Home Battery Calculator
Size your home battery system and estimate costs including the 30% federal tax credit (IRA 2022, valid through 2032).
Home Battery System Comparison (2026 Pricing)
Equipment cost only — installation adds $3,000-$6,000
| System | Capacity | Power Output | Cost | After 30% ITC | Warranty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh | 11.5 kW | $8,500 | $5,950 | 10 years |
| Enphase IQ 5P | 5 kWh | 3.84 kW | $5,000 | $3,500 | 15 years |
| LG RESU Prime | 16 kWh | 7 kW | $11,000 | $7,700 | 10 years |
| Generac PWRcell | 18 kWh | 9 kW | $12,000 | $8,400 | 10 years |
| Franklin WH aPower2 | 15 kWh | 10 kW | $10,000 | $7,000 | 12 years |
How We Calculate This
This home battery calculator uses established formulas and industry-standard data to provide accurate estimates.
- Enter your specific values into the calculator fields above
- Our algorithm applies the relevant formulas using your inputs
- Results are calculated instantly in your browser — nothing is sent to a server
- Review the detailed breakdown to understand how each factor affects your result
These calculations are estimates based on standard formulas. For critical decisions, always consult a qualified professional.
How to Convert Oven Recipes to Air Fryer
This calculator determines how many home batteries you need based on your energy usage, backup mode, and desired backup duration. It factors in solar recharging if applicable and calculates cost including the 30% federal Investment Tax Credit from the Inflation Reduction Act.
The basic rule:
- Critical loads mode uses ~30-40% of your total daily usage (essentials like fridge, lights, Wi-Fi, medical devices)
- Energy needed = hourly load × desired backup hours, adjusted for 90% usable battery capacity (depth of discharge)
- Batteries needed = energy needed ÷ usable capacity per battery (rounded up)
- Solar offset: solar panels generate ~4-5 hours of peak production per day, reducing net battery demand during daylight outages
The 30% federal tax credit (ITC) applies to standalone battery storage installed through 2032 — you no longer need solar to qualify. Installation costs typically add $3,000-$6,000 beyond equipment costs. Battery prices have dropped 20-30% since 2023 and continue to fall.
When Would You Use This Calculator?
This home battery calculator is designed for anyone who needs quick, reliable estimates without complex spreadsheets or professional consultations.
- When you need a quick estimate before committing to a purchase or project
- When comparing different options or scenarios side by side
- When planning a budget and need to understand potential costs
- When you want to verify a quote or estimate you've received from a professional
- When teaching or learning about the concepts behind these calculations
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Nebraska handle this differently?
Nebraska has its own specific rules, rates, and limits that may differ significantly from federal guidelines or other states. This calculator uses Nebraska-specific data where available. Always verify with a local professional for important decisions.
How many Tesla Powerwalls do I need?
Most homes need 1-3 Powerwalls. One Powerwall (13.5 kWh) can back up critical loads for about 12-24 hours. Whole-home backup for an average house (30 kWh/day) requires 2-3 Powerwalls. Homes with electric heating, EV charging, or pools may need 3-4. Adding solar significantly extends backup duration.
What does the 30% federal tax credit cover?
The Inflation Reduction Act's 30% Investment Tax Credit (ITC) covers the full cost of home battery storage including equipment and installation through 2032. Standalone batteries now qualify — no solar required. On a $15,000 battery system, you save $4,500 on your federal taxes. The credit is non-refundable but can be carried forward.
How long do home batteries last?
Most modern home batteries are warrantied for 10-15 years or a specific number of cycles (typically 4,000-6,000 cycles). Real-world lifespan is often 15-20 years. Tesla Powerwall has a 10-year warranty. Degradation averages 2-3% capacity loss per year. After warranty, batteries typically still hold 70-80% of original capacity.
Can batteries power my whole house during an outage?
Yes, but it requires more batteries and may be expensive. A whole-home backup for a typical house needs 40-60 kWh of storage ($25,000-$40,000 before tax credit). Most homeowners opt for critical loads backup — powering essentials like the fridge, lights, Wi-Fi router, medical devices, and a few outlets — which requires 1-2 batteries.
Is a home battery worth it without solar?
It depends on your goals. Without solar, batteries still provide backup power during outages and can save money through time-of-use rate arbitrage (charging when electricity is cheap, using stored power during peak hours). In areas with frequent outages or high peak rates, standalone batteries can pay for themselves in 8-12 years.
How do home batteries compare to generators?
Batteries are silent, require no fuel, produce no emissions, and start instantly. Generators are cheaper upfront ($3,000-$8,000 for whole-home) but need fuel, maintenance, and produce noise/fumes. Batteries shine for short to medium outages (1-3 days). Generators win for extended outages (weeks). Many homeowners install both for maximum resilience.