Skip to main content
Annual savings (estimate) Bill savings
₹16607.0 208%
Annual savings (estimate) ₹16607.0
Get full estimate Plan your solar | Price & savings
Bill savings 208%
Based on: 15 kWh/day usage · 5 kW solar · 5 kWh battery · typical tariffs

Solar & Battery Savings in Haryana, India Get quotes from local installers

Design solar and battery systems for Haryana using Photonik's professional design platform. Haryana, bordering Delhi, benefits from strong sunshine and the central government's rooftop solar push. With competitive electricity rates and growing awareness, more Haryana homeowners are installing solar panels to lower their energy costs and reduce dependence on the grid.

Solar Energy Savings in Haryana


How Solar Reduces Your Electricity Bills

The calculations below show how your electricity bills change with solar.


What drives your savings in Haryana

Haryana receives good solar irradiance of 5–5.5 kWh/m²/day, with the southern and western districts performing better than the NCR-adjacent areas. Residential tariffs follow slab rates that rise with consumption, making solar particularly cost-effective for households using 300+ units per month. Net metering is available through UHBVN and DHBVN, and the PM Surya Ghar scheme provides central subsidy support. Occasional power cuts in rural areas add value to battery-paired systems.

Your usage & system size Haryana


Energy usage & tariffs

With electricity costs rising across Haryana, typical households using around 8 kWh daily stand to benefit significantly from switching to solar power. Average daily consumption sits at around 8 kWh for most Haryana homes, with energy efficient properties typically using substantially less.

Simple changes like sealing draughts, upgrading to LED lighting, and setting hot water timers often cost far less than extra solar panels and deliver immediate bill savings.

5 kWh 100 kWh
/kWh
/kWh
%

lightbulb Note: These are simplified estimates. For detailed tariff inputs and advanced calculations, use the full Photonik app.

Representative flat export rate (feed-in tariff). What you earn per kWh of surplus solar exported to the grid. Your actual rate depends on your provider, plan, and time of day.

See how export rates work →

Estimated at 75% of the retail grid rate. A battery lets you store daytime solar and export during expensive peak hours, so each exported kWh is typically worth more than a flat feed-in tariff. Real returns depend on your time-of-use tariff and battery efficiency.

See how export rates work →


Solar system size

A 2.1kW solar system would typically cover your average daily electricity consumption. In Haryana, sizing between 3.2kW and 4.2kW gives a good balance between covering your usage and getting the best return on investment.

In Haryana, a 3.2 kW installation produces around 14.0 kWh per day on average, though output ranges from 3.59 kWh/kW/day during December to 4.85 kWh/kW/day in April.

1 kW 20 kW

lightbulb

A 5 kW system in Haryana can generate approximately 7984.0 kWh annually based on local sun conditions.


Battery storage

The 50% self-use figure reflects how much solar generation aligns with when you actually use power — shifting more usage to daylight hours can improve this without adding panels. Adding a 10 kWh battery increases energy independence to approximately 99% annually, reducing grid reliance to 1%.

The gap between December and April production affects how much work your battery does season to season — the full Photonik tool models this for your specific situation.

0 kWh 30 kWh

lightbulb A 0kWh battery will make you about 0% self sufficient.

The sweet spot for most households is 5 – 13 kWh — larger batteries add independence but with diminishing payback, especially where feed-in tariffs are low.