Rooftop solar and battery payback time shrinks as systems get cheaper

With payback times for solar and battery systems decreasing, the incentive for householders to generate and store their own energy increases.

New data shows that the payback period for residential solar systems – and also for battery storage – is once again shrinking as the upfront costs for installing home solar and storage steadily fall.

As the chart below shows, the moving average payback for residential rooftop solar has been trending upwards since 2020, bouncing off previous lows thanks to the global Covid-19 pandemic and then Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Payback for residential solar is improving, as electricity prices rise and PV system prices ease. Battery payback is improving at an even-quicker rate. (Source: Sunwiz)

But this trend appears to be reversing now, as supply chains and production get back to normal and as module costs start to come down.

The September 2023 report from industry analysts SunWiz shows the average per-Watt price for rooftop solar panels continued to fall over August to $1.06/W – a level not seen since June last year.

Average $/W continues to trend down ($1.06/W over Aug-23). Prices haven't been this low since June-22 ($1.04/W). (Source: Sunwiz)

For residential solar and battery storage, the average payback period has fallen below 10 years – where it has hovered since 2021 – to just over nine years.

SunWiz managing director Warwick Johnston says this trend reversal is thanks mainly to the falling cost of premium module brands, where the median price for a 6.6kW system is now at $1.32/W.

“The large drop in prices seen in the [above chart] is mainly attributable to premium panels being priced more affordably recently,” he says.

“The good news for DER companies is that system payback is certainly improving, as electricity prices rise and system prices ease.

“Battery pay-back is improving at an even quicker rate,” he adds.

Currently, SunWiz puts the median $/W post-subsidy pricing (incl. GST) at $1.00/W, but Johnston notes that, more recently, the popularity of systems priced at $0.75/W have been gaining in share.

This article was first published on One Step off the Grid. You can read it here.

Author
Sophie Vorrath
Editor, One Step Off the Grid
June 24, 2024
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