Get Up to 30% Off a Home Battery.
Here's Exactly How.
The Australian Government's Cheaper Home Batteries Program gives you a discount of approximately $310 per kWh on a home battery — deducted from your invoice by your installer at the point of sale. No application form. No income test. This guide explains everything in plain English, and when you're ready, one form gets you up to 3 quotes from accredited installers — so you can compare prices without ringing around.
You don't apply for this rebate yourself. Under the programme, your accredited installer creates Small-scale Technology Certificates (STCs) — the mechanism behind the discount — and deducts the value directly from your invoice. You choose an installer, get a quote, and the rebate should be applied at the point of sale. There is no government portal, no application form, no waiting for reimbursement.
Before 1 May 2026, every kWh of battery capacity earns a flat-rate discount of approximately $310 per kWh at current certificate prices. After that date, a new tiered structure kicks in that significantly reduces the discount for batteries larger than 14 kWh. Based on current prices, installing before 1 May could save you an estimated $400–$1,800 more depending on battery size. Figures correct as at 24 February 2026. Source: DCCEEW
What size battery do I actually need?
The right battery size depends on how much electricity you use between sunset and sunrise — not the size of your solar system. Here's a simple guide:
1–2 people, modest evening use. Covers fridge, lights, Wi-Fi, and charging devices overnight.
Family home. Covers fridge, lights, TV, dishwasher, and moderate heating/cooling from sunset to sunrise.
Large home, EV charger, pool pump, or ducted air conditioning running overnight. Near-complete grid independence.
Not sure? That's completely normal. When you request a quote below, your installer should assess your electricity usage and solar system to recommend an appropriate size. You don't need to know before you ask.
How Much Will You Save?
Drag the slider to match your battery size. We show your estimated rebate before and after the May 2026 change, so you can see what acting now could be worth.
Indicative estimate only — not a quote or guarantee. Your actual discount depends on certificate market prices on the day your battery is installed, and may be higher or lower than shown here. Your installer will confirm your actual discount on your quote. Figures correct as at 24 February 2026. For the latest official figures, use the Clean Energy Regulator's STC calculator. How we calculated this ↓
Not sure what size battery you need? That's fine.
Request a quote and your installer can recommend the right battery based on your solar system size and electricity usage. One form, up to 3 personalised quotes.
Get My Free Quote →What's Available Where You Live?
Every Australian can access the federal battery rebate. Some states stack additional incentives on top. Select your state for the full picture. State details verified 24 February 2026 — programmes can close or change at any time.
Victoria
State battery rebate: Closed. Victoria's Solar Homes battery loan program is no longer accepting applications.
Solar panel rebate: Still available — $1,400 rebate plus an interest-free loan for eligible owner-occupiers with combined household income under $210,000 and property value under $3 million. This can be claimed alongside the federal battery rebate if you're installing solar panels at the same time. Apply through Solar Victoria.
Best strategy for Victorians: Get the federal battery rebate through your installer (it's automatic — they deduct it from your invoice). If you haven't claimed a solar panel rebate, apply for that separately through Solar Victoria. The two discounts stack.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Confirm current eligibility at solar.vic.gov.au.
New South Wales
NSW VPP incentive: A one-off payment for connecting your battery to a Virtual Power Plant under the Peak Demand Reduction Scheme (PDRS BESS2). The amount varies by battery size and VPP provider — typically $400–$600 for a 10–13 kWh battery, scaling up to approximately $1,000–$1,500 for batteries closer to the 28 kWh cap. This incentive stacks with the federal rebate. Note: admin and agent costs may reduce the amount received.
How to claim the VPP incentive: After your battery is installed, choose a registered VPP provider from the NSW Government website. Sign a VPP contract and your accredited certificate provider manages the application. Get quotes from multiple VPP providers — incentive amounts and contract terms vary.
Example: A 13.5 kWh battery could receive an estimated $4,200 federal rebate + approximately $500 NSW VPP incentive = approximately $4,700 total discount. A larger 27 kWh battery could receive approximately $5,100 federal + approximately $1,200 VPP = approximately $6,300. Actual amounts depend on STC market prices and VPP provider terms.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Confirm current VPP incentive at energy.nsw.gov.au.
Queensland
State scheme: The Battery Booster Program has closed and is unlikely to reopen given the federal program is now in effect.
Higher solar value: While the battery rebate is the same nationally, Queensland's extra sunshine hours mean your solar panels generate more STCs, so the solar component of a package deal may be slightly better value than in southern states.
Renters: The Supercharged Solar for Renters program opened 12 December 2025 and offers landlords rebates of up to $3,500 for installing solar panels (not batteries) on rental properties. This is separate from the federal battery rebate but may benefit tenants looking to add a battery to a newly-solar rental. Details: QLD Government — Supercharged Solar for Renters.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Check qld.gov.au for current programmes.
South Australia
State scheme: The SA Home Battery Scheme delivered approximately 39,000 rebates before closing. Only the federal rebate remains available.
Local incentives: The City of Adelaide offers business battery rebates (50% up to $1,000) and concession card holder solar discounts. Check with your local council for any additional programmes.
VPP opportunities: South Australia has a well-established VPP market. While not a government rebate, joining a VPP (such as Tesla Energy Plan or AGL's VPP) can earn you ongoing credits on your electricity bill.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Check sa.gov.au for current programmes.
Western Australia
WA Residential Battery Scheme: Up to $1,300 for Synergy customers ($130/kWh, capped at first 10 kWh). Up to $3,800 for Horizon Power customers ($380/kWh, capped at first 10 kWh). Both require connecting to a VPP.
Interest-free loan: Up to $10,000 over 10 years. Income tested — combined household income must be under $210,000.
Combined example: A Perth household (Synergy) installing a 13.5 kWh battery could receive an estimated $4,200 federal + $1,300 state rebate = approximately $5,500 total discount, plus potential eligibility for a $10,000 interest-free loan. Actual federal rebate depends on STC market prices at installation.
Apply: Through the WA Residential Battery Scheme.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Confirm current eligibility and amounts at wa.gov.au.
Tasmania
Energy Saver Loan Scheme: Closed. The Tasmanian Government's Energy Saver Loan Scheme — which offered interest-free loans of up to $10,000 — exhausted its funding and closed on 1 September 2025. There is currently no replacement state battery incentive.
Best strategy for Tasmanians: The federal battery rebate is still available and is applied automatically by your installer. It provides approximately 30% off the upfront cost. Check with the ReCFIT website for any future state support.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026.
Australian Capital Territory
Sustainable Household Scheme: Loans from $2,000 to $15,000 at a fixed 3% interest rate for batteries, EVs, heat pumps, and other energy upgrades. Repayable over up to 10 years. Administered by Brighte. Note: solar panels are no longer eligible under the SHS for most households (from 1 July 2025). A credit check is required.
Concession card holders: May qualify for zero-interest loans and up to $5,000 in additional rebates through the Home Energy Support Program.
Note: The ACT sources 100% of its electricity from renewable energy contracts, so a battery is primarily about energy independence and avoiding peak pricing rather than reducing grid emissions.
Apply: Through the ACT Climate Choices website.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026. Confirm current eligibility at climatechoices.act.gov.au.
Northern Territory
State scheme: The NT Home and Business Battery Scheme has reached its funding cap and is no longer accepting applications. Only the federal rebate applies.
Off-grid consideration: The NT has a higher proportion of off-grid and fringe-of-grid properties. Off-grid batteries between 5 kWh and 100 kWh are eligible for the federal rebate but do not require VPP capability.
State details correct as at 24 February 2026.
How to Get Your Battery Rebate
It's simpler than any government website makes it look. Five steps, and your installer does the hard one.
Check you're eligible
You need a new or existing solar PV system, and the battery must be between 5 and 100 kWh, on the CEC approved product list, and VPP-capable (for on-grid systems). There's no income test. Homeowners, renters with landlord agreement, small businesses, and community organisations all qualify.
Get 2–3 quotes from accredited installers
Why 2–3 quotes? Because pricing varies significantly. The same 13.5 kWh battery can differ by $2,000–$4,000 between installers depending on their margins, the inverter they pair it with, and how they structure the STC discount. Some installers will recommend a 10 kWh battery for your home; others might suggest 15 kWh. Multiple quotes let you compare not just price, but what each installer thinks you actually need.
Compare and choose
Compare the out-of-pocket cost after the rebate is applied, not just the sticker price. Each quote should show the STC discount as a separate line item. Also compare: battery warranty (10 years minimum recommended), installer reviews, recommended battery size, and whether your quote includes any state incentives you're eligible for. Having quotes side by side makes this easy — you'll spot the differences immediately.
Installation — your installer handles the rebate
Under the programme, your installer creates the STCs and deducts the discount from your invoice. You should only pay the post-rebate price — confirm with your installer that the STC discount is shown as a separate line item on your quote. The installation date is when the certificate of electrical compliance is signed. The process typically takes 2–6 weeks from first quote to battery on your wall, though this can vary.
Claim any additional state incentives
In NSW, connect your battery to a VPP for an additional incentive (amount varies by battery size). In WA, apply for the state rebate and interest-free loan. In Victoria, apply separately for the $1,400 solar panel rebate if you haven't already. In the ACT, apply for the Sustainable Household Scheme loan (3% interest). State programmes change — check the relevant state guide above for current status. These are all separate from the federal rebate and require their own applications.
The rebate is higher before 1 May 2026
Get your quotes now while the higher rate applies. One form, up to 3 quotes from accredited installers showing your estimated savings after the discount.
Get My Free Quote →Am I Eligible for the Battery Rebate?
The federal programme is deliberately broad. Most Australians with solar panels (or planning to install them) qualify.
✓ You qualify if
- You have solar panels or will install them with the battery
- Battery is between 5 and 100 kWh nominal capacity
- Battery is on the CEC approved product list
- Your installer is SAA accredited for battery work
- On-grid battery is VPP-capable (most modern batteries are)
- Your property hasn't previously received a battery STC rebate
- You're a homeowner, renter (with landlord agreement), small business, or community org
✗ You don't qualify if
- No solar system and not planning to install one
- A battery at this address already received a rebate under this scheme
- Battery is not on the CEC approved product list
- Installer is not SAA accredited for battery installation
- It's a portable, removable, or EV battery
- Battery was tested or commissioned before 1 July 2025
Important: There is no income test for the federal battery rebate. You can own multiple properties and claim one rebate per electricity meter (NMI). The eligibility criteria above are based on published government guidelines and may change. Always confirm your eligibility with the official source: DCCEEW Eligibility Information
Which Batteries Are Eligible?
All batteries on the CEC approved product list qualify. Here are the most commonly installed models in Australia and their approximate rebate values (before May 2026, based on figures at 24 February 2026).
| Battery | Usable Capacity | Approx. Rebate (before May '26) | Warranty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh | ~$4,200 | 10 years |
| BYD Battery-Box HVM | 11.0 kWh | ~$3,420 | 10 years |
| Sungrow SBR096 | 9.6 kWh | ~$2,987 | 10 years |
| Sigenergy AI Home 10 | 10.0 kWh | ~$3,112 | 15 years |
| AlphaESS SMILE5 | 10.1 kWh | ~$3,143 | 10 years |
| Enphase IQ 5P | 5.0 kWh | ~$1,556 | 15 years |
| Sonnen sonnenBatterie | 10.0 kWh | ~$3,112 | 10 years |
Indicative estimates only — not a quote or guarantee. Actual discount depends on certificate market prices at installation. Figures correct as at 24 February 2026. For the latest figures, use the CER's official STC calculator. How we calculated this ↓
Everything Else You Need to Know
How do I apply for the solar battery rebate in Australia?
You don't apply directly. Under the programme, your accredited installer creates Small-scale Technology Certificates (STCs) — the mechanism behind the rebate — and deducts the value from your invoice at the point of sale. Your step is to find an accredited installer, get a quote, and the rebate should be applied automatically. There is no government application form, no online portal, and no waiting period for reimbursement. We recommend getting 2–3 quotes because pricing can vary significantly for the same battery — use our free form to request up to 3 quotes at once.
How much is the solar battery rebate worth in 2026?
Until 30 April 2026, the discount is approximately $310 per usable kWh of battery capacity. For a 10 kWh battery, that's around $3,100 off the purchase price. For a 13.5 kWh battery like a Tesla Powerwall 3, approximately $4,200. From 1 May 2026, a new tiered structure applies that reduces the discount for larger batteries — the first 14 kWh still receives a meaningful discount, but capacity above that receives progressively less. The exact discount depends on certificate market prices, which change over time. These figures are correct as at 24 February 2026. For the latest figures, use the CER's official STC calculator, or ask your installer — they deal with this daily.
Is the battery rebate means tested?
No. The federal Cheaper Home Batteries Program has no income test and no means test. It is available to all Australian homeowners, landlords, small businesses, and community organisations regardless of income or property value. Some state programmes (like Victoria's solar panel rebate or WA's interest-free loan) do have income limits, but the federal battery rebate itself does not.
Can I add a battery to my existing solar system?
Yes, and this is what most Australians claiming the rebate are doing. Your battery must be paired with a solar PV system, but that system can already be installed on your roof. Your installer may need to check that your existing inverter is compatible or recommend a hybrid inverter upgrade. The rebate applies to the battery component regardless of when your solar panels were installed.
Do I have to join a Virtual Power Plant (VPP)?
No. Your battery must be technically capable of connecting to a VPP — meaning it needs internet connectivity and the right communications protocol — but you don't have to actually join one. Most modern batteries from major manufacturers already meet this VPP-ready requirement out of the box. That said, joining a VPP can earn you ongoing electricity credits, and in NSW it unlocks an additional VPP incentive (amount varies by battery size and provider) on top of the federal rebate.
What happens to the rebate after 1 May 2026?
From 1 May 2026, the flat-rate discount is replaced by a tiered structure. The first 14 kWh of battery capacity still receives a meaningful discount, but larger batteries get progressively less per additional kWh. For a 13.5 kWh battery, the difference is modest — you'd save roughly $600 more by installing before May. For a 20 kWh battery, the saving from acting before May is around $1,300. The discount drops again on 1 January 2027 and every six months after that until the scheme ends on 31 December 2030. Estimates correct as at 24 February 2026 — for the latest, see the DCCEEW programme page or use the CER's STC calculator.
Which batteries are eligible for the rebate?
The battery must appear on the Clean Energy Council's approved product list. It must have a nominal capacity between 5 kWh and 100 kWh, be VPP-capable for on-grid systems, and be installed with a new or existing solar PV system. Popular eligible batteries include the Tesla Powerwall 3, BYD Battery-Box, Sungrow SBR series, AlphaESS, Sigenergy, Enphase IQ, and Sonnen. Any new inverter installed alongside the battery must also be CEC-approved.
Can I claim both the battery rebate and a solar panel rebate?
Yes. The federal battery rebate (for the battery) and the federal solar panel STC rebate (for panels) are separate incentives and can both be claimed on the same installation. In Victoria, you can also stack the $1,400 Solar Victoria panel rebate if your property hasn't received one before. In NSW, you can stack the federal battery rebate with the VPP incentive under the PDRS (amount varies by battery size and provider). Your installer can apply all applicable federal discounts on a single invoice.
Can renters get the battery rebate?
Yes, with the landlord's agreement. The rebate is per property (per electricity meter), not per person. The landlord would typically organise the installation through an accredited installer. The battery stays with the property, and the tenant benefits from lower electricity bills. In Queensland, the Supercharged Solar for Renters programme offers specific support for rental properties.
Can I claim the rebate if I already have a battery?
Only if your existing battery at that address has never received a rebate under this scheme. You can expand an existing system by adding more capacity, and claim the rebate on the new capacity, provided the total system stays between 5 kWh and 100 kWh and the addition is at least 5 kWh. If a battery at your address already received a rebate, you cannot claim again at that property.
How long does installation take?
From getting your first quote to a working battery on your wall typically takes 2 to 6 weeks, depending on installer availability, product supply in your area, and whether any switchboard or electrical upgrades are needed. The physical installation itself is usually completed in a single day. High demand around rebate deadline dates (like April 2026) may increase wait times, so allowing extra time is recommended. These are general timeframes — your installer can give you a more specific estimate.
Is a home battery worth it in Australia without the rebate?
It depends on your electricity usage, tariff structure, and how much solar you generate. Industry estimates suggest that for most households with time-of-use pricing and existing solar panels, a battery may pay for itself in roughly 7–12 years without the rebate. With the rebate reducing the upfront cost by an estimated 30%, the payback period could drop to around 5–8 years. If you're on a flat tariff and use most of your solar during the day, the economics are less compelling. A good installer should run the numbers for your specific situation as part of the quoting process. These are general estimates only — actual returns depend on your electricity rates, usage patterns, and future energy prices.
What does VPP-capable mean? Do I lose control of my battery?
VPP-capable means your battery has the technical ability to be remotely coordinated with other batteries to support the electricity grid — essentially, the hardware and software to receive and respond to external signals. It does not mean anyone can drain your battery without your permission. You choose whether to join a VPP, and if you do, the terms (including how much of your battery can be accessed and when) are set in a contract you agree to. Most VPP programmes typically include a minimum reserve for your household — check the terms of any VPP contract carefully before signing.
What size battery do I need?
For most Australian households, a battery between 10 and 15 kWh covers evening and overnight usage after solar stops generating. A 10 kWh battery typically stores enough to run lights, fridge, TV, and moderate appliance use from sunset to sunrise. If you have a large home, electric vehicle charger, or pool pump running overnight, you may need 15–20 kWh. Your installer should assess your electricity usage and solar system size to recommend an appropriate capacity. The rebate applies to any size between 5 and 100 kWh, so there's no financial penalty for going larger.
Can I get the rebate for an off-grid battery?
Yes. Off-grid batteries with a nominal capacity between 5 kWh and 100 kWh are eligible. The key difference is that off-grid batteries are exempt from the VPP-capability requirement, since they're not connected to the electricity grid. All other eligibility criteria (CEC-approved product, SAA-accredited installer, paired with solar) still apply.
Still have questions? Ask your installer.
Accredited installers deal with the rebate every day. One form gets you up to 3 quotes — they can walk you through the details.
Get My Free Quote →One Form. Up to 3 Quotes. Zero Hassle.
Fill this in once and we'll match you with up to 3 accredited installers in your area. Each one will provide a separate quote showing your rebate as a clear line item — so you can compare prices, warranties, and recommendations side by side without making multiple phone calls. Free and no obligation.
✓ Request received
Your details have been sent to accredited installers in your area. They will typically be in touch within a few business days with personalised quotes showing your rebate discount.
Meanwhile, use the calculator above to estimate your rebate, or read the FAQ to prepare your questions.
How We Calculate Your Estimate
The discount on home batteries is delivered through Small-scale Technology Certificates (STCs) under the Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme. Your installer creates these certificates on your behalf and deducts their value from your invoice. The dollar value of your discount depends on two things: the number of certificates your battery earns, and the market price of each certificate.
Number of certificates per kWh (the "STC factor"). Until 30 April 2026, every kWh of usable battery capacity earns 8.4 STCs — a flat rate regardless of battery size. From 1 May 2026, this changes to a tiered structure under amendments to the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Regulations 2001 (now in force, commencing 1 May 2026):
- First 14 kWh: STC factor applied at 100% (6.8 STCs per kWh)
- 15–28 kWh: STC factor applied at 60% (4.08 STCs per kWh)
- 29–50 kWh: STC factor applied at 15% (1.02 STCs per kWh)
Certificate price. The STC Clearing House price is fixed by regulation at $40 per certificate (excluding GST). However, most installers sell certificates through agents on the open market, where prices fluctuate. After typical admin and agent costs, the effective value passed on to the consumer is lower than $40. Our calculator uses an assumed value of $37 per certificate — this is an estimate only and will differ from the actual value your installer achieves. Your installer will confirm your actual discount based on the certificate value they receive at the time of your installation.
Example calculation (before May 2026). A 13 kWh battery: 13 × 8.4 certificates = 109.2 certificates × $37 (assumed) = approximately $4,040. Your actual discount may be higher or lower.
Sources. All figures on this page are derived from:
- DCCEEW — Cheaper Home Batteries Program (programme rules, eligibility, tier structure)
- Clean Energy Regulator — Solar Battery STC Calculator (official STC calculator)
- DCCEEW — Small-scale Technology Certificates (STC market, Clearing House price)
- CER — Changes to rebate for solar batteries from 1 May (February 2026 confirmation)
Important. All estimates on this site are indicative only. They are not a quote, guarantee, or financial advice, and should not be relied upon as such. Certificate market prices change frequently and government programme rules can change at any time without notice. The only figure you should rely on is the discount shown on your installer's quote. We accept no responsibility for any difference between the estimates on this site and the actual discount applied to your installation. Always verify current figures using the official sources linked above before making a purchasing decision.
Methodology last verified: 24 February 2026. Next scheduled review: 1 May 2026.
About This Guide
Hi, I'm James. I built this guide because I couldn't find a straight answer anywhere. When I started looking into battery rebates for my own home, every government website buried the key details and every comparison site wanted my phone number before explaining anything. So I pulled together everything I could find into one plain-English page and sent it to a few friends. They sent it to theirs, and here we are.
I'm a homeowner, not a solar installer or financial adviser. For advice specific to your home — what size battery you need, what it'll cost, whether it makes sense — that's what the accredited installers are for. This site helps you understand the rebate and find those installers without the runaround.
I want to be upfront, so full disclosure: when you request a quote through this site, I receive a referral fee which comes from the installers — not from you. That's how this site is funded. Full details here.
I hope this guide saves you some time and a few headaches.
— James
Disclosure
Accuracy date: 24 February 2026. All rebate values, programme details, eligibility rules, and state incentive information on this page were verified against official government sources on 24 February 2026. All dollar amounts are in Australian dollars (AUD). Government programmes, STC market prices, and eligibility criteria change over time. This page will next be reviewed on or before 1 May 2026. You should always confirm current information with your installer and the relevant government programme before making a purchasing decision.
About this site. HomeBatteryGuide.com.au is operated by Miniature Productions Pty Ltd (ABN 14 634 958 062). We provide general information about solar battery rebates in Australia and operate a quote-matching service that connects consumers with battery installers. This site is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any Australian government agency, any specific battery manufacturer, or any specific installer.
How we earn money. When you submit a quote request, your contact details are provided to up to three battery installers. We receive a referral fee from each installer to whom we provide your details. This fee is paid by the installer to us and is not itemised as a separate charge on your quote. This is a standard commercial arrangement used across the solar and energy comparison industry in Australia.
Your relationship is with the installer, not with us. We are a referral service only. We are not a party to any contract, quote, or transaction between you and any installer. We do not employ, endorse, supervise, or control any installer. We do not guarantee the accuracy of any quote, the quality of any installation, the suitability of any product, or the conduct of any installer. Any representations made by an installer — including representations about pricing, rebate values, product suitability, or timelines — are the responsibility of that installer alone.
Accreditation. We take reasonable steps to confirm that our installer partners hold current accreditation with Solar Accreditation Australia for battery installation. However, accreditation status can change and we do not guarantee that any installer's accreditation is current at the time they contact you. You can verify accreditation at solaraccreditation.com.au.
No obligation. Requesting a quote is free. You are under no obligation to proceed with any installer or to purchase any product or service.
General information only. The content on this site — including the rebate calculator, eligibility information, state-by-state guide, and FAQ — is general in nature and based on publicly available government sources. It is not financial advice, legal advice, or a personal recommendation. Estimated rebate values depend on STC market prices and government programme rules, both of which are subject to change. You should confirm eligibility, current rebate values, and product suitability with your chosen installer and the relevant government programme before making any purchasing decision.
Currency of information. All factual claims, rebate amounts, eligibility criteria, STC rates, state and territory programme details, and government scheme statuses on this page were verified against official government sources and are believed to be accurate as at 24 February 2026. Government programmes, rebate values, STC market prices, eligibility criteria, and scheme availability can change at any time without notice. This site is next scheduled for review on 1 May 2026, when the new STC tier rates take effect. Between the date of publication and the next review, information on this page may become outdated, inaccurate, or incomplete. We accept no liability for reliance on information that has changed since the date stated above. You should always verify current programme details with the relevant official sources listed at the bottom of this page before making any financial commitment.
Limitation of liability. To the maximum extent permitted by law, Miniature Productions Pty Ltd (ABN 14 634 958 062), trading as HomeBatteryGuide.com.au, its directors, employees, and contractors accept no liability for any loss, damage, cost, or expense arising from or in connection with: (a) your use of or reliance on information on this site; (b) the acts, omissions, conduct, representations, or services of any installer; (c) any transaction or dealings between you and any installer; or (d) any difference between estimated rebate values on this site and the actual rebate applied to your installation. Nothing in this limitation excludes or limits liability that cannot be excluded or limited under the Australian Consumer Law.
Complaints about installers. If you have a complaint about an installer's conduct, your recourse is with the installer directly and with the relevant regulatory bodies: the ACCC, your state or territory fair trading body, or the Clean Energy Council.
Published by Miniature Productions Pty Ltd (ABN 14 634 958 062), having regard to the Australian Consumer Law (Schedule 2, Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth)). Last updated: 24 February 2026. Next review: 1 May 2026.