When most Australians think of solar, they think of the big-ticket incentives: the federal solar rebate
(STCs) and the new Cheaper Home Batteries program. But did you know there are local council
perks, business tax advantages, and even EV-related tax breaks that can make going solar even
more attractive?
Some councils provide rebates or grants to help residents and businesses go green. Randwick City
Council in Sydney offers rebates for solar PV and batteries. Other NSW councils like Waverley,
Inner West, and Northern Beaches run sustainability programs or bulk-buy schemes. Queensland
councils may provide community solar or sustainability grants. Always check your local council’s
sustainability page.
Businesses can claim solar as a capital expense. Depending on the federal budget year, this may
qualify for instant asset write-off or accelerated depreciation, improving ROI. Solar reduces energy
costs and can pay back quickly for commercial sites.
Employer-provided EVs below the threshold value are exempt from FBT. This reduces costs for
businesses and staff, and when paired with home or business solar, EVs can be charged with solar
power, slashing costs further.
Local council rebates may add hundreds in savings, business tax advantages can cut ROI timelines
below 3 years, and EV incentives make solar even more compelling.
Check your local council’s website for sustainability programs. Ask your installer about stacking
rebates. Speak to your accountant about tax rules. Plan ahead if considering an EV.
The solar payback period is the time it takes for bill savings to equal the upfront cost. In Australia,
solar panels often pay for themselves in just 3–5 years.
Typical Solar Payback in 2025
5–6 kW systems average around 5 years. Rising electricity prices mean faster ROI (3–4 years in
Brisbane or Sydney under good conditions). Government data shows ~$1,500 yearly savings,
meaning a $5k system breaks even in 3.3 years.
High daytime usage, large systems (10kW+), or commercial sites with high bills may pay back in
2–3 years. Some Reddit users report 2-year ROI with big loads and batteries.
Homes with low usage, poor FiTs, or small bills may see 7–10 year ROI. Still, panels last 25+ years,
so ROI remains strong.
For QLD and NSW, solar usually pays off in under 5 years — after that, decades of savings follow.
Solar panels save money fast, but batteries are about independence and blackout protection. With
the new 30% rebate, batteries are more attractive in 2025.
Store excess solar for night use. Backup power during blackouts. Energy independence.
Costs and Rebate
10 kWh battery: ~$12k, ~$8k after rebate. 5 kWh: ~$4–5k, 15 kWh: ~$10k+.
Solar alone: 3–5 years. Solar + battery: 8–12 years. The rebate helps shorten ROI, but batteries are
still about resilience.
In QLD and NSW, batteries make sense in 2025 if independence matters. Panels remain the first
priority.
The right installer ensures your solar system performs and your warranties are secure. Here’s how
to pick wisely.
Use Clean Energy Council–accredited installers to qualify for rebates.
Avoid door-knockers, pressure sales, and quotes under $3k for 6kW.
Good panels: Jinko, Longi, REC, SunPower. Good inverters: Fronius, SMA, Sungrow, Enphase.
Panels: 10–15 years product, 25 years performance. Inverters: ~10 years. Workmanship: 5+ years.
Choose companies with 5–10 years history for warranty security.
In QLD and NSW, research and CEC accreditation ensure reliable, long-lasting solar savings.