Higher self-consumption:-
The more solar power you use directly in your home (self-consumption), the less you buy from the grid. Battery storage stores daytime surplus and discharges it when you need it, reducing purchased kWh and saving money.
Time-shifted value capture:-
Electricity prices often peak in early evening. A battery shifts cheap midday solar to evening use, avoiding higher tariff periods and increasing the monetary value of each kWh produced.
Reduced export losses:-
Export tariffs are typically lower than import prices. Storing energy for later personal use avoids selling cheaply and buying back at higher prices.
Backup power and resilience:-
While resilience isn’t always measured in pounds and pence, the security of backup power (for critical appliances, heating, or remote work) is a tangible benefit and can be a selling point that increases property value.
Access to incentives and flexibility markets:-
Some UK schemes and energy suppliers offer payments or rewards for export, import reduction, or grid-balancing participation. Batteries can enable access to these revenue streams.