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Battery · 5 min read

Is battery storage worth it without solar?

Most people assume a home battery only makes sense alongside solar. That's no longer true. With cheap overnight tariffs and rising peak prices, a standalone battery can genuinely pay for itself — provided the maths fits your home.

Key things to consider

Off-peak tariffs

Tariffs like Octopus Go, Cosy or Intelligent Octopus drop import prices to 7–10p/kWh overnight. Charging a battery during those hours and using it through the day is the core idea.

Energy arbitrage

Each charge/discharge cycle captures the gap between cheap overnight and expensive peak rates. Today that gap is around 15–25p/kWh.

Backup power

Some installs include an emergency power supply, keeping essentials running during a power cut. This is an upgrade, not standard.

Pros

  • Doesn't depend on roof orientation or shading
  • Genuine bill savings on the right tariff
  • Optional backup for power cuts
  • Easier planning — no scaffolding or panels

Cons

  • Payback is tariff-dependent — if rates change, so does the maths
  • Lower headline savings than solar + battery combined
  • Still a £3,500–£7,000 upfront cost
  • Requires switching to a time-of-use tariff

What it actually costs

Realistic payback

On a good off-peak tariff, a 5–10 kWh battery typically pays back in 8–12 years. Faster if peak grid prices rise further.

FAQs

Can I add solar to a battery later?

Yes. AC-coupled batteries integrate easily with solar added afterwards, no need to replace the battery hardware.

How do I know if my tariff is right?

Look at the difference between your off-peak and peak rates. A gap of 15p/kWh or more usually makes a standalone battery viable.

Will I save money in summer too?

Yes — the savings are tariff-driven, not solar-driven, so they apply year-round.

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