For years, bidirectional charging in Australia felt like an exclusive club. If you didn’t own a Nissan LEAF or a Mitsubishi Outlander (the pioneers of the older “CHAdeMO” plug), the idea of using your car to power your home was a distant “coming soon” promise.
As of this month, that wait is officially over.
The industry has successfully pivoted to CCS2, the charging standard found on nearly 95% of new electric vehicles on Australian roads today. Whether you drive a Tesla, a BYD, a Kia, or a Hyundai, the hardware has finally caught up to your driveway. We’ve moved past the era of small-scale trials and “lab-only” EV charger demonstrations. We are now in the era of market-ready, CEC-approved solutions that turn your most expensive purchase into your home’s most valuable energy asset.
This is a fundamental shift in how we view the Australian grid. This year, your car is no longer just a way to get from A to B. It is now a battery on wheels capable of slashing your bills and keeping your lights on when the grid goes dark.
The 2026 hardware leaderboard
We’ve moved past the “coming soon” posters. As of April 2026, there are now four distinct, CEC-approved pathways for Australian homeowners to turn their CCS2-equipped vehicles into home batteries.
Each of these units has a different strategic “fit” depending on your current home setup:
The value leader: StarCharge Halo (7.4 kW)
Freshly listed on March 31, 2026, this is the unit that effectively broke the “price barrier.” Priced at approximately $5,990 (inc. GST), it is nearly 40% cheaper than the first-generation units that hit the market last year. It’s a compact DC callbox designed specifically for the suburban home, offering a high-efficiency connection that won’t require a massive switchboard overhaul.
The integrated power house: Sigenergy SigenStor
If you’re doing a full home electrification project, this is the most efficient choice. The 12.5kW DC modules are designed to stack directly into a SigenStor battery tower. Because it’s a DC-coupled system, it avoids the conversion losses of typical AC chargers, making it one of the most efficient ways to move energy between your roof and your wheels.
The local here: RedEarth Boomerang
Proudly designed and manufactured in Brisbane, the Boomerang (priced around $9,990) is built for the Australian climate. It’s currently rolling out to pre-order customers this month and is a favourite for those who want local support and a “Black Start” feature, meaning it can jumpstart your home’s power even during a total grid blackout.
The universal remote: V2Grid Numbat
If your garage has a mix of vehicles, the Numbat is your best bet. It remains the only widely available unit in Australia supporting both standards in a single, CEC-approved standalone wallbox.
| Feature | StarCharge Halo | SigenStor DC | RedEarth Boomerang |
| Max Discharge | 7.4 kW | 12.5 / 25 kW | 11.0 kW |
| Est. Hardware Cost | $5,990 | $4,850 (+ Inverter) | $9,990 |
| Plug Type | CCS2 | CCS2 | CCS2 |
| Black Start? | No | Yes | Yes |
How it actually works
For years, EVs and chargers used “dumb” communication: the charger just sent power until the car said “full.” ISO 15118-20 is the latest global standard that introduces a sophisticated “handshake” specifically for bidirectional energy flow.
- The benefit: It lets your car tell the charger exactly how much energy it can spare and when you need the car ready for your morning commute.
- The security: It uses encrypted digital certifications (think of it like “FaceID” for your car) to authorise the discharge, ensuring that your battery is only used by your house, for your benefit.
AS/NZS 4777.2:2020 Amd 2: The Australian guardrail
While ISO 15118-20 handles the car-to-charger talk, Amendment 2 (which became mandatory in late 2025) handles the charger-to-grid talk.
This Australian standard officially categorises bidirectional chargers as “Inverter Energy Systems.: It tells your network provider that your car is a safe, stable source of power that won’t destabilise the local neighbourhood grid.
Before this amendment, trying to connect a bidirectional charger was a regulatory nightmare. Now, it’s a standard application process, identical to installing solar panels or a home battery.
If you are shopping for a charger today, look for these two codes in the spec sheet. If it doesn’t support ISO 15118-20, it’s a one-way street. If it’s not AS/NZS 4777.2.2020 And 2 compliant, your energy provider simply won’t let you plug it into the grid.
The “energy freedom” math
This is where the math of energy independence moves from theory to an undeniable financial strategy. To understand why CCS2 bidirectional charging is the strategic play for 2026, we have to look at the redundancy of the “second battery.” For years, the standard advice was to bolt a stationary battery to your garage wall, but if you have an EV in the driveway, that $15,000 investment increasingly looks like buying a spare tyre when you already have a full set.
The average flagship home battery today offers about 13.5kWh of storage, enough to get most Australian homes through a standard evening. By comparison, the EV sitting in your garage is likely carrying between 60kWh and 82kWh. In simple terms, your car is effectively five to six home batteries on wheels. Spending $6,000 on a bidirectional charger to unlock 75 kWh of mobile storage is, quite simply, a more efficient use of capital than spending double that for a fraction of the capacity on your wall.
This changes your “Solar Soak” ROI. With solar feed-in tariffs (FiTs) now hovering as low as 5c-8c/kWh, selling your excess power back to the grid is no longer a viable strategy. Meanwhile, peak evening rates in many states have climbed toward 50c/kWh.
The V2H strategy allows you to “capture” that 8c solar in your car during the day and “spend” it at home during the 6 PM peak. By avoiding that 42c per-unit markup, a household using just 10kWh of car power an evening can save roughly $1,500 a year, effectively paying for the charger in under four years.
Beyond the daily savings, there is the lifeboat factor. While a standard wall battery might keep your fridge and lights humming for a single night during a blackout, a bidirectional CCS2 connection can sustain a modern, energy-efficient home for 3-5 days. In an era of increasingly volatile weather and grid instability, this isn’t just about saving money, but about a strategy insurance policy that ensures your home remains a sanctuary when the neighbourhood goes dark.
The human-centred reality check
The tech is ready, and the math is undeniable, but moving from a buyer to an operator requires navigating a few remaining industry hurdles. Look for friction points, and in 2026, the friction is in the fine print of your warranty and the specific rules of your local energy network.
Currently, we are in a transition period for manufacturer confidence. While cards like the Ford-F150 Lightning and Kia EV9 were built from the ground up with V2H in mind, and explicitly back it in their Australian warranties, other giants like Tesla and BYD are still in the validation phase.
Even though a Model Y or an Atto 3 has the physical hardware to discharge power, using a third-party bidirectional charger could technically trigger a non-standard use clause in some older service agreements. The good news is that most major brands are expected to ship over-the-air (OTA) software updates by late 2026 that officially authorise this use, but as a peer-to-peer tip: always pull your latest warranty PDF before you flip the switch.
Then there is the network handshake. In 2026, you can’t just plug in and start feeding the grid. You need permission from your local distributor, such as Ausgrid, SA Power Networks, or Essential Energy. The breakthrough this month is that these providers have moved away from exclusive trials and into standard, streamlined approvals.
As long as your installer uses a CEC-listed charger and complies with the AS/NZS 4777.2:2020 standard, the application is now no more complicated than a standard solar install. In fact, many networks are now encouraging “Dynamic Connections,” where they might even pay you a premium to discharge your car’s battery during an unexpected grid peak.
The revolution is here, but it needs a bit of homework.
Our advice is simple: Don’t just buy a charger, but a future-proof connection. Ensure your installer is CEC-accredited and that your chosen hardware is fully compliant with the iso 15118-20 protocol. That is the only way to ensure that the battery on wheels you own today remains a functional part of your home energy strategy for the next decade.
Energy Matters has been in the solar industry since 2005 and has helped over 40,000 Australian households in their journey to energy independence.
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