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Solar comparison

California NEM 2.0 vs NEM 3.0: How Net Metering Changes Affect Solar Payback

Compare California NEM 2.0 and NEM 3.0 solar billing rules: export credit values, battery impact, payback period changes, and how to maximize savings under NEM 3.0.

Quick answer

What this comparison means

NEM 3.0 (effective April 2023) reduced solar export credit value by ~75% compared to NEM 2.0. Under NEM 2.0, exported solar was credited at near-retail rates (~$0.25–0.35/kWh). Under NEM 3.0, exports are credited at avoided-cost rates (~$0.04–0.08/kWh). This makes battery storage central to solar economics: self-consuming your solar is now worth 3–5x more than exporting. Solar-only payback extended from 5–7 years (NEM 2.0) to 8–12 years (NEM 3.0). Solar + battery payback under NEM 3.0 is 8–12 years β€” similar to solar-only under NEM 2.0.

Comparison table

FactorOption AOption BWhy it matters
Export credit valueNear-retail rate (~$0.25–0.35/kWh)Avoided-cost rate (~$0.04–0.08/kWh)NEM 3.0 export credit is ~75% lower. Self-consumption is now the dominant strategy.
Solar-only payback5–7 years8–12 yearsNEM 3.0 roughly doubles solar-only payback. Battery becomes much more important.
Solar + battery payback8–12 years (battery less valuable under NEM 2.0)8–12 years (battery is central under NEM 3.0)Under NEM 3.0, solar + battery payback β‰ˆ solar-only payback under NEM 2.0.
Battery strategyNice-to-have for backup and small TOU savingsEssential β€” store daytime solar for evening use instead of exporting at low creditUnder NEM 3.0, every kWh you store and use yourself saves $0.30+. Every kWh you export earns $0.05.
System design shiftMaximize panel count for maximum exportRight-size panels to daytime load + battery capacity; avoid overproductionNEM 3.0 rewards matching production to consumption. Oversizing wastes value.
GrandfatheringNEM 2.0 customers grandfathered for 20 years from PTO dateAll new applications after April 14, 2023If you have NEM 2.0, you keep it. Adding battery doesn't trigger NEM 3.0 transition (under 10% expansion rule).
Best next checkMaximize production before NEM 2.0 transition; add battery later if desiredModel evening load profile and battery dispatch; get multiple battery-inclusive quotesEvery CA homeowner should run a self-consumption model before sizing their system.

Data Sources

This comparison uses state electricity-rate ranges, local incentive context, net-metering rules, and solar production assumptions informed by NREL PVWatts-style modeling. Final quotes, utility tariffs, and interconnection rules can materially change the economics.

Assumptions

Payback and ROI are directional estimates, not financial advice. They assume typical residential roof conditions, stable household usage, currently available incentives, and separate treatment of battery backup value, financing costs, and installer-specific add-ons.

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