If you have been considering a home battery storage system — whether paired with solar, as backup for a generator, or for Time-of-Use rate optimization under PSE&G's new pricing structure — 2026 is the best time to install it in New Jersey. The Garden State Energy Storage Program, administered by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU), is offering meaningful upfront incentives for qualifying residential battery installations, and the program has funding available now.
What Is the Garden State Energy Storage Program?
The Garden State Energy Storage Program is a NJ BPU initiative designed to accelerate residential and commercial battery storage adoption across the state. For residential customers, the program provides a per-kWh incentive paid directly to the homeowner (or applied as a credit through your installer) for qualifying battery systems installed and connected at an eligible NJ service address.
The 2026 residential incentive rates are:
- Standard residential: $125 per kWh of usable storage capacity
- Income-qualified residential: $162.50 per kWh (a 30% premium for households meeting income thresholds)
For a Tesla Powerwall 3 with 13.5 kWh of usable capacity, the standard incentive works out to approximately $1,688. For the Enphase IQ Battery 10T (10.08 kWh usable), the standard incentive is approximately $1,260. Income-qualified households can receive proportionally more.
What Battery Systems Are Eligible?
To qualify for the Garden State Energy Storage incentive, the battery system must:
- Be a UL 9540-listed energy storage system
- Have a minimum of 3 kWh of usable storage capacity
- Be installed at a New Jersey service address by a qualified installer
- Be connected to the grid (not off-grid systems)
- Meet NJ BPU's current technical specifications
Popular eligible systems we install include the Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5 kWh, AC-coupled or DC-coupled with Tesla Solar), Enphase IQ Battery 5P and 10T, Franklin WH (whole-home systems), and the SolarEdge Home Battery. The program does not require solar to be co-installed — a standalone battery qualifies.
Does It Stack with Federal Tax Credits?
Yes, and this is important. The federal Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D) currently provides a 30% federal tax credit on qualifying battery storage systems installed in 2026. This credit applies to the full installed cost — equipment plus labor. When you stack the NJ state incentive with the 30% federal credit, the effective payback on a home battery system is significantly compressed.
Example for a Tesla Powerwall 3 installed in NJ in 2026:
- Installed cost (equipment + installation): approximately $14,000
- Federal 30% tax credit: -$4,200
- NJ Garden State incentive (standard): -$1,688
- Net cost after incentives: approximately $8,112
That is a meaningful reduction from the gross cost, and when you factor in TOU arbitrage savings under PSE&G's new rate structure, the payback period continues to shrink.
Do You Need Solar to Install a Home Battery?
No. This is one of the most common misconceptions about home battery storage. A standalone battery connected to your main electrical panel — without solar — is fully eligible for both the NJ state incentive and the federal tax credit. You charge the battery from the grid during off-peak hours and discharge it during peak hours, or you use it as backup power during outages.
That said, pairing a battery with solar does maximize the system's value. With solar, your battery charges from free solar production during the day and acts as backup at night and during grid outages. We install both solar-paired and standalone battery systems across NJ.
The Permit and Inspection Process in NJ
Battery storage installations in New Jersey require an electrical permit through your local municipality's construction office, a NJ electrical inspection, and in most cases a utility interconnection agreement with PSE&G or JCPL. The interconnection process can add 4–8 weeks to the project timeline, so plan accordingly if you have a deadline (like wanting backup power before hurricane season).
We manage the full permit and interconnection process for every battery installation we do. This includes preparing the interconnection application, coordinating the utility site visit, and scheduling the municipal electrical inspection.
When Should You Act?
Two factors make 2026 the right time to install: the NJ incentive program has active funding (BPU programs have historically run out of money mid-year when adoption spikes), and PSE&G's TOU rate launch on June 1 makes the economics of peak-hour battery discharge far more attractive than before.
We recommend homeowners who are seriously considering a battery installation get on our schedule now so the full permit and interconnection process can be completed before peak summer demand hits. Call (848) 294-1739 or visit malfettonegroup.com/contact for a free site assessment.