Calculate your annual net metering credits from excess solar energy exported to the grid. Estimate your credit value based on export rates.
Net metering allows solar homeowners to send excess electricity back to the grid in exchange for bill credits. When your panels produce more than you consume during the day, the surplus flows to the grid and your meter effectively spins backward, earning you credits at whatever rate your utility offers.
Credit rates vary widely. Some utilities offer full retail credits (you get the same rate you pay), while others pay a reduced rate — sometimes as low as wholesale or avoided-cost rates. The difference can significantly impact your solar economics. In states with strong net metering, excess production is fully valued; in states with weak policies, the value drops.
This calculator estimates your annual net metering credits based on how much energy you export and the credit rate your utility provides. Understanding this number is essential for sizing your system and projecting true savings.
By calculating this metric accurately, energy analysts gain actionable insights that inform equipment selection, system design, and operational strategies for maximum efficiency and savings.
Net metering credits can represent 20–40% of your total solar savings if your system produces more than you consume during peak production hours. Knowing the exact credit value helps you size your system and evaluate whether battery storage makes more financial sense. Precise quantification supports regulatory compliance and sustainability reporting, ensuring that energy data meets the standards required by auditors and industry certification bodies.
Annual Credit = kWh Exported × Credit Rate ($/kWh) Credit Loss vs Retail = kWh Exported × (Retail Rate − Credit Rate)
Result: $300/year in credits
Exporting 3,000 kWh at a $0.10/kWh credit rate yields $300 in annual credits. If the retail rate were $0.15, self-consuming that energy would save $450 instead — a $150 difference that could justify battery storage.
During the day, your solar panels may produce more electricity than you use. The excess flows to the grid through your meter, and you receive a credit. At night, you draw from the grid and use those credits. The net result determines your bill.
Historically, most states offered full retail net metering. Today, many are shifting to reduced credit rates that better reflect the wholesale value of exported energy. This trend makes self-consumption and battery storage increasingly important for maximizing solar value.
To get the most from net metering, align your electricity usage with solar production. Run heavy loads (laundry, dishwasher, EV charging) during peak solar hours. If your utility offers time-of-use rates, export during expensive periods and use credits during cheap off-peak hours.
Net metering is a billing arrangement where your utility credits you for excess solar electricity you send to the grid. Your meter tracks both electricity consumed and exported, and you're billed for the net difference. Credits offset future consumption, often within a billing cycle or annually.
Most U.S. states have some form of net metering, but policies vary widely. Some offer full retail credits, others offer reduced rates, and a few have moved to net billing or buy-all/sell-all models. Check your state's current policy before sizing your system.
Policies vary. Some utilities carry credits forward indefinitely, others reset them annually (often in April). Some pay out excess credits at a wholesale rate during the annual true-up. Understand your utility's policy to avoid losing credits.
Self-consumption is more valuable when the credit rate is below retail rate. For example, if you pay $0.15/kWh but only get $0.08/kWh for exports, each self-consumed kWh saves $0.07 more. Battery storage enables more self-consumption.
California's NEM 3.0 drastically reduced export credit rates from retail to near-wholesale levels. This makes battery storage essential for new California solar installations to maximize self-consumption and shift usage to peak rate periods.
Net metering can reduce the energy portion of your bill to zero, but most utilities charge a minimum monthly connection fee ($10–$20). Some months your credits may fully cover consumption, resulting in only the minimum charge.