How Solar Energy Credit Works for SESB Bills in Sabah

How Solar Energy Credit Works for SESB Bills in Sabah

How Solar Energy Credit Works for SESB Bills in Sabah

Solar energy credit for SESB bills in Sabah works by letting your home use rooftop solar power first, then exporting unused excess electricity to the SESB grid as bill credits. Under the Solar Rakyat Sabah Net Energy Metering programme, eligible homeowners can reduce monthly SESB bills through self-consumption and exported energy credits.

At HAG Solar, our team helps Sabah homeowners understand SESB billing, solar credit, system sizing, and Solar Rakyat Sabah requirements before installing a solar PV system.

Quick Summary

Use solar first Your home uses daytime solar power before buying electricity from SESB.
Export excess energy Unused solar electricity goes back to the SESB grid.
Earn bill credits Exported energy is credited against your SESB bill.
12-year contract period Export credit treatment applies during the first 12 years of operation.
12-month credit roll-over Unused net credit can roll over for up to 12 months within the settlement period.

What Is Solar Energy Credit for SESB Bills?

Solar energy credit is the bill credit given when your solar PV system exports excess electricity to the SESB grid. Solar Rakyat Sabah allows domestic consumers to install solar PV systems mainly for self-consumption, while surplus electricity can be exported to the grid and credited against electricity bills.

In simple terms:

  • Your home uses solar power first.
  • Extra solar power goes back to the grid.
  • The exported energy helps reduce your SESB bill.

Chinese Version

Malay Version

The biggest savings usually come from using your own solar electricity during the day, not from exporting all of it.

How Does Solar Power Reduce Your SESB Bill?

Solar power reduces your SESB bill by lowering the amount of electricity you need to import from the grid. During the day, your home uses electricity generated by your rooftop solar panels before drawing power from SESB.

For example:

Solar Generated Home Usage Imported from SESB Exported to SESB
20 kWh 18 kWh 0 kWh 2 kWh

In this example, your home uses 18 kWh of solar electricity directly. That means you avoid buying those 18 kWh from SESB, which gives the strongest financial benefit.

This is why we usually review each customer’s daytime usage before recommending a system size. Homes that use air conditioners, refrigerators, pumps, washing machines, or other appliances during the day often benefit more from solar self-consumption.

For a broader guide on bill reduction, you can read our explanation on using a solar PV system to lower electricity bills.

What Happens When Solar Panels Produce More Than You Use?

When your solar panels produce more electricity than your home needs, the extra energy is automatically exported to the SESB grid. That exported electricity becomes energy credit based on current Solar Rakyat Sabah programme rules.

Example:

Solar Generated Home Usage Exported to SESB
25 kWh 18 kWh 7 kWh

Here, 7 kWh is exported to the grid. A simple way to explain it is: extra solar power helps deduct your future electricity bill.

How Are SESB Energy Credits Used?

SESB energy credits are used to offset electricity charges based on imported and exported energy. Under the programme, imported and exported energy are considered when calculating the bill credit, based on the applicable programme rules and gazetted domestic energy rate.

Example monthly energy flow:

Description Energy
Electricity imported from SESB 350 kWh
Solar energy exported to SESB 120 kWh
Net energy reference 230 kWh

Instead of paying based only on 350 kWh imported from SESB, the exported 120 kWh helps reduce the bill value.

Important clarification: The Solar Rakyat Sabah contract allows eligible export credit treatment during the first 12 years of operation, while unused net credit can roll over for up to 12 months within the settlement period, subject to programme rules. Any unused credit remaining at the end of the settlement period will expire and cannot be redeemed, subject to the applicable Solar Rakyat Sabah rules.

Example of a Monthly SESB Bill With Solar

A monthly SESB bill with solar is lower because part of your electricity is supplied directly by your solar PV system, while excess solar generation earns bill credits.

Description Energy
Electricity imported from SESB 400 kWh
Solar electricity used directly at home 250 kWh
Excess solar exported to SESB 80 kWh

Your savings come from:

  • 250 kWh used directly, which you did not need to buy from SESB.
  • 80 kWh exported, which helps create bill credits.

As a result, your payable SESB bill is lower than it would be without solar.

Real Customer Scenario: How Solar Credit Works in Daily Life

In real home usage, solar electricity generated during the day first supplies appliances such as air conditioners, refrigerators, lighting, washing machines, fans, water pumps, and other electrical items.

For example, if your home imports 500 kWh from SESB in a month and your solar system exports 200 kWh to the grid, the bill is based on the net energy concept:

Description Energy
Electricity used from SESB 500 kWh
Solar exported to grid 200 kWh
Net energy reference 300 kWh

If exported solar energy is higher than your monthly imported usage, the remaining net credit can be carried forward for up to 12 months within the settlement period. However, it cannot be exchanged for cash or transferred to another SESB account. ECoS states that energy credits may only be used to offset electricity bills and cannot be converted into cash.

Why Bigger Solar Systems Are Not Always Better

A bigger solar system is not always better because unused credits may build up if your daytime electricity usage is too low. The best solar PV system size should match your SESB bill, daytime consumption, roof condition, and household needs.

When we review a home, our team checks:

  • Latest SESB bills
  • Daytime electricity usage
  • Roof layout, direction, and shading
  • Single-phase or three-phase supply
  • Expected solar generation
  • Budget and payback period
  • Long-term household electricity needs
  • Risk of unused credits from oversizing

This helps us avoid oversizing the system and reduce the risk of generating too much credit that cannot be fully used.

For homeowners planning their budget, our guide on choosing a solar system based on your budget explains how usage, system size, and long-term savings should be compared.

What Warranty and ROI Should Homeowners Expect?

For some homes, estimated ROI may be around 3 to 5 years, depending on system budget, electricity usage, daytime self-consumption, roof condition, and system size. A properly sized system helps improve payback because more solar energy is used directly at home.

Warranty coverage may include the following, based on the confirmed system package and product brand:

Component Warranty / Guarantee
Inverter 10 years
Solar panel product warranty 12 years
Solar panel efficiency guarantee 25 years

Warranty terms may vary by product brand and package. Our team explains the expected generation, payback, product coverage, and maintenance needs clearly before installation.

For cost planning, this guide on solar panel installation cost factors may help you understand the main pricing points.

As an example, a RM14,000 package may achieve an estimated ROI of 3 to 5 years for some homeowners, depending on usage, system suitability, roof condition, and daytime self-consumption. This is not a fixed guarantee, but it gives homeowners a practical way to understand payback before deciding.

What Are the Solar Rakyat Sabah System Limits?

Solar Rakyat Sabah system capacity is capped at up to 5 kWac for single-phase homes and up to 10 kWac for three-phase homes. These are maximum limits, not automatic recommendations for every house.

Home Supply Type Maximum Solar PV Capacity
Single-phase home Up to 5 kWac
Three-phase home Up to 10 kWac

A smaller system may be more suitable if your daytime usage is low or your roof condition limits solar generation. Our team recommends system size based on actual SESB bill usage, not simply the maximum allowed capacity.

Applications must be submitted through an ECoS-registered Electrical Contractor Class PV Grid-Connected contractor, also known as ECCPV-GC. The contractor supports the design, installation, technical certification, and application submission process through the ECoS Energy Information System platform.

HAG Solar supports Sabah homeowners with ECoS/ECCPV-GC-related solar application guidance, documentation support, site assessment, installation, and commissioning. You can also learn more about our ECoS-registered solar system consultancy for solar planning and compliance awareness.

Based on current programme information, the programme has a total 20 MW quota available until 2028 or until fully allocated, with applications processed on a first-come, first-served basis.

Simple Illustration of Solar Energy Flow

Solar energy flow is simple: your home uses solar first, exports extra power during the day, and imports electricity from SESB when solar generation is not enough.

           ☀️ Sun
             │
             ▼
      Solar Panels
             │
      ┌──────┴──────┐
      ▼             ▼
   Your Home    SESB Grid
 (Use First)   (Export Excess)


Night Time:

SESB Grid ─────────► Your Home

During the day, solar panels generate electricity for your home. At night, when there is no sunlight, your home uses electricity from the SESB grid.

How to Maximize Solar Savings for SESB Bills

The best way to maximize solar savings is to use more electricity during solar generation hours.

Useful habits include:

  • Running washing machines during the day
  • Using air conditioners when solar production is high
  • Scheduling water pumps or appliances in daylight hours
  • Charging devices during the day
  • Matching system size to actual household usage

For quotation comparison, we also recommend checking what is included in the system design, equipment, warranty, installation scope, and after-sales support. Our guide on comparing solar PV quotations properly explains these points in more detail.

Why Work With a Local Solar Team in Sabah?

Working with a local Sabah solar team helps ensure your system is planned around SESB bills, Solar Rakyat Sabah requirements, single-phase or three-phase capacity limits, roof condition, and practical household usage.

At HAG Solar, our team supports homeowners with:

  • SESB bill review
  • Roof and site assessment
  • Solar PV system sizing
  • Documentation and application support
  • Installation and commissioning
  • Warranty explanation
  • After-sales support

During assessment, we review your SESB bill, roof layout, shading, supply phase, and daytime usage. This helps us recommend a suitable system size and reduce the risk of long-term unused credits.

Our team provides A-to-Z support from documentation and application guidance to installation and commissioning, so homeowners can make decisions with clearer technical and financial expectations.

You can learn more about our local support as a trusted solar PV installer in Sabah.

Ready to Check Your SESB Bill and Solar Suitability?

If you are planning to reduce your SESB bill with solar, our team can help review your electricity usage, roof condition, system size, budget, expected ROI, and Solar Rakyat Sabah suitability.

We also provide a free assessment to help you understand whether your home is suitable for solar, whether your system should be 5 kWac, 10 kWac, or smaller, and how to avoid oversizing.

Send Your Solar Enquiry

FAQ

Solar energy credit works by converting excess solar electricity exported to the SESB grid into bill credits. These credits help reduce SESB electricity bills under the Solar Rakyat Sabah Net Energy Metering programme.

The Solar Rakyat Sabah contract allows eligible export credit treatment during the first 12 years of operation. However, unused net credit can only roll over for up to 12 months within the settlement period, and unused credit after that is forfeited, subject to applicable programme rules.

You usually save more by using solar power directly during the day. Self-consumption reduces the electricity you need to buy from SESB, while exported energy provides additional bill credits.

If exported solar energy is more than your monthly imported usage, the remaining net credit can be carried forward for up to 12 months within the settlement period. It cannot be exchanged for cash or transferred to another SESB account.

The maximum capacity is up to 5 kWac for single-phase homes and up to 10 kWac for three-phase homes under Solar Rakyat Sabah. These are maximum limits, not necessarily the recommended size for every home.

For some homes, estimated ROI may be around 3 to 5 years, depending on system cost, electricity usage, daytime consumption, and roof condition. Warranty coverage may include 10 years for inverter, 12 years for solar panel product warranty, and a 25-year solar panel efficiency guarantee, depending on the confirmed product brand and package.

Yes. Our team can review your SESB bill, roof condition, shading, supply phase, daytime usage, and budget to recommend a suitable solar PV system size and explain your expected savings.

Conclusion

In summary, solar energy credit for SESB bills in Sabah allows your home to use solar electricity first and export excess power to the SESB grid as bill credits. Under Solar Rakyat Sabah, the 12-year export credit period and 12-month credit roll-over period should be understood separately.

At HAG Solar, our team helps homeowners review SESB bills, roof suitability, system size, ROI, warranty coverage, and documentation before installation, so they can choose a solar PV system that fits their actual usage.