Most people think of battery storage as something you pair with solar panels. And that’s usually the strongest combination — the battery stores the free energy your panels generate during the day, so you can use it in the evening rather than exporting it at a low rate. The financial case stacks up well.
But what if you don’t have solar? Does a standalone battery still make sense?
The honest answer: sometimes yes, sometimes no. Here’s how to think it through.+

The case for battery storage without solar
Time-of-use tariffs
Electricity isn’t always the same price. Tariffs like Octopus Go and Octopus Flux charge very different rates depending on the time of day — as low as 7–10p per kWh overnight and up to 35–40p during peak evening hours. A battery lets you buy cheap electricity overnight, store it, and use it in the evening instead of buying at the higher rate.
The saving per kWh is roughly 25–30p depending on the tariff and timing. For a household that draws heavily in the evenings — which most do — this can add up to £200–£400 per year. It’s a real saving, but it’s smaller than the saving you’d get from combining a battery with solar generation.
Backup power
Some battery systems offer backup functionality — if the grid goes down, the battery can keep selected circuits running. For most households a power cut is an inconvenience, but for homes with medical equipment, a home office, or a property in an area with unreliable supply, this can be a meaningful benefit. Not all battery systems include backup as standard, so it’s worth checking before committing.
Future-proofing
If you’re planning to add solar panels in the next year or two, installing a compatible battery now isn’t necessarily a bad move — provided the system you choose integrates well with the panels you’ll add later. Some homeowners prefer to stage the investment. The key is making sure the battery and inverter are compatible with the solar setup you’re planning, rather than having to replace components when you add panels.
The honest limitations
Battery storage on its own is a harder financial case than solar plus battery. A typical home battery system costs £3,500–£7,000 installed. At a saving of £300 per year from tariff arbitrage, the payback period is 12–20 years — which is at the limit of what most battery warranties cover.
With solar added to the picture, the maths changes significantly. You’re now storing free generation rather than just shifting when you buy from the grid. Payback periods typically come down to 7–10 years, and the overall saving over the system’s lifetime is considerably higher.
So if your primary goal is financial return, solar plus battery is the stronger case. Battery alone is harder to justify on savings alone unless you’re on a very favourable tariff or have unusually high evening consumption.
What to consider before deciding
A few questions worth thinking through: Do you have a suitable roof for solar? If yes, it’s usually worth considering the full system rather than just the battery. Are you on a time-of-use tariff already, or would you switch to one? The saving from a standalone battery depends entirely on the tariff spread. Is backup power a genuine requirement, or just a nice-to-have?
If you’d like to talk through what would make sense for your home, get in touch. We install solar and battery systems across Bristol and South Gloucestershire and can give you a straight answer on whether the numbers work for your situation.

