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Time-of-Use Rate Optimizer

See exactly how time-of-use electricity rates change your solar economics — and whether a battery pays off for your specific utility tariff.

kW
hrs/day
kWh/yr
$/kWh

Your rate outside peak hours

$/kWh

Your rate during peak window (e.g. 4–9 pm)

$/kWh

What your utility pays for exported solar

hrs/day
kWh

Model a battery to see extra TOU savings

Your peak rate is 3.0× your off-peak rate. ⚡ High spread — a battery pays off well here.

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Why TOU rates change everything about solar

For two decades, most US homeowners were on flat rates — every kilowatt-hour cost the same whether you used it at 2 am or 7 pm. Solar economics under flat rates are simple: produce kWh, offset kWh, multiply by one rate. But TOU pricing has fundamentally changed this equation for tens of millions of Americans, and most solar calculators haven't caught up.

The mismatch problem

Solar panels generate most of their energy between 9 am and 3 pm. TOU peak periods typically run 4–9 pm, after the sun has started going down. Without a battery, you're selling cheap midday solar at a low export rate, then buying expensive evening power at the peak rate. Depending on your utility, this can quietly subtract $200–$600/yr from what a simpler flat-rate analysis would predict.

How a battery flips the equation

A battery stores your midday solar surplus and discharges it into your home during the 4–9 pm peak window. Instead of exporting at $0.06/kWh and re-importing at $0.40/kWh, you're using solar you stored at near-zero cost to replace the most expensive electricity of the day. On utilities with extreme TOU spreads like California PG&E or Arizona APS, this can be worth $500–$1,200/yr — changing the battery payback from 12 years to 7.

No battery? Still plenty of optimisation

The cheapest TOU optimization is behavioural. Moving EV charging to midnight, setting the dishwasher to run at 10 pm, and pre-cooling your home to 72°F at 2 pm (using free solar) before the peak window can save $150–$400/yr with zero hardware investment. This calculator quantifies both paths so you can decide which fits your situation.

Frequently asked questions

What is a time-of-use (TOU) rate?

A TOU rate charges different prices per kWh depending on the time of day. Peak hours — typically 4–9 pm on weekdays — can cost 2–4× the off-peak rate. Solar without a battery mainly generates during off-peak hours (midday), so a battery lets you store that cheap solar and dispatch it during the expensive peak window.

My utility just moved me to TOU — does solar still make sense?

Usually yes, but the math shifts. Solar alone still avoids midday grid consumption at your off-peak rate. Adding a battery changes the calculus: it stores midday surplus and discharges during expensive peak hours, often adding $300–$800/yr in extra savings depending on the rate spread.

What is a good TOU rate spread for a battery?

A peak-to-off-peak ratio above 2.5× typically makes batteries economically attractive. California PG&E EV2-A (up to 4× spread), Arizona APS Saver Choice Plus, and Texas Oncor TOU plans all show strong battery economics. Ratios below 1.5× rarely justify a battery on rate arbitrage alone.

What is an export credit rate?

Under net billing or many TOU tariffs, utilities credit exported solar at a rate lower than what you pay. California NEM 3.0 exports at avoided-cost rates (~$0.05–$0.08/kWh) vs retail rates of $0.30+. This is why self-consumption and batteries are so valuable in California.

What simple steps save money on TOU without a battery?

Shift your biggest loads to off-peak hours: EV charging overnight or at midday, laundry and dishwasher on timers, pre-cooling your home before 4 pm. These behavioral changes can recover $100–$300/yr in peak charges with zero capital investment.

Or browse all calculators, find rebates in the Incentive Finder, or read our solar guides.