Solar batteries in Victoria, is it worth it?
A battery lets a Victorian home use its own solar power after dark instead of buying from the grid. A federal scheme takes a sizeable chunk off the cost. This is a clear, no-jargon guide to how solar batteries work, what they cost, the support available, and whether one stacks up for your home.
- Independent and Victoria-focused
- No jargon
- Checked May 2026
The short answer
A solar battery stores the surplus power your panels generate during the day so you can use it in the evening, rather than exporting it cheaply and buying grid power back at a higher rate after dark. In Victoria a federal scheme takes roughly a third off the cost of an eligible battery, applied as an upfront discount, and because Victorian feed-in rates are relatively low, storing your solar is often worth more than exporting it. Whether a battery is worth it depends mostly on your evening power use, and a quote that models your usage is the best way to know.
How a solar battery works
Solar panels generate the most power in the middle of the day, which is often not when a household uses the most. Without a battery, that midday surplus flows out to the grid, and you are credited for it at the feed-in rate. Then in the evening, when your panels have stopped generating, you buy power back from the grid at the usual retail rate.
A battery changes that. Instead of exporting the daytime surplus, it stores it. When the sun goes down and your home still needs power, it draws from the battery rather than the grid. In effect, the battery shifts your own solar power from the daytime, when you generate it, to the evening, when you need it.
What a solar battery costs in Victoria
Battery cost depends mainly on capacity, measured in kilowatt-hours, and on the brand and the installation. The figures below are a rough guide based on current Victorian market pricing, before the rebate is applied.
Cost figures are indicative, based on current Victorian market data, checked May 2026. They are not a quote. Your actual price depends on the battery and your home.
Battery support in Victoria
In Victoria, battery support comes from one main place: a federal scheme that takes a sizeable chunk off the cost. Victoria used to run a state battery loan, but that has closed, so the federal scheme is the support to know about.
The federal scheme
The Australian Government runs a national scheme that reduces the upfront cost of an eligible home battery. It works through the same certificate mechanism as the solar panel scheme, your installer claims the certificates and applies the value as an upfront discount on the battery price. It is not means tested. The value per unit of storage steps down over time, so a current quote is the best guide to what it is worth.
The closed state loan
For several years Victoria offered a state interest-free loan for batteries through the Solar Homes Program. That loan closed to new applications and has not been replaced, so it is no longer available. If you remember the state battery loan, this is why you will not find it now. The federal scheme has effectively taken its place, and for many households is more accessible because it has no income or property-value test.
The federal battery scheme, current detail
- What it is: a national scheme that reduces the upfront cost of an eligible home battery, applied as a point-of-sale discount by your installer.
- How much: broadly around 30 percent of the eligible battery cost, which works out to roughly $3,300 off a typical 10kWh battery as at the date below.
- How it applies: your installer claims the certificates and deducts the value from your invoice. You do not apply separately or wait for a reimbursement.
- Eligibility: available to eligible owner-occupiers without an income or property-value test, which makes it broader than the old state loan.
- It steps down: the value per unit of storage reduces over time on a set schedule, so the discount on a given battery falls in later years.
- Adding to existing solar: you can add an eligible battery to an existing solar system and still receive the discount.
Last checked: May 2026. The federal scheme runs through the end of the decade, and its value per unit of storage steps down over time, with a scheduled reduction from 1 May 2026. The figures here are indicative and the scheme detail can change. Confirm the current position with your installer when you get a quote.
See a battery costed for your home
A quote models a battery against your actual usage and applies the federal battery discount.
Get a Victoria solar quote→Is a solar battery worth it in Victoria?
A battery suits some Victorian homes well and others less so. An honest look at where it fits is worth more than a blanket yes, though the federal discount and Victoria's relatively low feed-in rates tilt the case in favour for many homes.
A battery tends to suit you if
- You use a lot of power in the evening, after your panels stop generating
- You already have, or are installing, a solar system that generates surplus
- You want backup power and more independence from the grid in the evening peak
- You plan to stay long enough to see the savings build up
Worth thinking carefully if
- Most of your power use is during the day, when solar already covers it
- Your budget cannot stretch to the upfront cost, even after the support
- Your solar system is small and generates little surplus to store
- You may move home before the savings catch up
The clearest way to judge it is a quote that models a battery against your real usage. A good installer will tell you honestly if a battery does not stack up for your household.
Victoria solar battery FAQ
How much does a solar battery cost in Victoria?
As a rough guide, a common 10kWh home battery in Victoria is broadly in the region of $11,000 installed before rebates, depending on the brand and the installation. State and federal support then reduce this meaningfully. A quote gives the accurate figure for your home and battery.
What battery rebate is available in Victoria?
In Victoria the battery rebate is the federal Cheaper Home Batteries scheme. It reduces the upfront cost by roughly a third of an eligible battery, applied as a point-of-sale discount by your installer, with no income or property-value test. Victoria's old state battery loan has closed and has not been replaced, so the federal scheme is the support to know about. Confirm the current detail when you get a quote.
Is the Victorian battery loan still available?
No. Victoria's Solar Homes interest-free battery loan closed to new applications and has not been replaced, so it is no longer available to new applicants. Battery support in Victoria now comes through the federal scheme, which is applied as an upfront discount and for many households is more accessible than the old loan because it has no income or property-value test.
Is a battery worth it in Victoria?
For many Victorian homes it stacks up well. The federal discount reduces the upfront cost by roughly a third, and because Victorian feed-in rates are relatively low while evening grid prices are high, storing your solar to use in the evening is often worth more than exporting it. It still depends on your evening power use, so a quote that models your usage is the best way to know.
Can I add a battery to an existing solar system?
Often yes. Whether it is straightforward depends on your existing inverter. Some inverters are already battery-ready, while in other cases additional equipment or a reconfiguration is needed, which affects the cost. An installer can check your current system and tell you what adding a battery would involve.
Related guides
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