If you run a business in Ballarat, you’ve probably noticed power bills are not getting any friendlier. That’s why more local businesses are looking at solar. One of the first questions I hear is: “What commercial solar incentives are available?”
The honest answer is: there can be good support available, but it depends on your site, system size and eligibility. So in this guide, I’ll walk you through what Ballarat businesses should know about commercial solar incentives, business solar rebates and commercial solar panels in Ballarat.
First, What Counts as “Commercial Solar”?
Commercial solar is solar installed for a business or non-residential site. The right system depends on how much power you use, when you use it, your roof space, switchboard, network approval and future plans. The big advantage for many businesses is timing. Homes often use more power early morning and evening. Businesses usually use plenty during the day, while the sun is out.
If your business uses solar power as it’s being generated, you can reduce the amount of electricity you buy from the grid.
What Commercial Solar Incentives Are Available in Australia?
There are a few incentive pathways that may apply to Ballarat businesses: Small-scale Technology Certificates, or STCs; Victorian Energy Upgrades commercial and industrial solar discounts; battery incentives; tax deductions or depreciation options; and Large-scale Generation Certificates for bigger systems.
The Australian Government says eligible households and small businesses installing small-scale renewable energy systems may receive a benefit through STCs, which can be sold or assigned to help reduce the purchase cost.
Incentive 1: STCs for Smaller Commercial Solar Systems
STCs are one of the most common solar incentives in Australia. In simple terms, STCs are certificates created when an eligible small-scale renewable energy system is installed. These certificates have a market value, and in many cases the customer assigns them to the solar retailer or installer so the value can be applied as an upfront discount.
How STCs Reduce the Upfront Cost
The main benefit of STCs is that they can reduce the upfront cost of an eligible solar system. When we quote commercial solar, the STC value may already be included in the final price. STCs are not usually a separate cheque you receive later, so always ask: “Has the STC value already been included?”
Why the STC Value Changes Over Time
STC value can change based on system size, location, installation date and certificate market value. The scheme also reduces over time, so the incentive generally becomes smaller as the years go on.
What Ballarat Businesses Should Check in Their Quote
Don’t just look at the final price. Ask what system size is being quoted, what equipment is included, whether the STC discount has been applied, what annual production is expected, what payback has been estimated, and whether extra electrical work is needed.
Incentive 2: Victorian Energy Upgrades Discounts for Commercial Solar
For local businesses, the Victorian Energy Upgrades program is worth checking. The Victorian Government says commercial and industrial solar panel discounts are available for businesses and non-residential buildings to help reduce installation costs and energy bills.
Who May Be Eligible?
Eligible sites may include non-residential premises such as offices, warehouses, workshops, retail spaces, industrial buildings, schools, community buildings and other business sites. Eligibility depends on the current program rules and the details of your site, so it’s something I’d check properly during quoting.
What Size Systems Does It Apply To?
Current Victorian guidance says eligible commercial and industrial solar PV systems under this activity must be installed on non-residential premises and be between 30kW and 200kW in size.
Why You Need an Accredited Provider
With commercial solar incentives, the installation process matters. The right provider needs to understand the technical requirements, connection process, documentation and monitoring rules. Current Victorian guidance also says eligible systems need to support a monitoring portal accessible by the end user.
Incentive 3: Battery Incentives for Businesses
Batteries are getting more attention, and for some businesses they make sense. A battery stores excess solar energy so you can use it later instead of sending it back to the grid. The Australian Government’s Cheaper Home Batteries Program supports households, businesses and community organisations with a discount of around 30% on eligible small-scale battery systems.
When a Battery Makes Sense for a Business
A battery may suit your business if you use a lot of power early in the morning, late in the evening or overnight. It can also be worth considering if you have refrigeration, backup power needs, high demand charges or equipment running outside standard business hours.
When Solar Alone May Be the Better First Step
For many businesses, solar alone is the smartest first move. If your business uses most of its electricity during daylight hours, your solar system may already be working when you need it most. In that case, adding a battery straight away may not deliver the best return.
Questions to Ask Before Adding a Battery
Before adding a battery, ask how much excess solar your system will produce, when your business uses the most power, what loads the battery would support, whether backup power matters, and what the payback looks like with and without the battery.
Incentive 4: Tax Deductions and Depreciation
This is where I need to be clear: I’m not your accountant. Commercial solar may have tax benefits for some businesses, but the outcome depends on your business structure, turnover, asset cost, timing and current tax rules.
Why Solar Should Be Discussed With Your Accountant
Solar is a business asset, and your accountant can explain how it may be treated for your business. The ATO explains that eligible businesses may be able to claim an immediate deduction for the business portion of eligible assets in the year the asset is first used or installed ready for use.
Don’t Buy Solar Just for the Tax Deduction
A tax benefit can help, but it should not be the only reason you install solar. The system still needs to make sense from an energy and cash flow point of view. If it’s badly sized or poorly installed, a deduction won’t magically make it a good investment.
Look at Bill Savings, Payback and Cash Flow Together
When we talk to businesses about commercial solar, we look at the whole picture: upfront cost, available commercial solar incentives, estimated bill savings, payback period, finance options if needed, and long-term return.
What About Larger Commercial Solar Systems Over 100kW?
If your business uses a lot of electricity, you may be looking at a system over 100kW. That’s common for larger sheds, manufacturers, cold storage, supermarkets, farms and industrial sites.
STCs vs LGCs: The Simple Difference
STCs usually relate to smaller eligible systems and are often used to reduce upfront cost. LGCs, or Large-scale Generation Certificates, generally relate to larger systems and renewable energy generated over time.
Why System Size Matters Before You Quote
A commercial quote should be based on your load profile, not guesswork. We need to understand your daytime usage, roof space, switchboard capacity, metering, export limits, network requirements and future energy plans. Bigger is not always better.
Why Bigger Sites Need More Detailed Feasibility Work
Larger projects need more planning. There may be engineering requirements, network approvals, protection settings, metering changes and compliance steps.
How Incentives Affect Payback Period
Commercial solar incentives can reduce upfront cost, which can improve payback. But the biggest driver of payback is usually how much solar your business uses on-site.
If your system produces power at midday and your business uses it straight away, you’re avoiding buying that power from the grid. If most of the energy gets exported, the return may be lower.
So when we look at commercial solar Ballarat projects, we ask how much power you use during the day, when your peak periods are, whether you operate weekends, and whether you plan to add equipment, EV chargers or batteries later.
Why Ballarat Businesses Need a Local Solar Assessment
Ballarat has a real mix of buildings and businesses. Some have great roof space. Some have shading. Some have older switchboards. Some already have three-phase power, and others need electrical work first.
Your Daytime Load Matters Most
For commercial solar, daytime usage is one of the biggest factors. If you use a lot of power while the sun is shining, solar can work very well. That’s why workshops, offices, manufacturers, cool rooms, farms and retail sites can often benefit.
Your Roof and Switchboard Need to Be Checked
Commercial solar is not just a roof job. It’s an electrical job. Before installing commercial solar panels in Ballarat, we need to check the roof, switchboard, metering, supply and connection setup.
A Good Quote Should Include Savings Modelling
A commercial solar quote should include more than panels and a price. It should explain expected production, estimated savings, payback, equipment, warranties and any assumptions used. If the quote promises huge savings but doesn’t explain the numbers, be careful.
Common Mistakes Businesses Make When Chasing Solar Rebates
The biggest mistake I see is focusing only on the rebate or discount. I understand why it happens, but cheap solar can become expensive if it is badly designed, poorly installed or not supported properly.
Don’t assume every business qualifies for every incentive. Don’t choose the cheapest quote without checking equipment and workmanship. Don’t oversize the system just because the roof is big. Don’t ignore the switchboard. And don’t forget after-sales support.
Questions to Ask Before Installing Commercial Solar
Before you commit, ask your installer: Which commercial solar incentives apply to my site? Are STCs or Victorian Energy Upgrades discounts included? What system size do you recommend, and why? How much solar power will we use on-site? What is the estimated payback? Will we need switchboard upgrades? Is battery storage worth it? What monitoring and warranties are included?
Are Commercial Solar Incentives Worth It?
Yes, they can be. Commercial solar incentives can reduce upfront cost, improve payback and make the investment easier to justify. But I wouldn’t look at incentives on their own.
The real value comes from lowering your electricity bills year after year. Incentives help get the project moving, but good design is what makes it work.
Final Thoughts
If you’re a Ballarat business owner looking into solar, my advice is simple: don’t just chase the biggest rebate or the cheapest quote. Get the right system for your site.
A good commercial solar setup should match your energy usage, suit your building, meet current requirements, use quality equipment and give you clear performance monitoring.
If you’re thinking about commercial solar in Ballarat, get in touch with us at Ballarat Solar Company. We can look at your site, your bills and your options, then help you understand what incentives may apply and whether commercial solar panels in Ballarat are a smart investment for your business.

