US homeowners installed a record amount of battery storage this year, and it's reshaping the grid

Skye Jacobs

Posts: 2,010   +58
Staff
Bottom line: A growing slice of the country's energy storage capacity is being built in an unlikely place: inside people's homes. Residential battery systems are increasingly used for more than simple backup power, as homeowners and grid operators seek greater flexibility. Homeowners are installing batteries at a rapid pace, and that expanding fleet is being integrated into virtual power plant programs that grid operators can call on when demand spikes.

Recent data underscores how fast the market is moving. US homeowners installed 673 megawatts of battery storage in the first quarter of 2026, a record level, according to the Energy Information Administration. Much of that growth is concentrated in states where electricity is expensive and policies encourage storage, including California and Hawaii, as well as Texas and Arizona.

At a basic level, the appeal is practical. Batteries allow homeowners to store electricity when it is cheaper – often during the day when solar production is high – and use it later when prices rise. Growing numbers of home batteries are being managed collectively through virtual power plant schemes, which coordinate when they store and discharge energy so homes can act as part of a larger grid resource.

Policy has played a major role in pushing adoption forward. "You're seeing state policy demonstrate its importance," Ari Matusiak, founder and chief executive officer at Rewiring America, told Bloomberg.

California, for example, has adjusted how it compensates homeowners for sending electricity back to the grid, placing more value on power delivered after sunset. Hawaii has taken a different approach, offering a one-time payment of $400 per kilowatt of installed battery capacity.

Those incentives are landing at a moment when the economics of residential solar are shifting. The rollback of a federal tax credit for solar installations has slowed new rooftop projects, with installations down 10% in the first quarter compared to a year earlier. Batteries, however, are benefiting from a different set of incentives and use cases.

Credit: Bloomberg

"The fact that California, Hawaii, Texas and Arizona are incentivizing battery adoption is the main reason for the trend," said Cosmo van Steenis, a solar and storage analyst at BloombergNEF. He said batteries now open up additional revenue opportunities that solar alone cannot. "The economics have suddenly shifted towards batteries because if you add on a battery to a system, you can access all these extra revenue streams," he said. "And solar on its own is no longer as economic as it was."

Installers are adjusting accordingly. Martyna Kowalczyk, who runs the Dallas-based solar company Solartime, said customer demand has tilted heavily toward storage. "Three years ago we would sell three batteries for 10 systems that we sold," she said. "Right now it's more like eight homeowners out of 10 are electing to do a battery."

The biggest change is how these systems are being used once they are installed. Increasingly, home batteries are being linked together through virtual power plant programs, which allow operators to coordinate thousands of systems at once. Instead of acting as isolated units, they function more like a single, flexible power source that can be dispatched when needed.

That model is gaining traction. According to Yale E360, the amount of US home battery capacity tied into virtual power plants jumped 153% in 2025. A demonstration that year showed that a network of 100,000 home batteries could deliver more power than a traditional gas peaker plant.

Some companies are building entire business models around that concept. Austin-based Base Power offers heavily discounted home batteries and discounted electricity rates in exchange for managing its customers' battery fleet as a virtual power plant. The company effectively aggregates those systems into a shared energy resource.

There is also growing interest in using that distributed capacity beyond traditional grid support. As demand from AI data centers continues to rise, energy providers are looking for new ways to supply power. On June 24, Sunrun, Renew Home, and Tesla announced a plan to combine "hundreds of thousands of home battery systems operated by Sunrun and Tesla" into "the largest distributed power plant in the country." The companies said the network could supply more than 16 gigawatts of electricity to both utilities and large-scale data centers.

Some ideas go even further. Startup SPAN is exploring whether homes themselves could host small-scale data center infrastructure, supported by on-site batteries and, in some cases, solar panels. The proposal would place data center servers in suburban homes, backed by residential batteries and, in some cases, rooftop solar.

Rising electricity prices are adding another layer of urgency. The EIA reported that residential electricity costs were up more than 7% in April compared to the same month a year earlier. For homeowners with battery systems, that creates a clear financial incentive to manage when and how energy is used.

Permalink to story:

 
""Homeowners are installing batteries at a rapid pace, and that expanding fleet is being integrated into virtual power plant programs that grid operators can call on when demand spikes.""

I call BS. thanks to deregulation (team red) and private power deep pockets that spend 15 YEARS trying to kill home solar to the point that selling back to the grid is pointless and pays almost nothing. EVERY SINGLE home array I have been to does NOT sell back to the grid and does not flow back to the grid.

F### them .. private power and deregulation put the USA in the mess we are in. home owners should NEVER sell to the grid ,, make them fix their own crap and stop relying on other peoples money to to solve power distribution while keeping thier scumbag communist stock payouts by using other people to fill the gaps and not investing in infrastructure.

#cancelamerica #canceltherich
 
Hmmm, that brings up an interesting question; if you mandate that new homes get on-site battery storage (and incentivize/push for older homes to get it too), would that actually help the power grid issues better than building dedicated gigantic battery sites (which will also need more transmission lines)?
 
My electric bill was $ 0.92 this month with my solar panels. I'd love to get batteries but the powerwall, for example, replaces my existing inverter instead of just plugging into it. That's a waste of my investment, so I'll wait for better solutions or when I need to replace my inverter.
 
I'll happily sell my power back to the grid, but due to supply limitations and unprecedented demand from the booming economy, I must charge $5 per kWh with a $100 surcharge for all power use over 5 kWh.
""Homeowners are installing batteries at a rapid pace, and that expanding fleet is being integrated into virtual power plant programs that grid operators can call on when demand spikes.""

I call BS. thanks to deregulation (team red) and private power deep pockets that spend 15 YEARS trying to kill home solar to the point that selling back to the grid is pointless and pays almost nothing. EVERY SINGLE home array I have been to does NOT sell back to the grid and does not flow back to the grid.

F### them .. private power and deregulation put the USA in the mess we are in. home owners should NEVER sell to the grid ,, make them fix their own crap and stop relying on other peoples money to to solve power distribution while keeping thier scumbag communist stock payouts by using other people to fill the gaps and not investing in infrastructure.

#cancelamerica #canceltherich
Crying about private power and deregulation but also crying about distributed public solutions and "communist stock payouts"

So here is the game: is this low quality bait or is this truly a clueless politically brainrotted internet addict?
 
My electric bill was $ 0.92 this month with my solar panels. I'd love to get batteries but the powerwall, for example, replaces my existing inverter instead of just plugging into it. That's a waste of my investment, so I'll wait for better solutions or when I need to replace my inverter.
It already exists. Powerwall is crap tech. Siggen makes what you need and is taking the world by storm. Much cheaper than Tesla PW, can use existing panels and inverter in addition to it's own inverter, supports full home backup, 3-phase, V2H/V2G. is modular so you can add more capacity easily down the track.

My system is absolutely brilliant.
 
My electric bill was $ 0.92 this month with my solar panels. I'd love to get batteries but the powerwall, for example, replaces my existing inverter instead of just plugging into it. That's a waste of my investment, so I'll wait for better solutions or when I need to replace my inverter.
A Powerwall 3 unit can be AC coupled, so it can run with your existing solar inverter rather than replacing it. You can also add extra solar panels directly to the Powerwall 3 if needed, again this will work independently to your existing solar.
 
It already exists. Powerwall is crap tech. Siggen makes what you need and is taking the world by storm. Much cheaper than Tesla PW, can use existing panels and inverter in addition to it's own inverter, supports full home backup, 3-phase, V2H/V2G. is modular so you can add more capacity easily down the track.

My system is absolutely brilliant.
I took a look at SigEnergy products when I was looking at battery storage and almost went with their product. I ultimately decided on a Sonnen Evo system which suits my needs well.
 
Cheaper for them if the batteries are in your house instead of theirs. Another foot in the door legally and a claim to whatever you've made for yourself. What else is new?
 
I'm not sure what's coming, but the aggressiveness of these Solar panel companies is unbelievable. I own two properties here in NYC and these people are coming at me with their aggressive sales tactics trying to sell me Solar,despite me making it clear I'm not in the need for it. Now they're using "data centers causing prices to go up" as a reason- as if I myself should have to spend more money to address the problems caused by data centers. It's ridiculous. I definitely want a solar energy solution, but they aren't there yet. I expect solar panels, battery backups (at least 100 kWH) with electric everything: heating, water boiling, laundry, etc. Maybe 20 years from now the batteries will be cheap and safe enough to do all that, but what about solar powered furnaces and water boilers?

I am near retirement and I doubt I'm going to buy another house. I don't use enough electricity to justify adding any solar panels - that's something that should be done for new constructions.
 
The mad unbridled greed behind this AI insanity especially in the US is causing an environmental catastrophe. This latest get-rich-quick scheme is going to have repercussions for centuries. How hot does the Earth have to get and how many freakish weather events do there have to be before the moronsphere stops licking windows and actually pauses and thinks about something other than themselves for ten seconds?
Meta's Hyperion data center is expected to consume more energy per day than the whole of New Orleans. Even worse the data center they are building in Wyoming will consume more energy than the entire population of the state. Data centers in Texas are conservatively estimated to consume 49 billion gallons of water per year in the next few years. I could go on and on. It's a disaster and the AI boomers are paying none of the bill for this catastrophe. They should be paying billions in costs for the damage they are causing, but no, states are offering incentives and tax breaks to get dc's built in their state because in the US when there's a moral decision to be made everybody just chases the money every time.
 
""Homeowners are installing batteries at a rapid pace, and that expanding fleet is being integrated into virtual power plant programs that grid operators can call on when demand spikes.""

I call BS. thanks to deregulation (team red) and private power deep pockets that spend 15 YEARS trying to kill home solar to the point that selling back to the grid is pointless and pays almost nothing. EVERY SINGLE home array I have been to does NOT sell back to the grid and does not flow back to the grid.

F### them .. private power and deregulation put the USA in the mess we are in. home owners should NEVER sell to the grid ,, make them fix their own crap and stop relying on other peoples money to to solve power distribution while keeping thier scumbag communist stock payouts by using other people to fill the gaps and not investing in infrastructure.

#cancelamerica #canceltherich
Not paying you huge sums for solar power is not to "kill solar" but to prevent the grid from collapsing.
 
I took a look at SigEnergy products when I was looking at battery storage and almost went with their product. I ultimately decided on a Sonnen Evo system which suits my needs well.
I think at the time I was looking (BTW I'm in Australia), Sonnen were only just appearing. Siggen is rising rapidly in Australia and is so much more advanced and flexible than Powerwall and far cheaper. My entire 24kWh (3x8kWh) battery, 15kW 3P inverter, 7kW of new panels, home controller, racks and installation was only $16K compared to $14-15K for a 13kWh Powerwall 3 that would not do half of what I needed.
 
I'll happily sell my power back to the grid, but due to supply limitations and unprecedented demand from the booming economy, I must charge $5 per kWh with a $100 surcharge for all power use over 5 kWh.

Crying about private power and deregulation but also crying about distributed public solutions and "communist stock payouts"

So here is the game: is this low quality bait or is this truly a clueless politically brainrotted internet addict?

I see the words “communist” and “fascist” spread around so much these days that whenever I see a brainrot comment like mentioned using said words, I just assume it’s another Redditor off of their meds again.
 
""Homeowners are installing batteries at a rapid pace, and that expanding fleet is being integrated into virtual power plant programs that grid operators can call on when demand spikes.""

I call BS. thanks to deregulation (team red) and private power deep pockets that spend 15 YEARS trying to kill home solar to the point that selling back to the grid is pointless and pays almost nothing. EVERY SINGLE home array I have been to does NOT sell back to the grid and does not flow back to the grid.

F### them .. private power and deregulation put the USA in the mess we are in. home owners should NEVER sell to the grid ,, make them fix their own crap and stop relying on other peoples money to to solve power distribution while keeping thier scumbag communist stock payouts by using other people to fill the gaps and not investing in infrastructure.

#cancelamerica #canceltherich

That you Xi?
 
Back