What "budget" means in a battery
Budget batteries are the value end of an LFP market where the chemistry is now largely the same across every tier. What you save on is mostly brand maturity, warranty depth, efficiency and local support — not safety. These are typically newer entrants or value lines competing hard on price per kilowatt-hour.
The names that show up at this end:
- GoodWe ESA — frequently the best value per kilowatt-hour in the market, with supply pricing as low as around $331/kWh before install.
- Growatt APX — often the cheapest absolute entry point, with a 10 kWh unit from around $4,500 supply.
- FoxESS, SolarEdge, AlphaESS, Neovolt — established value brands offering 10 kWh storage in the same low band.
What a budget battery costs
Battery-only retrofit prices for a major city in 2026, after the federal Cheaper Home Batteries rebate.
| Battery size | Installed (after rebate) | Cost per kWh |
|---|---|---|
| ~10 kWh | $5,500 – $8,500 | $550 – $850 |
| ~16 kWh | $8,500 – $11,500 | $530 – $720 |
The cheapest hardware — a GoodWe ESA or Growatt APX — can sit below these bands again, especially at larger capacities where the rebate and fixed install costs spread further. As with every tier, the per-kWh cost falls as the battery grows.
What you trade away
Budget pricing is real, but so are the compromises. Four worth weighing:
A shorter track record. Many budget brands are newer to Australia. If a company isn’t here in eight years, a 10-year warranty is just paper — and warranty support is exactly what you’re most likely to need from a battery.
Thinner local support. Premium and mid-tier brands tend to have established Australian offices and installer networks. Budget brands vary widely, and a slow or absent support line turns a small fault into a long outage.
Warranty and longevity terms. Read the retention and throughput figures, not just the headline “10 years.” Lower guaranteed capacity at end-of-warranty, or a lower cycle rating, means less usable energy over the battery’s life.
Installer willingness and VPP eligibility. Some installers won’t fit brands they can’t easily get parts for, and not every budget battery is approved for the virtual power plant programs that can shorten your payback.
Who a budget battery suits — and who it doesn't
A budget battery can be a sound choice if your priority is the lowest upfront cost, you’ve checked the brand is Clean Energy Council-approved and VPP-eligible, and you’re using a reputable installer who’s happy to stand behind the product. The bill savings from shifting your solar into the evening are similar across tiers — so on pure self-consumption, a well-chosen budget battery does the same job.
It’s the wrong choice if you want genuine blackout backup, the longest warranties, or the reassurance of a brand with a long Australian track record — and if a fault years down the line would be a serious headache rather than an inconvenience.
Before you commit at this tier, it’s worth reading Are budget battery systems worth it? alongside this page — the upfront saving and the long-run risk need to be weighed together, not separately.
Figures are mid-2026, after the federal rebate (around $3,400 off a 13.5 kWh battery at current STC prices). The rebate steps down every six months from January 2027, and prices vary by state and installer.