Updated 24 March 2026
Solar Battery Cost 2026: Is Home Battery Storage Worth It?
A solar battery adds $8,000-$16,000 to your installation. Here is when it makes financial sense and when it does not.
Battery Prices by Brand
| Battery | Capacity | Installed Cost | After 30% Tax Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh | $11,500 | $8,050 |
| Enphase IQ Battery 5P | 5 kWh (stackable) | $10,000-$15,000 | $7,000-$10,500 |
| LG RESU Prime | 16 kWh | $9,500-$13,000 | $6,650-$9,100 |
| Generac PWRcell | 9-18 kWh | $10,000-$16,000 | $7,000-$11,200 |
| Franklin WH aPower2 | 13.6 kWh | $10,000-$14,000 | $7,000-$9,800 |
When Batteries Make Financial Sense
Time-of-use electricity rates
If your utility charges more during peak hours (4pm-9pm), a battery stores cheap solar energy from daytime and uses it during expensive evening hours. In California, the difference between peak and off-peak can be $0.15-$0.30/kWh. This alone can save $50-$100/month.
No net metering (or poor net metering)
If your utility pays wholesale rates ($0.03-$0.05/kWh) for excess solar instead of retail rates, you are better off storing that energy and using it yourself. Without net metering, a battery is almost always worth it.
Frequent power outages
If you lose power regularly (storms, grid instability), a battery provides backup. The financial value of avoiding food spoilage, hotel stays, and lost work time adds up. Hard to quantify but real.
High electricity rates ($0.20+/kWh)
States like California ($0.30/kWh), Hawaii ($0.43/kWh), and Connecticut ($0.27/kWh) make batteries pay back faster. At $0.30/kWh, a 13.5 kWh battery saves $4/day or $1,460/year. Payback: 5-6 years after tax credit.
When Batteries Do NOT Make Sense
- • Your utility offers full retail net metering (you get full credit for excess solar)
- • Your electricity rate is under $0.15/kWh (payback exceeds battery lifespan)
- • You rarely experience power outages
- • Budget is tight and you would rather invest in more panels instead
Battery Payback Period by State
| State | Avg Rate | Annual Savings | Payback (after credit) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hawaii | $0.43/kWh | $2,120 | 3-4 years |
| California | $0.30/kWh | $1,460 | 5-6 years |
| Connecticut | $0.27/kWh | $1,330 | 6-7 years |
| New York | $0.24/kWh | $1,180 | 7-8 years |
| Texas | $0.14/kWh | $690 | 12-14 years |
| Idaho | $0.10/kWh | $490 | 16+ years (not worth it) |
Bottom line: If you are in a high-rate state (CA, HI, CT, MA, NY) with time-of-use pricing, a battery pays for itself in 5-8 years and provides 10+ years of additional savings. In low-rate states, spend the money on more panels instead.
Calculate your full solar + battery cost
Our calculator includes battery storage options with payback estimates for your state.
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