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Marin County Battery Incentives Guide

Complete guide to battery storage rebates and incentives for Marin County residents

Last updated: March 2026MCE

No Local CCA Battery Program Yet

Marin County doesn't currently offer a dedicated local battery rebate through its community choice aggregator. However, residents can still access substantial federal and state incentives worth up to $17,500 for qualifying households.

Available Incentives for Marin Residents

Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC)

30% of Cost

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 extended the federal clean energy tax credit at 30% through 2032.[1]

For a typical 13.5 kWh battery system costing $12,000-15,000, the ITC provides $3,600-$4,500 in tax credits. For leased systems, the leasing company claims the credit and passes savings to you through reduced monthly payments.

California Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP)

$200-$1,000/kWh

California's SGIP is one of the nation's longest-running distributed energy incentive programs, administered by the California Public Utilities Commission.[2][3]

Standard residential rebate: ~$200/kWh ($2,700 for 13.5 kWh battery). Equity Resiliency rebate for income-qualified households or those in high fire-threat areas: up to $1,000/kWh ($13,500 for 13.5 kWh battery).

Why Battery Storage Makes Sense in Marin

NEM 3.0 Changes Everything

California's new Net Energy Metering rules (NEM 3.0) reduce the value of exported solar by 75%. Batteries are now essential to maximize your solar investment by storing energy for self-use rather than exporting at low rates.[5]

Time-of-Use Rate Arbitrage

$500-1,200/year

California utilities charge significantly more during peak hours (4-9 PM) than during midday solar hours.[4]

With MCE, peak rates can exceed $0.45-0.55/kWh while off-peak rates are $0.15-0.25/kWh. A battery lets you store cheap midday solar and use it during expensive peak hours, saving $40-100/month.

Backup Power & PSPS Protection

California's Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS) can leave homes without power for days during fire season. A battery keeps critical loads running.[5]

Local Energy Context

MCE was California's first community choice aggregator, founded in Marin County in 2010. As a leader in clean energy innovation, MCE has explored battery programs for wildfire resilience. Marin's high property values and environmental awareness make it a strong market for home batteries.[4]

Population:262,000
Avg Electric Bill:$180-250/month

Cities & Areas Covered

San Rafael, Novato, Mill Valley, Larkspur, Corte Madera, Tiburon, Sausalito, Fairfax, San Anselmo

Check Your Exact Rebate in Marin

Use our free CA Battery Incentive Tool to see exactly how much you qualify for through MCE, the federal ITC, and SGIP — based on your income and home.

Check My MCE Rebate

Sources & References

  1. [1]Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC)
  2. [2]California SGIP Program
  3. [3]CPUC SGIP Handbook
  4. [4]MCE
  5. [5]California Public Utilities Commission
  6. [6]DSIRE Database
© 2026 Energy Scout. Not affiliated with MCE. Information current as of March 2026.