Why battery storage matters in this market
Three factors stack up to make battery storage the default recommendation for most Central Valley solar systems today. First, NEM 3.0 reduced export credit value by about 75%, so unused midday solar production is worth significantly less when sent to the grid. Second, PG&E and other utilities have implemented routine Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) events during fire season, leaving homes without power for hours or days at a time. Third, the federal SGIP program is still active and provides meaningful rebates for storage installations.
The combination means a battery does three different jobs at once: it stores midday solar production for use during the high-rate evening peak window, it provides backup power during outages, and it qualifies for state-level rebates that reduce the effective cost. The Department of Energy's solar energy storage overview covers the technology basics, but the California-specific economics are what really drive the decision.
How NEM 3.0 changed the storage math
Under the previous Net Energy Metering 2.0 program, solar exported to the grid earned roughly retail rate credit. Send 1 kWh to the grid at noon, get 1 kWh back at no cost during the evening. That made batteries a luxury, solar alone covered the economics fine.
NEM 3.0 changed this. The Net Billing Tariff that replaced NEM 2.0 values exported solar at roughly the utility's avoided cost rather than retail rate. In practice, that means midday export credit dropped about 75% in most California markets. Sending 1 kWh to the grid at noon now earns maybe 8 to 10 cents of credit, while consuming 1 kWh from the grid during evening peak hours costs 45 to 55 cents.
The arithmetic that follows is straightforward: if you can store midday production in a battery and use it yourself during evening peak hours, you avoid the entire export-then-import penalty. The CPUC Net Energy Metering page has the official tariff details. The NEM 3.0 page on our site walks through the math in plain English.
The practical takeaway
For homes pulling $200+ monthly utility bills with evening AC, EV charging, or pool pumps, battery storage typically shortens payback by 2 to 4 years compared to solar alone. For homes with lower evening loads, the math is closer, sometimes storage still pencils out for the outage backup benefit alone, sometimes it doesn't. We model both scenarios during your free assessment.
What we install: Enphase IQ Battery
Our standard storage configuration is the Enphase IQ Battery 5P. We chose this platform specifically because it integrates cleanly with the Enphase IQ8HC microinverters we already use on every solar install, which means simpler wiring, unified monitoring through one app, and a single warranty company to deal with.
Key specs:
- Capacity per unit: 5 kWh usable energy, 3.84 kW continuous power output
- Modular design: Stack multiple units for larger capacity (5 kWh, 10 kWh, 15 kWh, etc.)
- Warranty: 15-year warranty, 6,000 cycles or 15 years (whichever comes first)
- Backup capability: Whole-home or partial backup depending on installation configuration
- Monitoring: Per-second production and consumption data through the Enphase app
- Round-trip efficiency: 90%, meaning you get 90% of the energy back out that you put in
The lithium iron phosphate (LFP) chemistry used in Enphase batteries is the safest battery chemistry available today, significantly more thermally stable than older lithium-ion chemistries. This matters for installations in Central Valley garages that can hit 120°F+ in summer.
SGIP rebates and how they apply
The Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP), administered by the CPUC, is California's largest energy storage rebate program. It provides cash rebates for residential and commercial battery storage installations, with rebate amounts varying by tier and customer category.
Three relevant SGIP tiers for most Central Valley homeowners:
- General Market, standard residential and commercial rebate, typically $150 to $200 per kWh of storage
- Equity, increased rebate for income-qualified households, typically $850 to $1,000 per kWh
- Equity Resiliency / High Fire Risk, increased rebate for households in high fire risk zones, typically $1,000+ per kWh
Many Central Valley addresses qualify for the High Fire Risk Tier because of regional fire zoning. We check your specific address during the assessment and apply for the appropriate SGIP tier on your behalf. The rebate is paid out after installation and inspection.
Cost and sizing for your home
Most residential battery installations in this market run $10,000 to $18,000 installed before SGIP rebates, depending on capacity. Most homes need 10 kWh (two Enphase IQ Battery 5P units) to cover evening peak hours; some larger homes or those wanting whole-home backup need 15 kWh or more.
After SGIP rebates (assuming standard residential tier), effective costs typically drop $2,000 to $3,000. For households qualifying for the Equity Resiliency tier, the rebate can cover most or all of the battery cost depending on system size.
Sizing depends on your evening load profile, which we model during the free assessment. Households with EV charging or pool pumps generally need larger storage. Households with newer efficient HVAC and modest evening loads can get away with smaller systems. The EnergyStar appliance guides are a useful resource for evaluating evening consumption patterns.