Introduction

Not all solar feed-in tariffs are unlimited. Many retailers apply caps and thresholds that limit how much credit you can earn from exports. Understanding these details in your plan is critical — otherwise, you might expect a bigger bill reduction than you actually get.

If you’re new to FiTs, see our What is FiT? guide first.

Key Definitions

Compare FiT rules across states: Compare FiT by State.

Worked Example 1 — Daily Cap

Plan: 10c/kWh FiT with 10 kWh/day cap

Worked Example 2 — Monthly Cap

Plan: 8c/kWh FiT, capped at 300 kWh/month

Worked Example 3 — Threshold Rates

Plan: First 5 kWh/day @ 12c/kWh, after that 5c/kWh

Check how this impacts payback with our Solar ROI & FiT calculator.

Why Reading the Fine Print Matters

Always cross-check offers at Retailer Rates and monitor changes using the Rate Change Tracker.

Tools to Estimate Your Exposure

FAQs

Q1. Are FiT caps common?
Yes, especially in high solar states like SA and QLD. Some caps are daily, some monthly.

Q2. What happens after I hit the cap?
Usually, exports above the cap earn no credit — they go to the grid for free.

Q3. How do I find caps in my plan?
Look under “feed-in tariff terms” in the retailer’s energy fact sheet.

Q4. Is a capped high FiT better than an uncapped lower FiT?
Not always — run the numbers with our FiT Savings Calculator.

Conclusion

FiT caps and thresholds can make or break your solar savings. A plan with a 12c FiT cap may deliver less credit than an uncapped 8c plan if you’re a heavy exporter. Always read the fine print and test offers with calculators before switching.

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