A hybrid system pairs solar panels with battery backup, so you're not just generating power during the day — you're storing it for the hours that actually matter: peak tariff hours, and loadshedding.
A hybrid system is three distinct pieces of hardware working together — here's what each one does and why it matters.
N-Type Bifacial panels from brands like Jinko, JA Solar, and Trina — generating power during daylight hours, sized to your actual monthly consumption rather than a generic package size.
Converts the DC power your panels generate into the AC power your home runs on, and manages where that power goes — into your home, into the battery, or back to the grid.
Stores surplus solar for the hours you actually need it most — whether that's offsetting expensive peak-tariff electricity, or keeping your home running through loadshedding.
Both are valid, and a hybrid system addresses both — but how we size your system shifts depending on which one matters more to you.
Solar offsets your highest-cost grid usage first, cutting your monthly bill — even without a battery, though pairing one lets you shift more of your usage to stored solar instead of grid power.
A battery-backed hybrid system switches over automatically the moment the grid drops, keeping your lights, fans, fridge, and whatever else you choose running without you noticing the outage.
No pressure, no obligation — our team can walk you through sizing, backup options, and timelines over WhatsApp.