What “budget” actually means
Budget systems usually pair entry-level or newer-brand panels — names like Seraphim, or the cheaper lines from Jinko and Trina, often under $150 a panel — with a basic string inverter. The hardware does the job on day one. The question is what’s behind it: the brand’s staying power, and the installer’s ability to support you across a 25-year system life.
What a budget solar system costs
The ranges below are for budget equipment installed in a major city in mid-2026, after the federal STC rebate — the upfront discount applied to your panels at the point of sale. They sit roughly 20–30% below the mid-tier benchmark.
| System | Installed price (after rebate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 6.6 kW | $3,500 – $5,000 | the common budget package; sometimes advertised under $4,000 |
| 10 kW | $5,500 – $7,500 | larger array, entry-level inverter |
| 13 kW | $7,000 – $9,500 | maximum output on a tight budget |
Because so much of an install is fixed cost, the per-watt price keeps falling as the system grows — which is why a big budget array can look strikingly cheap per watt. Budget solar often comes in around $0.60–$0.80 per watt installed after the rebate. The headline “from $3,999” deals you see advertised are almost always a 6.6 kW budget system in a sunny postcode, where the STC rebate is largest.
Where the savings actually come from
This is the whole game. A budget price is discounted from one of two places, and they carry very different risk.
Cheap hardware. Newer brands competing hard on price can be a defensible bet. There’s little evidence the panels underperform in the short term, and entry-level modules from a large manufacturer are usually fine. The real risk is longevity: a long warranty is only worth as much as the company still being here in year twelve. The Australian market has seen cheap brands arrive and quietly vanish once warranty claims started.
Cheap installation. This is the harder one to defend. If two installers quote the same hardware at very different prices, the gap is coming out of the installer’s margin — and a thin margin means less capacity to come back and fix a fault later. A system without a contactable installer is one whose warranties are effectively unenforceable. A low quote from an unfamiliar installer is a stronger red flag than a low quote on hardware.
Who a budget solar system suits — and who it doesn't
Budget can make sense if you’re price-sensitive, comfortable accepting some brand-longevity risk, and buying from an installer with a genuine track record — a long trading history, real reviews, a contactable office. It can also suit shorter-term owners who won’t be in the home for the full warranty period anyway.
It’s a poor fit if you want the reassurance of a brand that’s certain to honour a year-15 claim, or the quote is cheap because the installer is unknown and the margin is paper-thin. In that case you’re not saving money — you’re deferring a cost.
The one rule that matters: when a quote sits well below the mid-tier ranges, find out which lever has been pulled before you sign. Cheap hardware from a known installer is a calculated risk. A cheap install from an unknown one is usually just risk.
Figures are mid-2026, installed in a major city, after the federal STC rebate. The STC deeming period is five years in 2026 and steps down by one year every January until the scheme ends in 2030, so the rebate shrinks a little each year. Prices vary by state, solar zone and installer.