What Backup Power Really Costs in South Africa (2026)
Updated 2026-07-11
Backup power prices span an enormous range — from a few thousand rand for a portable generator to R280,000+ for a full solar-and-battery system. Here's what South African homes actually pay in 2026, and what drives the number.
Typical installed prices (2026)
| System | Typical installed range |
|---|---|
| Inverter + battery backup (basic to whole-home) | R25,000 – R120,000 |
| Solar power system (5kW hybrid, panels + battery) | R90,000 – R280,000 |
| Generator (portable to standby) | R8,000 – R70,000 |
These are indicative installed estimates — the final figure depends on system size, battery chemistry, brand and how complex the installation is. Always get a site assessment quote.
What drives the price
- Battery capacity (kWh). Batteries are the single biggest cost in most inverter and solar systems. A 5 kWh lithium battery is a large chunk of the total; doubling your storage roughly doubles the battery spend.
- Inverter size (kW). Bigger inverters cost more, and higher-quality brands with proper local support and warranties command a premium worth paying.
- Panels (solar only). Panel prices have fallen, but you still pay for the number of panels, mounting, and roof work.
- Installation complexity. A simple plug-in inverter is cheap to fit; tying a system into your DB board, adding an automatic changeover, or working on a difficult roof adds labour and materials.
- Battery chemistry. Lithium (LiFePO4) costs more upfront than lead-acid but lasts far longer per rand over its life — see our buyer's guide.
The extras that catch people out
- The DB-board tie-in and Certificate of Compliance (CoC). A safe, legal installation needs a registered electrician and a CoC — budget for it, and never accept a system wired in without one.
- Surge protection and cabling. Quality cabling, breakers and surge protection are not optional.
- Battery expansion later. Buying a system you can add batteries to costs a little more now but saves a full replacement later.
- Mounting and roof work for solar, especially on tile or difficult roofs.
- Delivery and call-out fees outside the major metros.
Ways to spend wisely
- Size for your real essentials, not the whole house — our sizing guide shows how.
- Start with an inverter-battery system and add solar later if cash flow is tight; a good installer will design for that.
- Compare at least three written quotes — for the same spec, prices vary a lot.
- Check the warranty and local spares before chasing the lowest price; a cheap inverter with no local support is a false economy.
Budgeting rule of thumb
For a comfortable inverter-and-battery system that keeps a family's essentials running through load-shedding, plan for roughly R60,000–R90,000 installed, including the electrical work and CoC. A full hybrid solar system that also cuts your bill starts around R90,000 and rises with panels and storage. Whatever the number, insist on a site assessment before you sign.