PlugSolar by AVALIX

Money · 8 min read

How much can you save with plug-in solar in Ireland?

Irish electricity is among Europe's most expensive at ~€0.36/kWh, which makes plug-in solar unusually profitable. We break down the maths: yield, self-consumption, payback, and 10/25-year net returns for every PlugSolar kit.

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Plug-in solar in Ireland is profitable for one very simple reason: Irish electricity is among the most expensive in the European Union. At a typical retail rate of €0.36 per kWh, every kilowatt-hour your kit produces and you actually use is worth almost double what the same kWh is worth to a German household.

That alone shifts plug-in solar from “nice idea” into one of the highest-return low-risk investments most Irish households will ever make. Here’s the maths.

The core numbers that drive your savings

1. Annual yield (kWh)

For a vertical balcony mount in Ireland, expect roughly 0.95 kWh per W of inverter capacity per year. That’s for the inverter, not the panel — because the inverter clips peak output to 800 W. Orientation matters:

  • South: 100% of nominal yield (≈ 760 kWh/year for an 800 W inverter).
  • East / West: ≈ 82% (≈ 620 kWh/year).
  • North / Shaded: ≈ 58% (≈ 440 kWh/year).

2. Self-consumption %

You only save money on the kWh you actually usein real time (Ireland’s feed-in tariffs for sub-800 W systems are negligible). A typical household self-consumes around55% of generated energy in normal use, rising toward 65% for homes with stronger daytime demand.

This is one of the biggest variables in your ROI. The more solar you consume live, the faster payback becomes.

3. Electricity rate (€/kWh)

Ireland averages €0.36/kWh in 2026, with some suppliers above €0.42 on standing tariffs. Each kWh you generate and use is worth that full rate.

4. Up-front kit price

The two current starter kits are €799 (AVALIX FlexPower)and €999 (AVALIX FixPower). Everything is included — panels, microinverter, cable, and mount.

What this looks like per kit

Putting the numbers together for a south-facing mount in Ireland:

KitPriceGross yieldSaves / yrPayback
AVALIX FlexPower€799760 kWh€150–€2502.5–3.0 yr
AVALIX FixPower€999850 kWh€200–€2503.0–3.4 yr

Ranges span conservative (€0.36/kWh, typical €150/mo household, ~55% self-consumption) to best case(€0.50/kWh standing tariff, high-consumption household, ~65% self-consumption). For your specific situation, run the live calculator.

Lifetime returns

PlugSolar modules carry a 30-year output guarantee (with linear degradation to ~87% capacity at year 25). The microinverter typically lasts 12–15 years. Even pricing in one inverter replacement, the 25-year economics remain strong:

  • AVALIX FlexPower: long-run returns are typically positive with the strongest outcomes on south-facing installs and higher retail tariffs.
  • AVALIX FixPower: higher annual gross yield can improve total long-term value where orientation and daytime usage are favorable.

And those numbers assume electricity prices stay flat. Every historical trend says they won’t.

When does plug-in solar not pay back?

Three honest cases where the maths gets tighter:

  1. North-facing only. A north-facing kit yields ~58% of nominal output. Payback can stretch compared with south-facing installs. Still positive in many cases, just less dramatic.
  2. You’re away most of the day. Solar peaks at midday. If nobody’s home and there’s nothing running, effective self-consumption drops and payback takes longer.
  3. You move every 12 months.Re-installation is quick, but you’ll lose a few weeks of yield each move. Over a 5-year horizon this is still a clear win — over 18 months, marginal.

Why Irish electricity prices make this so attractive

For comparison, the same hardware in Germany pays back in 2.5–4 years because German electricity is cheaper (~€0.28/kWh). In Ireland, the same kWh saved is worth roughly 30% more. The consequence: PlugSolar expects payback periods in Ireland to be the fastest in the EU for residential solar of any kind.

Once Ireland legalises plug-in solar, this stops being theoretical.

Questions about this topic

Is plug-in solar actually worth it in Ireland?

Yes. At Irish electricity rates of €0.36–€0.50/kWh, current starter kits typically pay back in about 2.5–3.4 years depending on orientation, tariff, and usage profile.

Do I get paid for surplus solar exported to the grid?

For sub-800 W plug-in solar, no meaningful feed-in tariff exists. The economic model is built on self-consumption — using the solar power you generate yourself rather than buying it from the grid.

How much electricity does an 800 W inverter kit produce in Ireland?

Typical gross output is around 760 kWh/year south-facing, ≈ 620 kWh east/west, and ≈ 440 kWh north or heavily shaded. FixPower can deliver higher gross output due to its panel configuration.

Will electricity prices stay this high?

Historically Irish residential electricity has trended upwards faster than inflation. Even if prices stayed flat for 25 years, PlugSolar pays back many times over. If prices keep climbing, the returns scale with them.

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