Solar & energy in Brisbane
Queensland has Australia's highest solar penetration (40%+ of homes). Excellent sun year-round. Payback 3-5 years.
Key facts
- RegionQueensland
- CountryAustralia
- CityBrisbane
- Average rateR0.28/kWh
- Peak rate (TOU)R0.45/kWh
- Off-peak rate (TOU)R0.12/kWh
- Peak sun hours5.2 hrs/day
- Net metering policyFeed-in tariff (~$0.06-0.12/kWh)
- NM qualityFair
- Solar friendliness rating★★★★★/5
Available incentives
- STCs
Net metering quality
Quality of net metering policy (higher = better for solar economics):
Fair — Feed-in tariff (~$0.06-0.12/kWh)
What this means
Fair net metering policies pay less than retail for exports. Consider self-consumption or a battery.
Example: 900 kWh/month household in Brisbane
At 5.2 peak sun hours and a 400W panel, you'd need approximately 16 panels (6.4 kW system) to cover your usage. That produces ~10,447 kWh/year, saving about R2,925/year at the 0.28/kWh local rate.
Run the full calculatorGoing solar in Brisbane
Brisbane, in Queensland, Australia, has 5.2 average peak sun hours per day — excellent for solar. The local electricity rate is R0.28/kWh, below the Australia average.
Net metering in Brisbane is rated fair. Feed-in tariff (~$0.06-0.12/kWh). This significantly affects solar payback: with excellent net metering, every excess kWh you produce is credited at full retail value; with poor net metering, exports may be worth only 10-30% of retail, making battery storage much more attractive.
Available incentives include: STCs. These can substantially reduce the upfront cost of solar and battery installations. Note: the US federal solar tax credit expired December 31, 2025. State and local incentives still vary by region. South African taxpayers can claim accelerated depreciation under SARS section 12B.
Next steps
Use the Solar Panel Sizing Calculator with 5.2 peak sun hours to find out exactly how many panels you need. Then check the Solar Savings Calculator for a 25-year projection using the local R0.28/kWh rate. If net metering is poor in Brisbane, also run the Battery ROI Calculator — batteries may be essential rather than optional.