not sufficient for a fridge. It may have a cute box and a digital display with a built in inverter but it is not sufficient. My inverter was $26 and you don't need an inverter for a "tiny dometic fridge".
Without "controllers, invertors and fuses" and all the other paraphernalia like wires and terminals you don't really have a system capable of keeping food cold in a fridge.
A small system suitable for a fridge is a pair of 6 volt golf cart batteries, about 200 amp hours, 2400 watt hours, and 200 to 300 watts of solar panel with a solar charge controller.
Where you are going to go matters. If you go to western North Carolina you will find that the trees grow straight up all the way to the sky and your solar panels only work from 11:30 to 12:30. You might need more solar panels or a good plan to deal with a backup supply. The winter I spent in San Francisco, 1968-1969, was not remarkable. It started drizzling in September and either rained or fogged every day until April. Arizona is better for solar. Far North places aren't as good.