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The Power of Smart Home Technology and Rooftop Solar

The words "smart home technology and solar panels" on a blue background showing a smart thermostat.
UpdatedAugust 1, 2024
AuthorHeadshot of Andrew Blok.Andrew BlokWriter and EditorEditorCory O'Brien HeadshotCory O'BrienSenior Director - Growth Marketing
In this article
01.
What is a Smart Home?
02.
The Benefits of Smart Home Technology
03.
Smart Home Costs
04.
How Smart Homes and Solar Panels Work Together
05.
Final Thoughts
06.
FAQs

When you have rooftop solar panels, the solar electricity that you use offsets what you’d typically buy from your utility. The more utility electricity you offset, the more you can save.

Smart home technologies—from smart thermostats to smart plugs to smart lights—can help your solar energy go farther and offset even more of your utility costs. What’s more, solar and smart devices can be a winning combination for home energy control, security, and long-term savings.

In this guide, we break down how combining smart home elements with solar panel installations can unlock convenient, efficient, and low-cost electricity in every corner of your home.

See how much you can save with home energy changes

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My electric bill is $290/mo

What is a Smart Home?

A smart home is any home with automated or remote-controlled appliances used for everyday life. Made up of interconnected devices, smart home systems can incorporate app-based control of a house’s lighting, heating, cooling, access, or security.

Smart home devices

As the variety of smart devices continues to grow, today’s homes are becoming increasingly sophisticated. While comprehensive smart technology can be directly incorporated in new buildings, smart home devices can also be installed one by one in existing homes.

  • Smart thermostats communicate with a home’s HVAC system and connected apps to automate and schedule home heating and cooling.
  • Smart access and security systems keep your property safe with digital keys, garage door openers, doorbells, cameras, and more.
  • Smart plugs let you schedule and remotely control power to home devices. They can be built into the wall or added to existing power outlets.
  • Other smart appliances and gadgets include speakers, vacuums, refrigerators, air conditioners, water heaters, dishwashers, laundry systems, pet feeders, and more.

Beyond energy consumption, smart home technologies like smart irrigation controllers can conserve water while leak detectors and freeze prevention systems can stop a costly disaster early.

The Benefits of Smart Home Technology

Smart appliances and devices can unlock three key benefits: energy savings, convenience, and financial incentives.

Energy savings

To the extent smart home technology gives you insight into your energy consumption, it can help identify overconsumption, make changes, and lower your monthly energy bills.

Let’s say that you are on your way to work and realize that you forgot to turn off the lights in your bedroom. If your lights are scheduled to turn off at 8:30 AM on weekdays, this will be no concern. Even without automation, you could also turn your smart lights off remotely (after arriving safely at work) to save some energy and money.

Convenience

Smart devices let you “work smart, not hard,” in managing your home’s energy efficiency. While it is possible to manually toggle lights, your AC, and other appliances around your schedule and grid electricity rates, smart systems make it easier to automate your home’s essential operations.

It may be possible to set your air conditioning, morning coffee, and EV charging to run when energy is cheapest (or maybe free from your solar panels) in a few taps of your smartphone.

Financial incentives

Depending on where you live, smart home devices may enable you to sign up for energy conservation programs that utilize their remote control capabilities. Even if such programs aren’t available, you could qualify for other incentives. Here’s how the most common programs work.

  1. Demand response programs. Demand response programs incentivize homeowners to balance local energy supply and demand by reducing their energy demand or sharing energy with the grid. Smart devices let companies, called aggregators, switch them off remotely at times of high demand (with the device’s owner’s permission, of course), in return for some sort of compensation.
  2. Product rebates. Smart technology rebates are sometimes offered by the manufacturer, your utility, or your city or state. Rebate values range by provider and category, with incentives commonly ranging from $20 to $2,000 and beyond.
  3. Tax credits. Several smart technologies, like HVAC systems and water heaters, that meet certain efficiency standards can qualify for the nationally available Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit. When installing a smart heat pump system, you may also qualify for an additional federal tax credit worth up to $2,000.

Smart Home Costs

The total costs of smart home systems depend on the number of integrated devices, your property’s size, and individual purchasing circumstances. You can start small with a few smart plugs (about $10 each) or a smart thermostat (can be bought for under $100). If you’re upgrading your water heater you can spend hundreds of dollars. So while there is a large range of potential project expenses, complete smart home upgrades for temperature control, lighting, and select major appliances can cost between $2,000 and $9,000.

Common smart home devices can range in cost depending on their features and demand.

Average costs for select smart home devices

Device Cost
Smart Plug $6-25
Smart thermostat $80-250
Smart light bulbs $6-10
Smart locks $120-200
Smart speakers $50-250
Smart water heater $1600-3000

See how much you can save with home energy changes

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Step 02
My electric bill is $290/mo

How Smart Homes and Solar Panels Work Together

By generating renewable energy on-site, solar panels for homes can maximize the benefits of smart technology and minimize the ongoing costs and carbon emissions associated with your electricity consumption. For easy integration, solar systems can be installed with a smart meter, energy management system, and optional battery storage.

Smart meters and solar energy savings

While millions of traditional electric meters still operate in the US today, about 3 in every 4 grid-connected homes have a “smart” meter installed. Connected to advanced metering infrastructure, these devices enable two-way communication between your home and the electric utility.

Smart meters allow you and your energy utility to monitor the electricity you consume and share with the grid in real-time. With this, utilities can more accurately forecast grid power supplies and introduce time-of-use (TOU) rates, in which the price of electricity fluctuates with the time of day.
Smart meters come standard in nearly every new solar project and, while programs vary across the country, they can usually be leveraged to participate in demand response programs and maximize your net energy metering credits.

Home energy management systems

Like a smart meter, a home energy management system processes and controls the electricity information coming to and from your property. Available in many different capacities, a home energy management system may replace or connect to your electric panel and can generally be controlled online or with a mobile app.

A few essential home energy management system functions include:

  • Detailed energy consumption monitoring with appliance-by-appliance usage
  • Automation that uses real-time data to maximize energy efficiency or cost savings
  • Easy integration with solar panels and battery storage systems

When you go solar with Palmetto, you can monitor your renewable energy production, optimize your home electricity consumption, and track your solar savings all within the Palmetto App.

Solar battery storage

No single device is poised to redefine the future of home energy quite like battery storage. By letting you store power for later, batteries let you stretch your solar savings farther. Newer batteries may work with your local utility rate to use their stored energy in a way that saves you the most money.

Across the US, many emerging utility programs compensate solar battery owners for sharing stored electricity during scheduled or spontaneous events of increased local energy demand. Locally available in select states, a few examples include California’s Self-Generation Incentive Program and New England’s ConnectedSolutions program.

By tapping into dispersed customer resources, these programs allow electric utilities to create a virtual power plant without building additional energy infrastructure.

Final Thoughts

In short, intelligent systems allow your home to operate efficiently, and solar energy can help maximize your investment in smart home technology. By automating parts of your home and going solar, you can power your property in the greenest, cheapest, most convenient way possible.

If you are interested in how solar could help you save money on energy at home, reach out to a solar advisor today. You can estimate your savings with Palmetto’s solar savings estimator at any time. 

FAQs

Can smart home devices save me money?

Yes, smart home devices can save money through energy-efficient operation, load shifting, automatic shut-offs, and other product features. Although smart upgrades usually cost more than non-smart alternatives, efficient devices may qualify for financial incentives and lead to long-term energy savings.

What is demand response?

The International Energy Association (IEA) defines demand response programs as those that encourage “customers to shift electricity demand to times when electricity is more plentiful or other demand is lower, typically through prices or monetary incentives.” In other words, these programs allow homeowners to financially benefit from efforts to help balance local grid energy supply and demand.

How do solar panels and smart devices work together?

Smart thermostats, energy management systems, and other Internet-of-things devices can work seamlessly with solar panels to stretch our solar energy farther.

See what home electrification can do for you:

My electric bill is $290/mo

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only. Palmetto does not provide tax, legal, or accounting advice. Please consult your own tax, legal, and accounting advisors.

About the AuthorHeadshot of Andrew Blok.Andrew BlokWriter and Editor

Andrew has worked as a journalist and writer for four years, over half of those dedicated to covering solar. He currently lives in Tucson, AZ, where you might run into him walking his dog and birding while dodging the heat. He has degrees in English education and journalism.

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