Home Battery Cost in Oklahoma (2026)
Home batteries install for roughly $1,000–$1,300 per kWh of usable capacity. In Oklahoma, whether that spend pays back depends heavily on state net-metering policy — Oklahoma uses No statewide net metering.
Home battery cost by size in Oklahoma
| Battery size | Typical use | Installed cost |
|---|---|---|
| 10 kWh | Essentials backup (fridge, lights, Wi-Fi, a few circuits) | $11,000–$14,000 |
| 13.5 kWh | Powerwall-class — most of a typical home overnight | $13,000–$17,000 |
| 27 kWh | Whole-home backup / two-unit stack for larger homes | $26,000–$34,000 |
Estimates for a professionally installed battery, before incentives. Actual pricing varies by brand, electrical work, permitting, and whether the battery is added with a new solar system or retrofitted. Get 2–3 local quotes.
Does a battery pay off in Oklahoma?
Often yes — because Oklahoma has no statewide net-metering guarantee. Oklahoma allows net metering but utilities aren't required to pay for net exports and may add demand charges, so terms are effectively utility-dependent. When exports earn little (or nothing) beyond what your utility chooses to pay, banking your midday solar in a battery and using it at night is usually worth far more than exporting it at ~14¢/kWh of avoided retail cost. Here a battery is a genuine savings tool, not just backup.
| Net-metering policy | No statewide net metering |
|---|---|
| Retail electricity rate | ~14¢/kWh |
| Battery's main job here | Self-consumption savings + backup power |
2026 reality check: there is no federal tax credit for home batteries bought in 2026 — the 25D residential clean-energy credit that used to cover storage was repealed. Some Oklahoma utilities and state programs still offer storage rebates or performance incentives, so check locally before you sign. Run the numbers on your actual utility bill and export rate first.
See full solar costs & payback for Oklahoma
Solar panel cost in Oklahoma →Oklahoma home battery FAQ
Is a home battery worth it in Oklahoma?
Frequently, yes. Since Oklahoma pays below retail for exports (no statewide net metering), a battery lets you self-consume solar worth the full ~14¢/kWh instead of exporting it for less. That storage arbitrage is where much of the savings comes from, on top of the backup benefit during outages.
How much does a Powerwall cost in Oklahoma?
A Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5 kWh) typically installs for about $13,000–$17,000 in Oklahoma before any incentives — the exact figure depends on your electrical panel, whether it's paired with solar, and how many units you stack. There is no longer a federal tax credit to offset it for purchasers (see below), so compare local installer quotes and any Oklahoma utility storage rebates.
How many kWh of battery do I need in Oklahoma?
For essentials backup (fridge, lights, internet, a few outlets) 10 kWh often covers an evening. To run most of a typical home overnight, plan on 13.5 kWh or more; for whole-home backup including heavy loads like AC or heat pumps, 27 kWh (two units) is common. In Oklahoma, sizing to capture your daily midday solar surplus also maximizes the self-consumption savings.
Is there a tax credit for home batteries in Oklahoma in 2026?
Not a federal one for buyers — the 25D residential clean-energy credit that covered battery storage was repealed and no longer applies to systems purchased in 2026. Some states and utilities still offer storage rebates or performance incentives, so check what's available in Oklahoma through your utility or state energy office before you buy.