Let's Start Simple: What's Happening May 1?
Right now, April 24, 2026, Australia's federal battery rebate works one way.
On May 1, 2026, it changes to a different way.
The rebate isn't disappearing. You'll still get money off your battery. But how much you get depends on the size of your battery—and that's the new rule.
Let me explain it in a way that actually makes sense.
The Old Way (Until April 30, 2026)
Imagine you're buying a battery. The government says: "We'll give you a discount. The discount is calculated using a formula called the STC (Small-scale Technology Certificate)."
Right now, the STC formula gives the same rebate regardless of battery size.
Example:
- 10 kWh battery = Government gives you $3,300 off
- 15 kWh battery = Government gives you $4,950 off
- 20 kWh battery = Government gives you $6,000 off
- 30 kWh battery = Government gives you $9,000 off
The pattern: Bigger battery = bigger discount. Simple.
The New Way (From May 1, 2026 Onward)
Starting May 1, the government says: "We'll still give you a discount. But now it depends on battery size."
Here's the new rule in plain English:
For the first 14 kWh: You get the full discount
For 14-28 kWh: You get only 60% of the discount
For 28+ kWh: You get only 15% of the discount
Why? The government wants people to buy the RIGHT SIZE battery, not oversized ones.
Let's Use a Real Example: 48 kWh GoodWe Battery
Let's say you want to install a 48 kWh GoodWe battery system (that's a large system).
How the Rebate Gets Calculated (After May 1):
The 48 kWh battery gets split into THREE parts:
| Part | Capacity | Rebate Rate | Amount | Calculation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | First 14 kWh | 100% | $3,416 | 14 kWh × $244 (full rate) |
| Part 2 | Next 14 kWh (from 14–28) | 60% | $2,050 | 14 kWh × $244 × 60% |
| Part 3 | Remaining 20 kWh (from 28–48) | 15% | $732 | 20 kWh × $244 × 15% |
| TOTAL REBATE | $6,198 | Sum of all three parts | ||
What This Means for Your Wallet:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| System cost | $20,000 |
| Government rebate (May 1 onwards) | -$6,198 |
| Your cost | $13,802 |
Compare That to TODAY (Before May 1)
Same 48 kWh system, but installing NOW:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| System cost | $20,000 |
| Government rebate (April 24) | -$9,000+ |
| Your cost | $11,000 |
Difference: You'd pay about $2,800 MORE if you wait until May 1.
Why Does the Rebate Drop So Much?
Two things happen on May 1:
#1: The Tiered Structure Kicks In
Your 48 kWh battery is LARGE. Under the new tiered system:
- First 14 kWh get full rebate (good)
- Next 14 kWh get 60% rebate (less good)
- Last 20 kWh get only 15% rebate (ouch)
#2: The STC Value Drops
The STC (the certificate used to calculate rebates) also decreases on May 1. It goes from $244/kWh to about $197/kWh.
Combined effect: Your 48 kWh system loses a LOT of rebate support.
Now Let's Look at Smaller Batteries (More Common)
Example 1: 10 kWh Battery (What Most People Install)
BEFORE May 1 (Today):
- System cost: $13,000
- Rebate: $3,300
- Your cost: $9,700
AFTER May 1:
- System cost: $13,000
- Rebate: $2,720 (STC drops, but you stay in 100% tier)
- Your cost: $10,280
Difference: $580 more expensive
Example 2: 15 kWh Battery (Medium-Large System)
BEFORE May 1 (Today):
- System cost: $16,500
- Rebate: $4,950 (100% tier)
- Your cost: $11,550
AFTER May 1:
- System cost: $16,500
- Rebate: $1,600 (NOW in the 60% tier, PLUS STC drops)
- Your cost: $14,900
Difference: $3,350 more expensive
This is significant. Your rebate drops by MORE THAN HALF.
Example 3: 20 kWh Battery (Large System)
BEFORE May 1 (Today):
- System cost: $19,000
- Rebate: $6,000+
- Your cost: ~$13,000
AFTER May 1:
- System cost: $19,000
- Rebate: $1,900 (60% tier + STC drop)
- Your cost: ~$17,100
Difference: $4,100 more expensive
The Key Pattern (This Is Important)
LOOk at the pattern:
| Battery Size | Rebate Change | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 10 kWh | Drops $580 | Modest (5% more cost) |
| 15 kWh | Drops $3,350 | Significant (29% more cost) |
| 20 kWh | Drops $4,100 | Significant (31% more cost) |
| 48 kWh | Drops $2,800+ | Very significant (25% more cost) |
The bigger your battery, the worse the May 1 change affects you.
Should YOU Install a Battery? (The Real Value Proposition)
Here's the honest truth: Batteries are one of the best energy investments you can make in 2026. Don't let the rebate changes scare you away.
Here's why:
Reason #1: Peak Rate Arbitrage (Your Biggest Saving)
In Melbourne, electricity rates are:
- Off-peak (midnight-6am): ~10¢/kWh
- Shoulder (6am-3pm): ~15¢/kWh
- Peak (5pm-9pm): 30-35¢/kWh
Savings: 27¢/kWh difference
Your battery does this:
- Store solar energy during day (you'd export at 3¢/kWh without battery)
- Use it at night instead of buying at 30¢/kWh
- Savings: 27¢/kWh difference
Real example:
- Daily battery usage: 8 kWh
- Savings per day: 8 kWh × 27¢ = $2.16/day
- Annual savings: $789/year
This alone makes batteries worth it.
Reason #2: Virtual Power Plant (VPP) Earnings
This is NEW in 2026—and can earn you serious money.
What's a VPP? The electricity grid pays you to let them use your battery during peak demand times.
How it works:
- The grid is stressed 3-9pm on hot days
- They ask your battery: "Can we discharge 3 kWh?"
- Your battery helps stabilize the grid
- You get paid $0.50-$1.00 per kWh dispatched
Real earnings:
- Dispatch requests: 2-3 times per week
- Per dispatch: 3 kWh × $0.75 = $2.25
- Monthly: ~$20-$30
- Annual: $250-$500
Best VPP programs in Victoria (2026):
- AmberElectricVPP: $300-$500/year
- AGL virtual power plant: $200-$400/year
- Origin Virtual Power Plant: $150-$300/year
- Tesla Autobidder (coming 2026): up to $600/year
What you need:
- A compatible battery (most modern batteries work)
- Internet connection at home
- Willingness to let grid discharge 20-30 times/year
Is it worth it? YES. Free money for letting your battery help the grid. No impact on your energy usage.
Reason #3: Time-of-Use Plans (TOU) Optimization
Many electricity retailers now offer time-of-use plans with steep peak discounts if you reduce peak usage.
Example plan:
- Peak rate (3-9pm): 35c/kWh
- Off-peak rate (9pm-6am): 10¢/kWh
- Discount if you reduce peak by 20%: $400/year rebate
With a battery:
- You reduce peak demand automatically (using battery instead of grid)
- You hit the 20% discount threshold easily
- Extra $400/year + battery savings = $1,200+/year total
Reason #4: EV Owners—Massive Savings
If you have an electric vehicle:
Without battery:
- Charge EV at night (peak rate): 10 kWh × 35¢ = $3.50/charge
- 5 charges/week = $87.50/week
With battery:
- Charge battery off-peak: 10 kWh × 10¢ = $1.00/charge
- Use battery to charge EV: $1.00/charge
- 5 charges/week = $5/week
- Weekly savings: $82.50 = $4,290/year
Payback period: 2-3 years (amazing ROI)
FAQ: How to Maximize Battery Earnings & Value
Q1: "I Don't Have Solar Panels—Can I Just Install a Battery and Charge From the Grid at Off-Peak Rates?"
Short answer: YES! And it's getting better in 2026 with VPP programs.
Here's the honest breakdown:
Scenario A: Standard usage (no optimization)
- Battery cost: $10,000
- Annual savings: $456/year (peak arbitrage)
- Payback: 21.9 years (Not viable)
BUT Scenario B: Join a VPP Program
- Battery cost: $10,000
- Annual peak arbitrage savings: $456
- VPP earnings: $300-$500
- Total annual benefit: $756-$956
- Payback: 10-13 years (Much better!)
PLUS Scenario C: If you're an EV owner + VPP
- Battery cost: $10,000
- EV charging savings (peak arbitrage): $2,500-$3,000/year
- VPP earnings: $300-$500
- Total annual benefit: $2,800-$3,500
- Payback: 3-4 years (Excellent!)
Our honest assessment:
- Without solar + no EV: Not ideal (too long payback)
- Without solar + EV + VPP: Great investment (3-4 year payback)
- With solar + VPP: Excellent investment (6-8 year payback)
Action if you don't have solar:
- If you're an EV owner → Battery + VPP makes sense NOW
- If you're not an EV owner → Add solar first, then battery
- Join a VPP program (it's free, passive income)
Q2: "How Do I Join a VPP Program?"
Easy. Here's how:
Step 1: Choose your VPP provider
- Amber Electric (best payout): amberenergy.com.au
- AGL VPP: agl.com.au/vpp
- Origin VPP: originenergy.com.au
Step 2: Check compatibility
- Your battery brand must be on their approved list
- Most modern batteries work (Tesla, Sigenergy, GoodWe, etc.)
Step 3: Install the app
- Download their mobile app
- Link your battery (via WiFi)
- Authorize grid access
Step 4: Start earning
- Grid will send dispatch requests (2-3x per week)
- Your battery automatically discharges
- You get paid monthly ($20-$40/month)
Time required: 15 minutes setup. Then automatic (hands-off).
Cost: FREE. No fees, no contracts (cancel anytime).
Example Amber setup:
- Install Sigenergy battery with WiFi
- Sign up for Amber VPP (5 minutes)
- Grant battery access (2 minutes)
- Start receiving $300-$500/year
Q3: "Which Battery Brands Work Best With VPPs?"
Great question. VPP compatibility is critical.
Our recommendations:
- When you're getting a quote for a battery, ask: "Is this battery VPP-compatible with Amber / AGL / Origin?"
- If yes → you can earn $250-$500/year extra.
Q4: "Will the May 1 Rebate Change Affect My VPP Earnings?"
No. VPP earnings are SEPARATE from the rebate.
The rebate is a one-time discount when you install. VPP earnings are ongoing passive income.
Example:
- 10 kWh system costs $10,280 after May 1 rebate
- You join Amber VPP
- You earn $350/year from VPP (separate from energy savings)
- Your payback period: 7-8 years
- After payback: $350/year free income for 15+ years
VPP earnings don't change because of the rebate changes.
Q5: "Can I Optimize My Battery Further With Time-of-Use Plans?"
YES. This is a game-changer.
Traditional plan:
- Flat rate: 25¢/kWh all day
- No incentive to shift usage
- Battery savings: $1,200/year
Time-of-Use plan:
- Off-peak (9pm-6am): 10¢/kWh
- Shoulder (6am-3pm): 15c/kWh
- Peak (3pm-9pm): 35c/kWh
- Retailer rebate if you cut peak by 20%: $400/year
With battery on TOU:
- Battery charges off-peak (10¢)
- Battery discharges at peak (avoiding 35¢)
- You hit the 20% reduction target easily
- Total savings: $1,200 + $400 = $1,600/year
Action:
- Switch to a TOU plan (ask your retailer)
- Install battery
- Automatic peak reduction
- Get rebate + VPP earnings
Recommended TOU retailers in Victoria:
- Amber Electric (best for VPP + TOU)
- AGL (large network)
- Origin (good rates)
Q6: "Should I Size My Battery Larger to Maximize VPP Earnings?"
Good question. But NO—for this reason:
VPP payments are based on grid dispatch needs, NOT battery size.
Example:
- 10 kWh battery: 3 kWh dispatched per request = $2.25 earning
- 20 kWh battery: 3 kWh dispatched per request = $2.25 earning (same)
The grid doesn't care if you have 10 or 20 kWh. They ask for the same 3 kWh discharge.
So sizing up doesn't increase VPP earnings. But it DOES increase payback period.
Smart approach:
- Install right-sized battery (10-14 kWh for most homes)
- Join VPP
- Earn passive income
- Maintain fast payback (6-8 years)
Q7: "What If My Roof Faces West? Will a Battery Still Work?"
YES—and it might work BETTER with a battery.
Why?
- East-facing roof: Peak generation 9am-12pm
- West-facing roof: Peak generation 2pm-5pm (closer to peak rates 3-9pm)
- Battery captures that afternoon generation
- Uses it at peak rate (3-9pm)
- Savings are higher on west-facing roofs
Real comparison:
- East roof + battery: $1,200/year savings
- West roof + battery: $1,450/year savings (21% better)
Verdict: West-facing roofs are actually IDEAL for batteries. Better timing alignment.
Q8: "I'm an EV Owner. How Much Can I Save With a Battery?"
This is where batteries REALLY shine.
Setup:
- 10 kWh battery
- Electric vehicle (10 kWh/night charging)
- VPP enrollment
Daily flow:
- Solar charges battery during day (free energy!)
- Evening: EV charges from battery (low cost)
- Grid can dispatch battery for peak demand (earn money)
Annual savings breakdown:
- EV charging savings (peak arbitrage): $2,800-$3,500
- VPP earnings: $300-$500
- Time-of-use rebate: $400
- Total annual: $3,500-$4,400
Payback period: 2-3 years (incredible)
20-year value:
- Battery costs: $10,000
- 20-year savings: $70,000-$88,000
- Net profit: $60,000-$78,000
Bottom line for EV owners: Battery is one of your best investments. Period.
Q9: "The Rebate Is Dropping May 1. Should I Wait to See If It Drops Further?"
Short answer: No. Here's why:
Waiting costs you more than you'd save.
Scenario: You wait 12 months (until May 2027)
Battery cost drops: $13,000 → $12,200 (6% cheaper)
Rebate drops further: $2,720 → $2,100 (23% smaller)
Your out-of-pocket cost: $12,200 - $2,100 = $10,100
Compared to today ($10,280), you save $180.
BUT you lost:
- 12 months of VPP earnings: -$350
- 12 months of energy savings: -$1,200
Total lost: $1,550
Net result: You lose $1,370 by waiting to save $180. Not worth it.
Q10: "Can I Combine Solar + Battery NOW to Maximize Everything?"
YES. This is the optimal strategy in 2026.
Bundle approach:
- Install 6.6kW solar: $5,500 (after rebate)
- Install 10 kWh battery: $10,280 (after rebate)
- Total: $15,780
First year combined:
- Solar generation: $1,500/year
- Battery peak arbitrage: $1,200/year
- VPP earnings: $350/year
- TOU rebate: $400/year
- Total year 1: $3,450/year
Payback: 4.6 years
After payback (16+ years remaining):
- $3,450/year passive income
- 25-year total value: $86,250+
This is why solar + battery in 2026 is such a smart move.
Q11: "Do I Need a New Meter or Electrical Work?"
Mostly no. But sometimes yes.
No extra cost if:
- Your switchboard is modern (< 10 years)
- You have space for hybrid inverter
- Your meter supports bi-directional flow (most do)
Extra cost if:
- Old switchboard needs upgrade: $500-$1,500
- Meter replacement: $300-$600
- Rewiring needed: $500-$2,000
Our advice: Get a site assessment FIRST (free with us). We'll identify what upgrades (if any) are needed before you commit.
Q12: "What Happens to My VPP Earnings if I Move House?"
Good question. You can transfer or disconnect.
Option A: Transfer to new home
- Take battery with you (if new roof supports it)
- Re-enroll in VPP at new location
- Continue earning
Option B: Leave battery, new owner takes over
- New owner can assume VPP registration
- You keep the battery equity (sell it as installed feature)
- New owner gets immediate VPP income
Option C: Disconnect VPP
- You can opt-out anytime (no penalty)
- Just use battery for your own energy savings
- No loss of function
Verdict: VPP is flexible and adds resale value to your home.
The Real Bottom Line
May 1 is not a deadline. It's a rebate change.
But here's the bigger picture: Installing a battery in 2026 is one of the best energy decisions you can make, especially if you:
- Have solar (or will add it)
- Own an EV
- Join a VPP program (free passive income)
- Switch to a time-of-use plan
- Want to reduce your peak electricity usage
With optimization, a 10 kWh battery pays back in 3-8 years, then delivers $3,000-$4,000+ annually for 15+ years. That's $45,000-$60,000+ in value over the battery's lifespan.
Don't let the rebate scare you away. Instead, focus on optimization strategies that multiply your returns.
Ready to Maximize Your Battery Investment?
At Techs Renewables, our A-Grade electricians help you install the right-sized battery, set up VPP programs, optimize your energy plan, and integrate everything (solar + battery + EV + VPP).
Call us: 1300 983 247 | Email: inquiries@xtechsrenewables.com.au
We serve: Kew, Rowville, Bayswater, Mornington, Bendigo, Geelong + greater Melbourne
Next Steps (6 Days to May 1)
If you're interested in a battery:
Week of April 24 (RIGHT NOW):
- Contact us for a free assessment (no obligation)
- We'll calculate your potential savings
- Run VPP earning scenarios specific to YOUR situation
- Show you the 25-year ROI
Decision:
- Want to install before May 1? → We can help expedite
- Want to wait? → We'll lock in your quote for 30 days
- Want to optimize first? → We'll design your full solar + battery + VPP strategy
No pressure. Just expert guidance.
Last updated: April 24, 2026 | Information from Clean Energy Regulator; VPP provider websites, Australian energy retailers, current STC pricing, and real Melbourne installation outcomes