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Eastern Cape · 10 kW · 2026

10 kW solar payback in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth): 4.15.8 years

At Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth)'s 2026 tariff of R2.76/kWh and PVGIS yield of 1 790 kWh/kWp/year, a 10 kW grid-tied solar system pays for itself in 4.1 years (with battery, 85% self-consumption) to 5.8 years (no battery, 60% self-consumption). Below is the full calculation, with every input shown.

System cost
R172 500
10 kW grid-tied, installed
Annual generation
17 900 kWh
at 1 790 kWh/kWp × 10 kW
Monthly saving
R2 470–3 499
60–85% self-consumption

How we get to 4.15.8 years

1. Annual generation = 10 kW × 1 790 kWh/kWp × 0.80 loss = 14 320 kWh/yr
2. Monthly saving (no battery) = 14 320 × 0.60 × R2.76 ÷ 12 ≈ R2 470
3. Monthly saving (with battery) = 14 320 × 0.85 × R2.76 ÷ 12 ≈ R3 499
4. Payback (slow) = R172 500 ÷ (R2 470 × 12) ≈ 5.8 years
5. Payback (fast) = R172 500 ÷ (R3 499 × 12) ≈ 4.1 years

0.80 loss factor accounts for inverter inefficiency, wiring losses, dust, and temperature derating. Self-consumption assumptions follow Victron / SolarEdge published South African data. See full methodology.

What if you add a battery?

Adding a battery to the 10 kW system bumps total cost to about R252 500 but raises self-consumption to ~85%. In Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) that pushes payback to roughly 6 years. The battery also covers load-shedding stages 4–6 and protects against tariff escalation faster than a grid-tied setup, which is why most Eastern Cape homeowners now opt for hybrid systems.

10 kW payback in other SA cities (fastest first)

City10 kW paybackCompare
Saldanha Bay3.3 yrsCity page →
Benoni3.5 yrsCity page →
Boksburg3.5 yrsCity page →
George3.5 yrsCity page →
Cape Town3.6 yrsSee full maths →
Johannesburg3.6 yrsSee full maths →

FAQ — 10 kW payback in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth)

What is the payback period for a 10 kW solar system in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth)?

Between 4.1 and 5.8 years, depending on whether you add a battery (which raises self-consumption from 60% to 85%). After payback, every kilowatt-hour the system produces is pure savings for the remaining 15–20 years of panel life.

What does the calculation assume?

Mid-market 2026 system cost (R172 500 for 10 kW grid-tied), Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth)'s PVGIS v5.2 irradiance (1 790 kWh/kWp/year), the local municipal tariff (R2.76/kWh), an 80% loss factor (inverter, soiling, derating), and 60–85% self-consumption. We use nominal payback — including 10%/year tariff escalation would shorten actual payback by 0.5–1.5 years.

Does adding a battery slow payback?

Slightly yes. A 10 kW + battery configuration in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) pays back in about 6 years vs. 4.1 years without. The trade-off: the battery moves you from ~60% self-consumption to ~85%, eliminates load-shedding pain, and protects you from rising tariffs faster.

What about the SARS Section 12B rebate?

Section 12B lets you claim 125% of the PV panel cost as a depreciation deduction. For a homeowner in the 36% income-tax bracket, that's roughly R31 050 of deferred tax benefit on this 10 kW system — which can shave another 0.8–1.2 years off your effective payback.

What happens after payback?

After year 5.8, the system continues generating roughly 17 900 kWh/year for another 15+ years. At today's tariff that's R41 988/year of free electricity per year, growing as Eskom raises tariffs. Over a 25-year lifecycle, the same system in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) typically nets R877 200+ in lifetime savings.

Cost breakdown for Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth)Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) solar overview →10 kW systems explained →Methodology →

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