Solar + battery storage payback in 2026: real math by scenario.
A $12,000 Powerwall 3 either pays for itself in 8 years or never — it depends entirely on your utility's export compensation regime. Here is the math for the four regimes that cover 95% of US households, and the one-sentence test to know which side of the line you fall on.
What a battery costs installed in 2026
| Model | Capacity | Installed cost (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh / 11.5 kW continuous | $10,500-$14,000 |
| Enphase IQ Battery 5P | 5 kWh / 3.84 kW | $5,500-$7,500 |
| Enphase IQ Battery 10C | 10 kWh / 7.08 kW | $11,500-$14,000 |
| FranklinWH aPower 2 | 15 kWh / 10 kW | $13,000-$16,000 |
| SolarEdge Energy Bank | 10 kWh | $10,500-$12,500 |
Sources: EnergySage Marketplace Q1 2026, manufacturer dealer-pricing reports, NEEP installed-cost database.
The four utility regimes
1. Net metering (NEM 1.0/2.0): battery NOT economic
Most US states. Surplus solar exported gets credited at retail rate. The grid acts as a free, infinite battery. Adding a physical battery duplicates that function for $12k. Backup-only value: ~$200-400/yr in insurance against outages.
Verdict: only add for backup if outages are frequent (Texas hurricane zones, California PG&E PSPS areas, Florida storm zones). Pure economic payback: 25+ years.
2. California NEM 3.0: battery becomes near-mandatory
Export compensation collapsed from ~$0.30/kWh to ~$0.05-0.08/kWh average (TOU-weighted). The battery lets you self-consume your midday production during evening peak instead of exporting for pennies.
| Scenario | Year-1 value |
|---|---|
| PG&E E-TOU-C, 8 kW solar, no battery | ~$2,520 saved (70% self-consumption) |
| PG&E + 13.5 kWh Powerwall 3 | ~$3,420 saved (95% self-consumption) |
| Incremental battery value | $900/yr |
At $900/yr on a $12,000 battery: 13.3-year simple payback. With rate inflation: ~10-11 years. The 12-15 year battery lifespan means it pays back just before replacement — marginally economic.
The case is stronger if you can claim California's SGIP (Self-Generation Incentive Program): $1,000/kWh for medical-baseline customers and high-fire-risk-zone (HFTD) homes. A 13.5 kWh Powerwall in an HFTD zone gets a $13,500 SGIP rebate — battery effectively free, payback under 1 year.
3. Hawaii: 100% self-consumption regime
HECO eliminated net metering for new customers. Export is worthless. The battery is the entire economic value. With Hawaii's $0.42/kWh retail rate, every kWh self-consumed via battery is worth $0.42 — vs the $0.05 it would fetch as export.
Year-1 incremental value for a 13.5 kWh battery in Hawaii: ~$1,400. Payback: ~8.5 years. With rate inflation: ~7 years.
4. Texas ERCOT: spike capture & resilience
Texas's deregulated retail electricity market has hourly spot pricing. During grid emergencies (the 2021 Uri winter event, 2023 summer caps), wholesale rates spiked from $0.04 to $9/kWh. Some retail plans (Griddy-style) pass these through. A battery can capture this volatility — or simply provide outage backup, increasingly valuable.
Pure economic payback for a Texas household on a flat-rate plan: ~16 years (border to backup-only). On a real-time pricing plan with battery dispatch: ~9-11 years. Add the cost of one extended outage (~$2,500-$5,000 in spoiled food, hotel, generator fuel) and the economic logic flips to "absolutely yes".
When to skip the battery
- Net-metered state, no outage concerns. Save $12k. Use it for a heat pump or insulation instead.
- You don't have solar yet. Battery without solar is just an expensive UPS — almost never economic.
- Apartment / condo. Most batteries need wall space + 240V circuit + transfer switch. Not practical in most multi-unit buildings.
- Sub-3 kW solar. Not enough surplus to fill a battery anyway.
Battery lifespan + warranty reality
2026 lithium-iron-phosphate (LFP) batteries from Tesla, Enphase, FranklinWH and BYD-based brands carry 10-year warranties with 70% capacity retention guarantee. Real-world degradation in cycling-heavy applications (TOU arbitrage daily): 12-15 % loss by year 10. Real-world in backup-only mode: under 5 % loss by year 10. Most warranties cover the cell pack but not labor; expect a $1,500-$2,500 replacement install fee around year 12-14.
Frequently asked questions
Does a Powerwall pay for itself?
Yes in California NEM 3.0 (~$1,400/yr value), Hawaii (~$1,400/yr), and parts of Texas with real-time pricing. No in net-metered states — pure economic payback is 25+ years.
How much does a Powerwall 3 cost installed in 2026?
$10,500-$14,000 in the US. Bundled with 8 kW solar: $11,000-$12,500 due to shared labor.
What's the difference between TOU arbitrage and backup-only?
TOU arbitrage: battery charges off-peak / from solar and discharges peak — captures rate spread. Real economic value. Backup-only: idle except during outages — insurance value, not economic.
Sources: CPUC NEM 3.0 implementation, HECO interconnection tariffs, ERCOT historical wholesale prices, EnergySage Marketplace Q1 2026, Tesla and Enphase installer pricing reports. Last reviewed May 12, 2026.