Solar & Battery Insights
for Smarter Energy Decisions

When Do Home Batteries Make Financial Sense in Australia?
Why the answer is “it depends”
Home batteries are one of the most asked-about upgrades in solar. They are also one of the easiest to oversimplify.
Whether a battery makes financial sense depends on your tariff, your export rate, how much solar excess you have, and what you want the battery to do. Some households get strong value. Others mostly buy peace of mind.
A good decision starts with your household data, not a generic payback claim.
The big levers that influence battery value
· Electricity rates and how much they vary across the day
· Feed-in tariff (what you get paid for exports)
· Export limits in your area
· Evening electricity use
· Whether you can shift loads into daylight hours
· Whether you value backup power
If you want a quick takeaway, batteries tend to look better when grid electricity is expensive, exports are paid poorly, and you use a decent amount of power after sunset.
A simple way to estimate benefit (without pretending to be your bill)
You can do a rough estimate using two numbers: what you pay for imported electricity and what you get for exported solar.
If you export solar at a low rate and later buy electricity at a much higher rate, the gap is the potential value a battery can capture by shifting energy into the evening.
It is still not a guarantee because batteries have efficiency losses and your ability to charge depends on weather and seasonal output. But it helps you understand why a battery can look brilliant in one household and average in another.
Battery cost drivers that affect payback
The installed cost of a battery system depends on more than the battery itself.
· Whether your existing inverter is compatible or needs upgrading
· Whether you need a switchboard upgrade or additional protection devices
· Whether backup circuits are included and how they are configured
· Whether monitoring and smart controls are included
Two quotes with the same battery capacity can include different levels of electrical work and backup capability. Comparing only the battery model and capacity can miss the real differences.
Case 1: low feed-in tariffs and high evening usage
This is the classic battery use case. If your solar exports are paid at a low rate and you import a lot of energy in the evening, a battery can shift solar into that expensive period.
The important detail is that your solar system needs enough excess to charge the battery often. If you already self-consume most of your solar during the day, there may not be enough excess left to store.
Case 2: time-of-use tariffs and peak periods
Time-of-use tariffs can make storage more valuable because the battery can reduce imports during the most expensive hours. In some homes, that peak window is where a large portion of the bill comes from.
If you are ontime-of-use, the right question is not “How big a battery?” first. It is “What does my household draw during peak, and for how long?” That shapes sizing and expected benefit.
Case 3: export limits or constrained networks
Export limits can reduce the value of adding more panels because excess generation may be capped. In this situation, a battery can capture midday energy that would otherwise be clipped or exported at low value and use it later.
If you frequently hit export caps, storage or smart load control can sometimes deliver a bigger improvement than simply adding more panels.
Case 4: you want backup power, not just savings
Many households choose a battery partly for backup during outages. From a strict payback perspective, backup value is hard to quantify, but it is real for people who work from home, have medical needs, or live in areas with unreliable supply.
If backup is a priority, your system must be designed for it. Not every battery setup provides backup automatically, and some require dedicated backup circuits.
The hidden factor: how often the battery will cycle
A battery that cycles regularly is doing work. A battery that sits half-full because there is not enough excess solar is not.
Seasonality matters here. A battery might fill easily in summer and struggle in winter. A good assessment looks at a typical winter weekday, not the best summer day.
If the battery only cycles occasionally, the financial return tends to soften because the battery is not displacing much grid energy. This is why sizing matters as much as brand choice.
This is why sizing matters as much as brand choice. For a deeper look at how usage patterns and seasonal performance affect sizing, see how to choose the right battery size for your home.
What about VPPs?
Virtual Power Plantscan change the economics by providing payments or bill credits for participating in grid support events. Whether that improves your outcome depends on program rules, dispatch frequency, and how you prioritise having stored energy for your own use.
If you are considering a VPP, treat it as an optional layer. First make sure the battery makes sense for your household goals. Then decide if VPP participation aligns with how you want the system to behave.
Before buying a battery, check the low-hanging fruit
Sometimes the cheapest way to improve outcomes is not a battery. It is changing when you run certain loads.
· Shift dishwashers, washing machines, and dryers into solar hours where possible.
· Timer-controlled hot water or a heat pump can soak up solar during the day.
· Pool pumps and other fixed loads can often be scheduled into the middle of the day.
· If you are planning an EV, smart charging can align charging with solar generation.
If these changes dramatically reduce evening imports, the financial case for a battery can change. In some homes that is a good outcome. In others, the remaining evening load is still large enough that storage makes sense.
Common battery myths worth ignoring
· Myth: a battery will eliminate your bill. Reality: most homes still import some power, especially in winter or during high-demand evenings.
· Myth: the biggest battery is always best. Reality: thebest value usually comes from a battery that cycles regularly and matches your load profile.
· Myth: every battery provides whole-home backup. Reality: backup capability depends on system design and sometimes additional hardware.
A good installer will set expectations early, including what winter looks like and which circuits can be backed up.
A practical checklist before you buy
1. Check your current feed-in tariff and your import rates, including peak rates if you are on time-of-use.
2. Estimate how much you import after sunset on a typical day.
3. Estimate how much solar you export on a typical day, noting winter versus summer.
4. Confirm whether export limits apply at your address.
5. Decide how much you value backup power and what loads you would want backed up.
If an installer cannot talk through these points using your own data, it is worth slowing down. Batteries are a long-term asset. A rushed decision often leads to disappointment.
Bottom line
Batteries tend to make the most financial sense when your home exports solar for a low return, imports a lot of energy in the evening at a high rate, and has enough solar excess to charge storage reliably.
If your primary goal is backup power, the value calculation becomes more personal. In either case, the best outcomes come from sizing and designing the whole system, not adding a battery in isolation.

Battery Capacity vs Usable Energy Explained
Why this topic matters
Battery quotes can look confusing because two numbers that seem similar can actually mean different things. If you only compare headline capacity, you can end up with asystem that does not meet your expectations in the evening or during an outage.
Understanding capacityversus usable energy helps you compare options properly and ask betterquestions before you sign.
Capacity (kWh) is not always what youcan use
Battery capacity isusually listed in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That is the total amount of energystored, like the total volume of a fuel tank.
Usable energy is theportion you can actually draw on in day-to-day operation. Many batteries keep areserve to protect the cells and maintain stable operation. That reserve is oneof the reasons a battery can last longer.
When you comparebatteries, make sure you are comparing usable energy, not just nameplatecapacity.
Depth of discharge and why batterieshold something back
Depth of discharge(often shortened to DoD) describes how much of the battery can be dischargedcompared to its total capacity.
A battery that allowsdeeper discharge can provide more usable energy, but design choices vary bymanufacturer and chemistry. The important point is simple: a battery that keepsa buffer is not “cheating”. It is protecting the battery from operating at extremesevery day.
Energy (kWh) vs power (kW): the othercommon mix-up
It is also easy toconfuse energy with power.
· kWh tells you how long something can run.
· kW tells you how big a load it can run at one time.
You can think of itlike water storage. kWh is the tank size. kW is how wide the pipe is. A largetank with a narrow pipe still cannot supply a huge burst of water.
This matters forappliances like kettles, ovens, and air conditioners. Even if your battery hasenough energy, it may not have enough power to run certain loads or runmultiple high-power loads at once.
How to do a simple runtime check
A basic runtimeestimate helps you translate usable energy into something practical.
If a battery has 10kWh of usable energy and your essential loads average 1 kW, you might expectaround 10 hours of runtime. If the average load is 2 kW, that drops to about 5hours.
Real life is messierbecause loads spike. A fridge cycles. A kettle draws a big burst. Heating andcooling can jump. But the simple math still helps you sanity check what a givenusable energy figure can realistically cover.
Backup reserve settings can changeusable energy overnight
Many systems allow youto set a backup reserve, which means the battery keeps a portion of energyaside in case of an outage.
This is a usefulfeature, but it can surprise people. If you set a 20% reserve, that chunk isnot available for normal evening use. It can make a battery feel smaller thanits headline number.
If backup is importantto you, talk through the trade-off: more reserve improves outage readiness, butleaves less usable energy for daily bill reduction.
Round-trip efficiency and conversionlosses
Another reason“capacity” is not the same as “energy you get back” is efficiency. When youcharge a battery and later discharge it, you lose some energy along the way dueto conversion and internal losses.
This is calledround-trip efficiency. Most modern systems are quite efficient, but the loss isnot zero. Over a year of cycling, efficiency can influence the overall valueyou get from storage, especially if you are charging from solar purely to uselater at night.
How VPP participation can affect usableenergy
If you join a VirtualPower Plant (VPP), the battery may sometimes be dispatched to export energy tosupport the grid. Depending on the program and your settings, that can changehow much energy is available at the end of the day.
If you wantpredictable daily behaviour, make sure you understand how reserves andparticipation rules work. It is not about avoiding VPPs, it is about choosingwhat fits your priorities.
What usable energy means for a typicalevening
Most households usestored energy between late afternoon and bedtime. That period often includescooking, heating or cooling, entertainment, and general power points.
If the usable energyis smaller than you assumed, the battery may empty sooner than expected, andthe home will start importing from the grid earlier in the night.
This is why a gooddesign starts with your evening usage pattern rather than picking a batterypurely from a brochure.
Usable energy needs to match your solarsupply
A battery with lots ofusable energy needs enough excess solar to fill it regularly. If your solarsystem is small or you use most of your solar during the day, the battery mayonly partially charge on many days, especially in winter.
In that situation thebattery’s headline capacity can look impressive, but the day-to-day benefit canbe modest. A well-sized system is one where the battery cycles often enough toearn its keep.
How degradation fits into the picture
Battery capacitydeclines slowly over time. This is normal. A battery that starts with a certainusable energy will typically deliver less usable energy after years of cycling.
Warranties ofteninclude a minimum retained capacity at the end of the warranty period. If youare aiming for a specific outcome, it is worth considering how the battery’susable energy might look later in life, not just in the first month.
Questions to ask on a quote
· What is the usable energy (kWh), not just the headlinecapacity?
· What is the continuous power rating (kW), and whatloads will that support?
· Is there a reserve set aside for backup, and how doesthat affect day-to-day usable energy?
· What capacity is guaranteed at the end of the warrantyperiod?
If an installer cananswer these clearly, it usually means they are thinking about how the systemwill work in a real home.
Bottom line
Capacity is the headline. Usable energy is whatyou actually live with. When you compare batteries using usable energy andpower rating, you can make decisions that match your household’s needs andavoid nasty surprises after installation.

How to Choose the Right Battery Size for Your Home
Battery sizing is about your evenings, not your roof
A home battery is not just a box that stores solar. It is a tool for shifting energy from when it is generated to when you actually need it.
For most households, that means covering the evening period: cooking, heating or cooling, lighting, and the background loads that never stop.
Choosing the right battery size is a balancing act between how much energy you want to shift, what you want during outages, and what makes sense financially.
Two numbers you must understand: kWh and kW
Battery specs get confusing because two different units sit side by side.
· kWh (kilowatt-hours) is the amount of energy stored. Think of it as the size of the fuel tank.
· kW (kilowatts) is the power the battery can deliver atany moment. Think of it as how wide the tap is.
A battery might have plenty of energy (kWh) but still struggle to run high-power appliances if the power rating (kW) is limited. Both matter, especially for backup.
What can a battery run, realistically?
People often think of battery sizing as a simple runtime calculation. In real homes, the limiting factor is often power, not energy.
A kettle, toaster, oven, and ducted air conditioning all draw a lot of power. A battery may have enough stored energy to run them for a while, but if the power draw exceeds what the battery and inverter can deliver, the system will limit output or trip the protected circuits.
This is why backup planning usually focuses on critical loads rather than whole-home backup. It is also why it is important to discuss which appliances you want to run at the same time, not just how long you want backup for.
Step 1: Estimate your evening and overnight usage
The most practical starting point is your electricity use from late afternoon through the night. If you have smart meter data, look at something like 4pm to 8am. If you do not, you can still make a useful estimate.
Consider:
· Cooking and kitchen loads in the evening.
· Heating or cooling after the sun goes down.
· Laundry habits and whether they can be shifted into the day.
· Hot water type: resistive electric, controlled load, or heat pump.
· Background loads: fridges, networking gear, standby devices.
If your evening use is relatively low, a large battery can end up under-used. If your evening use is high, a small battery may empty quickly and stop doing much after dinner.
Step 2: Be clear about the goal
Different goals point to different battery sizes and sometimes different hardware.
Bill reduction and self-consumption
If your main goal is reducing bills, the battery should be able to capture a meaningful portion of your typical midday excess and then cover a solid slice of evening demand.
This is where right-sizing matters. Too small and it fills quickly then you are exporting again. Too large and it rarely fills, so you are paying for capacity you do not use.
Backup power during outages
If you care about backup, ask two questions: how long you want to run, and what you want to keep running.
Most homes do not backup everything. A practical backup plan focuses on critical circuits such as:
· Fridge and freezer
· Lighting
· Internet and basic power points
· A small amount of heating or cooling, depending on the setup
· Medical equipment if relevant
High-power loads like ducted air conditioning, ovens, and EV charging may be limited or excluded from backup depending on system design. This is normal.
Peak pricing and time-of-use tariffs
If you are on a time-of-use tariff, the battery can reduce imports during expensive peak windows. Sizing depends on how long the peak period runs and your typical consumption during that time.
Some households also use batteries to charge during cheaper periods and discharge during peak. Whether that makes sense depends on the tariff spread and how the system is configured.
AC-coupled vs DC-coupled: why it matters for upgrades
If you are adding a battery to an existing solar system, you may hear terms like AC-coupled and DC-coupled.
· AC-coupled systems connect the battery through its own inverter. They can be practical for retrofits because the existing solar inverter can often stay in place.
· DC-coupled systems typically share a hybrid inverter, which can be efficient and neat for new builds or full system replacements.
There is no universal best choice. The right approach depends on what you already have, what you plan to add later, and how you want backup circuits configured.
Usable capacity vs nameplate capacity
Many batteries are marketed by their total capacity, but what matters is usable capacity. Most systems reserve some energy to protect the battery and ensure stable operation.
When comparing options, ask for the usable capacity (kWh) and the limits on depth of discharge. It is the usable portion that powers your home.
Match the battery to your solar systemsize
A battery needs energy to store. If your solar system is small or your daytime use is high, there may not be much excess solar available to charge a large battery.
As a rough principle, battery size should be chosen alongside solar size, not in isolation. The goal is a system that fills the battery often enough to be useful, without constantly overflowing into exports.
Example household scenarios (to help you sanity check)
No two homes are identical, but these scenarios show how the decision shifts.
· Small evening load: a household that cooks lightly and has modest heating or cooling may only need enough storage to cover lighting, refrigeration, and general power points. A huge battery will often be wasted capacity.
· High evening load: a family running air con into the evening, cooking nightly, and doing laundry after work may need more storage to noticeably reduce peak imports.
· Backup-focused: a household in an outage-prone area may prioritise the ability to run critical loads for longer rather than chasing maximum bill reduction.
An installer should be able to explain which scenario you most closely resemble and why.
Export limits can make batteries more valuable
If export limits apply at your property, you may find that excess midday energy is capped. A battery can capture some of that energy and shift it into the evening, improving the usefulness of your solar system.
This is one of the more practical reasons batteries can make sense even when feed-in tariffs are modest.
Summer, winter, and realistic expectations
Battery behaviour changes with the seasons because solar production changes.
· Summer: longer days can mean more solar excess and more opportunity to fully charge the battery.
· Winter: shorter days and higher household loads can mean the battery charges less often and empties faster.
A good design sets expectations for winter. If a battery only fully charges on the best summer days, it is likely oversized for your current setup.
EVs and electrification: plan ahead
If you plan to add an EV, heat pump hot water, or switch off gas cooking, your electricity demand will change. That can change both the best solar size and the best battery size.
The simplest approach is to map what you are likely to add in the next two to five years and designfor that pathway. It often avoids rework later.
VPP participation: it can influence the right size
If you join a Virtual Power Plant (VPP), your battery may be used to export energy to support the grid during certain events. That can change how full the battery is at different times and may affect how you prioritise backup versus bill reduction.
Not everyone wants a VPP. If you do, it is worth designing the system around how you want the battery to behave day to day, not just what the brochure promises.
A practical sizing workflow you can follow
1. Estimate evening and overnight usage using interval data if available.
2. Decide your primary goal: bill reduction, backup, or peak price management.
3. Check whether export limits apply and how often you export solar today (if you already have solar).
4. Confirm your solar system has enough excess to charge the battery reliably across seasons.
5. Choose a battery size that will cycle regularly without being empty by early evening most days.
If you want to sanity check a recommendation, ask the installer to explain what the battery will look like on a typical winter weekday. That answer is often more revealing than a summer output estimate.
Battery lifespan, degradation and warranties
Batteries slowly lose capacity over time. This is normal. The key is understanding what the warranty actually covers and how that lines up with your expectations.
Warranties commonly include a time period and a throughput or cycle limit, plus a minimum remaining capacity at the end of the warranty period. These details matter more than marketing phrases like “long life”.
When comparing battery sizes, remember that a battery that cycles hard every day may reach its throughput limit sooner than a larger battery doing lighter daily cycles. Again, the goal is a size that matches your real usage and the way you plan to operate the system.
Questions to ask before you sign
· What is the usable capacity, not just the headline capacity?
· What is the continuous power rating and what loads will it support?
· Is the system designed for backup, and if so, what circuits are included?
· How will the battery behave in winter when solar production is lower?
· If I add an EV later, what changes would you recommend?
Clear answers are a strong signal you are dealing with proper system design rather than aone-size-fits-all approach.
Bottom line
The right battery sizeis the one that you will actually use most days. It should fill often enough to matter, discharge in a way that matches your household’s peak periods, and support your backup goals if that matters to you.
If you size the battery around real usage patterns, you usually end up with a system that performs well across seasons and still feels sensible years down the track.
Coming soon...
