The Solar Sharer Offer (SSO) is a new regulated electricity plan overseen by the Australian Energy Regulator (AER).
Households that sign up can access up to 24kWh of free electricity each day during a set midday window.
Australia generates a huge amount of solar energy in the middle of the day, often more than we're actually using.
Rather than let it go to waste, the government wants households to run their big appliances during that window, such as heating and cooling, clothes dryers, washing machines and EV chargers.
This will, in turn, ease demand on the grid in the evenings and hopefully bring bills down in the process.
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It's available to households in NSW, South East QLD or South Australia - the regions where the AER's Default Market Offer (DMO) applies.
The DMO is a benchmark price that caps what electricity retailers can charge customers on standing offer plans.
Around 8% of households are on these plans, while most are on market offers, where retailers set their own prices and discounts.
Good to know: Victoria is getting its own version, the Midday Power Saver, launching 1 October 2026. The federal government has said it's considering making the SSO available in other areas, but there's no firm announcement yet.
When are the free electricity hours?
It depends on where you live:
For NSW and South East QLD, it's 11am to 2pm.
For South Australia, it's 12pm to 3pm.
What are the Solar Sharer Offer rates?
Here's a state-by-state breakdown. For NSW specifically, the rates will vary based on your electricity distributor.
NSW (Ausgrid)
Period
Rate
Free period (11am–2pm)
0 cents per kWh
Peak (3pm–9pm, Nov–Mar and Jun–Aug only)
63.72 cents per kWh
Off peak (all other times)
27.56 cents per kWh
Daily supply charge
$1.76 per day
NSW (Endeavour)
Period
Rate
Free period (11am–2pm)
0 cents per kWh
Peak (4pm–8pm, working weekdays only)
48.75 cents per kWh
Off peak (2pm–4pm and 8pm–10am weekdays; 2pm–10am weekends and public holidays)
37.53 cents per kWh
Solar soak (10am–11am)
14.19 cents per kWh
Daily supply charge
$1.85 per day
NSW (Essential Energy)
Period
Rate
Free period (11am–2pm)
0 cents per kWh
Peak (7am–10am and 3pm–10pm)
45.57 cents per kWh
Off peak (10am–11am, 2pm–3pm and 10pm–7am)
27.60 cents per kWh
Daily supply charge
$2.72 per day
South East QLD (Energex)
Period
Rate
Free period (11am–2pm)
0 cents per kWh
Peak (4pm–9pm)
48.90 cents per kWh
Shoulder (9pm–11am)
26.41 cents per kWh
Off peak (2pm–4pm)
8.10 cents per kWh
Daily supply charge
$1.78 per day
South Australia (SAPN)
Period
Rate
Free period (12pm–3pm)
0 cents per kWh
Peak (6am–10am and 4pm–midnight)
58.84 cents per kWh
Shoulder (midnight–6am)
35.17 cents per kWh
Solar soak (10am–12pm and 3pm–4pm)
19.66 cents per kWh
Daily supply charge
$1.80 per day
Am I eligible to get 3 hours of free electricity every day?
Any electricity retailer with more than 1,000 customers in the eligible regions must offer the SSO.
But you won't be switched automatically. You'll need to opt in if you want to access the 3 hours of free electricity each day.
Whether you own or rent, your home will also need a smart meter. If you don't already have one, your retailer can usually arrange an installation at no extra cost.
The offer isn't available to everyone. Small businesses and households in embedded networks aren't eligible.
Embedded networks are common in some apartment buildings, retirement villages and caravan parks.
In this case, residents receive electricity through a shared private network rather than having a direct account with an electricity retailer.
Is the Solar Sharer Offer actually worth it? How to use our calculator to find out
You can use our SSO calculator to check whether your household could benefit from the 3 hours of free electricity scheme.
All you have to do is answer a few questions like:
Where you live
Whether you're home during the free window period
Whether you can run big appliances on a timer or delay the start in the free window
Whether you have an EV that you can charge during that free window
When your household's electricity use is the highest
What type of electricity plan are you on now
What your electricity bill is per quarter (you can also give exact rates)
We'll then give you a general idea of whether you'll be better off with or without the SSO.
Just keep in mind that these are general estimates only and not personal advice.
Here's some more context on the Solar Sharer Offer rates
As you saw from the tables earlier, the peak usage rates on the SSO are steep, up to 63.72 cents per kWh.
The supply charges are high, too. That's the daily fee you pay for staying connected to the grid.
That's the trade-off you need to weigh up before switching.
If you can't shift much of your usage into the free window, those higher peak rates will cost you more than the free midday power saves you.
Off-peak rates are more favourable, though how much time you actually get in that window depends on which state you're in and your distributor.
The AER acknowledges the offer won't suit everyone.
Retailers are required to inform customers that SSO might not be right for them before signing them up, and cannot put anyone on it without their consent.
If you're out during the day and your electricity use peaks in the evening, a standard market offer is likely the better deal.
How do I sign up?
Contact your current energy retailer by phone, online or via their app and ask to switch to the SSO.
There's no lock-in contract and no cost to switch, and you can always go back to a market offer if it's not working for you.
But before you switch, it's worth comparing energy plans to see if you can find a cheaper offer that better suits your household's energy use.
Mariam Gabaji is a journalist with 13 years of experience, specialising in consumer topics like mobile services and energy costs. Her work appears in the ABC, Yahoo Finance, 9News, The Guardian, SBS, 7News, A Current Affair and Money Magazine. Mariam holds a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and was a finalist for the 2024 and 2025 IT Journalism Award for Best Telecommunications Journalist.
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