Imagine a sunny week where your system exports at midday, sending your meter effectively backward from a billing perspective. Come evening, lights, cooking, and devices draw energy, using stored credits first. By month’s end, your statement nets exported and imported kilowatt-hours, showing what you owe after credits. This cycle repeats, allowing your daytime production to counterbalance your nighttime needs, and revealing where slight habit shifts could keep more credits covering your higher-cost hours.
Many utilities let credits roll month to month, then reconcile annually at a true-up. Some pay out excess at a separate export rate, while others reset credits to zero. Understanding the calendar prevents shocks and helps you plan upgrades or seasonal usage changes. Consider timing high-consumption activities before credits expire, and ask your provider how banked credits appear on statements so you can track value clearly rather than guessing about invisible balances.
Utilities may cap system size, set minimum monthly charges, or use export values below retail energy prices. Some regions differentiate summer and winter credits, or require specific meters and interconnection agreements. Read your provider’s handbook and confirm program names before assuming benefits. Small administrative details, like meter reading dates or holiday calendars, can change how much of your daytime production truly offsets evening usage, ultimately influencing total savings and the best strategies you adopt at home.