Should I Buy More Solar Panels If I Buy a Battery? — Australia’s 2026 Guide 

If you’re thinking about adding battery storage to your solar system, it’s a smart time to ask:  👉 Should I also get more solar panels?  The short answer is: Often, yes — but it depends on your system, usage and goals. Adding panels alongside a battery can increase savings and make the storage investment more effective. At Arise Solar, we help […]

If you’re thinking about adding battery storage to your solar system, it’s a smart time to ask: 

👉 Should I also get more solar panels? 

The short answer is: Often, yes — but it depends on your system, usage and goals. Adding panels alongside a battery can increase savings and make the storage investment more effective. At Arise Solar, we help Australian homeowners balance system size, battery capacity and expected benefits to deliver the best outcome. 

🔋 Why Solar Panels and Batteries Work Better Together 

A solar battery stores excess energy your panels generate during the day so you can use it later — in the evening, on cloudy days or during peak pricing periods. But if your existing solar array doesn’t produce much surplus energy, your battery won’t fill up quickly — and you won’t reap the full financial or lifestyle benefits. 

That’s why in many cases, adding more solar panels when installing a battery makes sense. It increases daytime generation and gives your battery something useful to store. 

📈 When You Should Consider More Panels 

Here are the most common reasons to add panels when adding a battery: 

✅ 1. Your System Rarely Generates Excess Power 

If most of your solar electricity is consumed instantly — leaving little to store — adding more panels increases the daytime surplus your battery can capture. 

For example: 

  • A small 3 kW system might produce enough power for daytime use 
  • But with a battery installed, the system may never generate enough excess to fully charge it 
    Adding panels ensures your battery doesn’t sit under-utilised. 

✅ 2. You Plan to Use More Stored Energy 

If your goal is to power lights, appliances, EV charging or air conditioning after sunset, you’ll want enough battery capacity and enough solar generation to fill it. A larger panel array helps ensure stored energy lasts longer into the evening. 

✅ 3. You Want Faster Payback 

More panels usually mean more solar production, which increases: 
✔ Stored energy for later use 
✔ Reduced grid imports 
✔ Potential feed-in credits for exported power 

A bigger solar battery by itself doesn’t increase production — it just stores what you already produce. More panels increase both storage and generation, helping your system pay for itself faster. 

📉 When You Might Not Need More Panels 

There are situations where expanding your panel array may not add much value: 

❌ You Already Generate Plenty of Solar 

If your current system already produces excess energy every day (common with larger systems like 8–10 kW), adding more panels may have diminishing returns when paired with a battery. 

❌ Your Electricity Use Is Low 

Small households or those that run most loads during daylight may already use most solar power as it’s generated — meaning a battery alone might suffice. 

In these cases, a battery alone could still reduce grid use without needing more panels. 

🧠 How to Decide What’s Right for You 

Here’s how a thoughtful design helps you make the right choice: 

🔍 1. Analyse Your Energy Usage 

Look at how much power you use: 

  • During the day 
  • In the evening 
  • On weekends or holidays 

Understanding usage patterns helps size both your battery and your panels appropriately. 

☀ 2. Review Current Solar Output 

If your current solar system rarely generates surplus, a larger panel array can boost both midday efficiency and battery charging — increasing savings overall. 

🔋 3. Balance Battery Size With Production 

You don’t want a battery that never fills — and you don’t want extra panels generating energy that can’t be stored or used efficiently. A balanced design considers both sides of the equation. 

🔌 Battery & Panel Upgrade Options in Australia 

When planning panel + battery upgrades, Australian households typically consider: 

📍 AC-Coupled Batteries 

These add storage alongside your existing inverter and solar array. They’re easier to retrofit but may be less efficient if your system needs significant expansion. 

📍 Hybrid Inverter Upgrades 

Some homeowners replace their older inverters with hybrid models that manage both panels and batteries in one unit — optimising performance and enabling advanced features like Virtual Power Plant (VPP) participation. 

📍 Increased Panel Count 

Adding panels increases: 
✔ Daytime generation 
✔ Battery charge potential 
✔ Overall self-consumption 

This is especially helpful if you consume much of your power in the evening or morning

🛠 Why Professional Design Matters 

Adding panels and a battery isn’t just about capacity — it’s about system harmony: 

  • Matching panels to battery size 
  • Ensuring your inverter supports battery integration 
  • Confirming roof space and orientation are suitable 
  • Avoiding oversizing that doesn’t add value 

For this reason, your installation should be handled by a Solar Accreditation Australia (SAA)-accredited installer — professionals trained and certified to design compliant, high-performing solar + storage systems under current Australian standards. 

Accredited installers ensure your system: 
✔ Qualifies for government rebates 
✔ Meets electrical and safety codes 
✔ Is optimised for weather patterns in your area 
✔ Delivers maximum real-world savings 

🔎 Real Examples 

📌 Case 1: Small System + Small Battery 

  • 4 kW solar system 
  • 10 kWh battery 
    → Result: Battery rarely fills because solar output rarely exceeds daytime use 
    ➡ Best solution: Expand panels to 6–8 kW before installing the battery 

📌 Case 2: Large System, High Daytime Consumption 

  • 8 kW solar system 
  • 13.5 kWh battery 
    → Result: Plenty of surplus — battery fills daily 
    ➡ Battery only may be enough 

💡 Summary — Should You Add Panels With a Battery? 

✅ Yes, if: 

  • Your current system doesn’t generate enough surplus 
  • You want more stored energy for evening/evening peak use 
  • You want return on investment faster 

❌ Maybe not, if: 

  • Your existing system already produces significant daytime surplus 
  • Your household load aligns well with daylight use 
  • Adding panels yields minimal extra energy 

Future-proofing your solar + storage setup often includes panel expansion alongside battery installation — but every home is different. 

📞 Let Arise Solar Design the Right System for You 

Whether you decide to add just a battery, just more panels, or both together, making the right choice starts with a professional assessment. 

Arise Solar works with you to: 
✔ Analyse your consumption and production 
✔ Design a balanced solar + battery system 
✔ Maximise savings with the right panel + battery sizes 
✔ Install it safely with SAA-accredited professionals 

Contact us today for a free custom solar + storage consultation and make sure your system meets your energy goals — now and into the future. 

This Solar System Promotion is available for standard metropolitan based installations only. Price is after Small Scale Technology Certificates (STCs) have been assigned to Solar Answered T/A Arise Solar or its agents. Any additional extras including but not limited to double storey, roof type, meter box upgrades or three phase power, may attract additional charges. *Price beat offer applies to local competitor advertised quotes only and must be for identical goods. T&C’s apply. Excludes Victoria
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