| Typical retail price | $7,260 |
| Out-of-pocket (after rebates) | $4,392 |
| Average annual savings | $2,057 |
| Typical payback | 2.1 years |
Solar in Rose Bay, 2029
Rose Bay 2029 is in New South Wales (Sydney - Eastern Suburbs region), which sits in STC Zone 3 for the federal rebate scheme. Zone 3 is a typical federal rebate band.
On a 6.6 kW system, Rose Bay households claim about $1,368 in federal STC rebate , plus up to $1,500 in NSW-specific programs. That's a combined $2,868 off the invoice for the typical home in this postcode.
Sunlight and generation in 2029
Sitting at roughly 33.9°S, Rose Bay gets an estimated 4.0 peak sun hours a day averaged across the year. On a north-facing 6.6 kW system that works out to roughly 9,722 kWh of generation a year (about 1,473 kWh per kW installed) — before shading and panel orientation are factored in. It's one reason the payback maths below holds up for this part of NSW.
NSW rebate programs that apply in 2029
Peak Demand Reduction Scheme (PDRS) battery incentive
Point-of-sale discount on a new home battery, calculated per usable kWh and applied as Energy Savings Certificate (ESC) value at install. Stacks with the federal Cheaper Home Batteries Program.
NSW VPP / BESS2 sign-on incentive
One-off payment to homeowners who connect an eligible battery to a NSW-registered Virtual Power Plant. Paid in addition to the PDRS battery rebate.
Empowering Homes interest-free battery loan
NSW's previous interest-free battery loan (up to $14,000) closed to new applicants in 2025. Replaced by the federal Cheaper Home Batteries Program + the per-kWh PDRS incentive above.
Full New South Wales rebate breakdown →
How payback works for a Rose Bay household
For an average NSW household with a quarterly electricity bill around $ 480, a 6.6 kW system typically saves about $2,057 per year — combining bill offset (you import less) and feed-in credits (you export excess to the grid). Out-of-pocket cost after rebates is about $ 4,392, putting payback at 2.1 years.
That payback assumes a CEC-accredited tier-1 panel system (Trina, REC, JA Solar or similar) with a Sungrow or Fronius inverter. Budget gear is 15–20% cheaper but the warranty is half as long and the inverter usually needs replacing at year 8–10, so the lifetime numbers are worse.
See your Rose Bay rebate amount
Pre-filled with 2029. Hit submit to start the 30-second check.
How to get matched with a Rose Bay installer
- 30-second eligibility check. Postcode 2029, ownership, bill range, roof type.
- Specialist follow-up within 24–48 hours. Australian, friendly, no high-pressure tactics.
- Match with one CEC-accredited installer who works 2029 and surrounding suburbs.
- Fixed-price quote with every rebate applied at the invoice.
- Install in 4–6 weeks. Single-day job. Rebate already on your invoice.
Common questions about solar in Rose Bay (2029)
What solar rebates can I claim in Rose Bay (2029)?
Rose Bay 2029 is in New South Wales, which means you can claim the federal STC rebate (~$1,368 on a 6.6 kW system), plus NSW-specific programs worth up to about $1,500 more. 2029 sits in STC Zone 3, with a zone rating of 1.382.
How much does solar cost in Rose Bay?
A typical 6.6 kW system in Rose Bay costs about $7,260 retail. After the federal STC rebate ($1,368) and NSW state bonus ($1,500), the typical out-of-pocket is around $4,392.
Do you cover Rose Bay (2029)?
Yes. We have CEC-accredited installer partners covering 2029 and surrounding suburbs in NSW. Run the 30-second eligibility check to confirm a specific installer for your roof type.
How long does payback take in Rose Bay?
Typical payback in Rose Bay is 2.1 years on a 6.6 kW system. Annual savings of about $2,057 on average NSW household electricity costs.
Recent activity: 10 homes in 2029 matched with an installer this week.