Texas Solar Net Metering Changes Explained
If your solar credits look different than they used to, you’re not imagining it.
Texas Does Not Have Statewide Retail Net Metering
Unlike some states, Texas does not require utilities to credit solar exports at full retail rates.
Instead:
Texas operates in a deregulated electricity market
Retail electric providers offer voluntary buyback programs
Export compensation varies by contract
Terms can change at renewal
Many homeowners assumed they had guaranteed retail net metering.
In reality, most had retail buyback agreements.
That distinction matters.
What Changed in Texas Solar Compensation
Over the past several years:
Many retail providers reduced export credit rates
Some moved from retail-based credits to market-based credits
Free nights plans shifted daytime value
Contract renewals introduced new compensation structures
Several years ago, many homeowners received near-retail credits.
Today, some plans credit as little as 2–5¢ per kWh.
If you purchase electricity at 14–18¢ per kWh, the gap significantly affects ROI.
The production didn’t change.
The compensation did.
Why Texas Is Different
Texas uses a competitive retail market model.
That means:
Retail providers compete on pricing
Buyback programs are optional
Compensation structures can change
There is no universal statewide export policy
As solar adoption increased, providers adjusted buyback programs to reduce risk exposure.
This is not a sudden collapse.
It is a structural shift toward market-based export pricing.
Why Your Solar ROI May Look Different Now
When you installed solar, projections likely assumed:
Stable buyback credits
Predictable retail rates
Long-term rate consistency
If export credits dropped or your plan changed, your payback timeline changes.
That does not mean solar stopped working.
It means the value of exported energy decreased.
Many homeowners now experience:
Smaller monthly credits
Higher-than-expected bills
Longer ROI timelines
How Homeowners Are Adapting to Net Metering Changes
There are three common responses:
Switching retail providers
Changing rate plans
Increasing self-consumption with battery storage
Switching plans can help temporarily.
However, plan structures can change again.
Battery storage allows homeowners to:
Store excess daytime solar production
Reduce reliance on export credits
Offset higher retail rates
Stabilize long-term savings
Instead of depending on compensation, homeowners increase control.
Is Solar Still Worth It? Yes… But the Strategy Has Evolved
Solar still reduces energy costs.
However, maximizing value now often requires:
Careful rate plan selection
Monitoring export vs import balance
Considering battery storage
Optimizing self-consumption
Solar alone worked extremely well under strong retail buyback programs.
In today’s environment, storage often completes the strategy.
Solar produces.
Storage protects.
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Texas does not mandate statewide retail net metering. Buyback programs are offered by retail electric providers.
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Texas did not eliminate net metering. Compensation structures changed as providers adjusted buyback programs.
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Many providers shifted toward market-based pricing and adjusted risk exposure.
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Switching may improve short-term savings, but rate structures can change at renewal.
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Increasing self-consumption, often through battery storage, reduces reliance on buyback compensation.