From 1 May 2026, changes to Australia’s federal battery rebate will affect how much support households and businesses receive when installing battery storage. While the rebate will continue, the way its value is calculated means that identical battery systems can receive different levels of support depending on when they are installed and how large they are.
This article explains why battery rebates are expected to decline after May 2026, how those changes work in practice, and what that means for people deciding whether to install a battery before or after the change.
TL;DR
- Battery rebates are expected to decline after 1 May 2026, but they are not ending.
- The same battery installed later can receive less federal support due to changes in how the rebate is calculated.
- Both the installation date and battery size influence how much rebate is available.
- Installing earlier may result in a higher federal discount for the same system.
- Installing later can still make sense as battery prices continue to fall.
Why battery rebate values change over time
The federal battery rebate is delivered through Small-scale Technology Certificates under the Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme. The number of certificates a battery can create is not fixed forever. It is designed to decline as battery prices fall and as battery adoption increases.
Two factors determine how much support a battery receives:
- The STC factor in effect at the time of installation.
- The usable capacity of the battery system.
From May 2026, both of these factors change in a way that generally reduces the rebate value for later installations.
What changes after 1 May 2026?
After 1 May 2026, the federal battery rebate changes in two key ways.
First, the STC factor used to calculate the rebate is expected to decline more frequently. Instead of stepping down over longer intervals, the factor reduces every six months. This means the same battery installed later can generate fewer certificates than if it were installed earlier.
Second, the rebate begins to taper by battery size. Higher levels of support apply to the first portion of usable capacity, while additional capacity above key thresholds receives reduced support.
Together, these changes mean that rebate values generally trend downward over time, even if battery prices remain stable.
Before and after May 2026: what changes in practice
To understand how this affects real installations, it helps to think in terms of timing rather than exact dollar figures.
A household that installs a battery before May 2026 benefits from:
- A higher STC factor compared to later periods.
- Support that applies more evenly across the system size.
- Greater certainty around the level of federal assistance available.
A household that installs a similar battery after May 2026 may experience:
- A lower STC factor at the time of installation.
- Reduced support on capacity above key thresholds.
- A smaller overall federal discount for the same system.
The battery itself may be identical, but the rebate outcome can be different purely due to timing and system size.
Why exact dollar figures are hard to predict
It is common to see battery rebates described using dollar-per-kilowatt-hour estimates. In reality, the federal battery rebate does not have a fixed dollar value.
The final discount depends on:
- The STC factor in effect on the installation date.
- The market price of STCs at that time.
- The usable capacity of the battery and how it is treated under the size taper.
Because STC prices fluctuate and the factor declines over time, fixed dollar estimates can quickly become inaccurate. This is why timing and system design matter more than headline figures.
Does this mean batteries are not worth installing after 2026?
No. Installing a battery after May 2026 can still make financial sense for many households and businesses. Battery prices are expected to continue falling, which can offset some of the reduction in rebate support.
The key difference is that the rebate becomes less generous over time, which shifts more of the value calculation toward:
- Electricity bill savings.
- Self-consumption of rooftop solar.
- Backup power needs.
- Participation in programs such as Virtual Power Plants, where available.
For some households, installing earlier may result in a higher rebate. For others, waiting may still make sense depending on energy usage patterns and budget.
What this means for NSW households
In New South Wales, federal rebate changes affect how much support is available when combined with NSW-specific battery incentives. Many NSW households consider federal certificates alongside programs such as the Peak Demand Reduction Scheme, as well as optional Virtual Power Plant arrangements.
As federal support declines, the relative importance of state incentives and correct system sizing increases. This makes NSW-specific advice particularly important when planning a battery installation.
A detailed explanation of how federal and NSW incentives interact is available in the NSW battery rebates guide.
Key points to consider before deciding when to install
- Battery rebates generally decline over time by design.
- From May 2026, both timing and battery size influence rebate value more strongly.
- Installing earlier can result in higher federal support for the same system.
- Later installations may still be viable as battery prices continue to fall.
- State incentives and usage patterns play a growing role in overall value.
Next steps
If you are considering a battery, the next step is to compare how installation timing and system size affect your specific situation. Reviewing federal rebate rules alongside state incentives can help you decide whether installing before or after May 2026 makes sense for your household.
For the full federal policy overview and timelines, refer to the national battery rebates guide. For NSW-specific eligibility and stacking pathways, see the NSW battery rebates guide, or contact Solar Galaxy Today for a free consultation and quote












