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Under the current Solar Billing Plan, the "buy back" rates are low enough that most experts recommend adding a battery to store power for your own use at night rather than selling it back to the grid for pennies. If you'd like to dive deeper, tell me:

If you still have a surplus at your "True-Up" (the end of your 12-month cycle), PG&E pays you for the leftover power.

You can leave the credit on your account for future bills or request a check if the amount exceeds $1. Key Program Details for 2026

To encourage early adoption of NEM 3.0, customers who sign up before April 2028 receive an extra "adder" on top of their export rates for 9 years. In 2026, this is 0.88¢/kWh for standard customers and 3.6¢/kWh for low-income (CARE/FERA) participants.

PG&E ’s "buy back" system—officially known as —allows you to receive a payment if your solar system generates more electricity than you use over a 12-month period. Core Compensation Structure

Systems applied for after April 14, 2023, use "avoided cost" rates. Instead of retail value, you are paid what it would cost PG&E to buy that power elsewhere. This typically averages $0.04 to $0.09 per kWh during the day—a drop of about 75% compared to NEM 2.0. How Buy Back Payments Work