August 7, 2025 /eszoneo/ —
Pakistan’s residential electricity market, with its clearly defined tiered tariff structure and room for price arbitrage, has become one of the most attractive scenarios for energy storage deployment. The market is divided into single-phase and three-phase users. Single-phase users, covering a wide share of households, especially small- and medium-sized residences, are currently the key target group for storage system deployment.
According to data from the Islamabad Electric Supply Company, Pakistani households with single-phase connections are charged based on a tiered tariff, starting from PKR 23.59/kWh (0–100 kWh) and gradually increasing to PKR 48.84/kWh (above 700 kWh). The price gap between tiers can reach up to PKR 6.48/kWh, creating significant arbitrage opportunities for storage systems.
| Fixed Charge (PKR) | Consumption Range (kWh) | Tariff (PKR/kWh) | Price Difference (PKR/kWh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| – | 0 – 100 | 23.59 | 6.48 |
| – | 101 – 200 | 30.07 | 4.19 |
| – | 201 – 300 | 34.26 | 4.89 |
| 200 | 301 – 400 | 39.15 | 2.21 |
| 400 | 401 – 500 | 40.61 | 1.42 |
| 600 | 501 – 600 | 42.78 | 1.14 |
| 800 | 601 – 700 | 43.92 | 4.92 |
| 1000 | >700 | 48.84 | – |
Three-phase residential users are charged under a time-of-use tariff, with peak hours priced at PKR 49.98/kWh and off-peak hours at PKR 41.68/kWh, providing an arbitrage margin of PKR 8.3/kWh.
| Time Period | Tariff (PKR/kWh) | Peak-Valley Price Gap (PKR/kWh) |
|---|---|---|
| Off-Peak | 41.68 | 8.3 |
| Peak | 49.98 | – |
Since July 2024, the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) has formally introduced a fixed electricity charge across all user categories. This fee is based on consumption tier and voltage level, becoming another key driver for household storage deployment. The fixed charges differ by user type:
Single-phase residential users: charged according to monthly consumption tiers, ranging from PKR 200 to PKR 1,000;
Three-phase residential users: a uniform monthly connection fee of PKR 1,000;
On an annual basis, households now face an additional burden of PKR 2,400 to PKR 12,000. Storage systems can help users avoid crossing into higher tiers by peak-shaving and load-shifting, thus lowering their fixed charge bracket and providing clear economic incentives.
In Pakistan, residential electricity load quotas are determined by housing size, which also forms the basis for sizing Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS). Under the combined structure of tiered tariffs, fixed charges, and time-of-use pricing, the deployment of residential storage systems in Pakistan already enjoys a strong policy and economic foundation:
Small-scale households (≤126 m²): recommended to adopt small-capacity BESS for backup power and enhanced PV self-consumption;
Medium-scale households (126–252 m²): benefit from optimized load distribution between day and night through storage paired with the time-of-use mechanism;
Large-scale households (>252 m²): recommended BESS capacities vary by family size, generally estimated at around 50% of installed PV capacity.
| Housing Area (m²) | Connection Type | Load Quota | Recommended PV Capacity | Reference BESS Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≤126 m² (≈ ≤5 marla) | Single-phase | ≤5 kW | ≤5 kW | ≤2.4 kWh |
| 126–253 m² (≈ 5–10 marla) | Single-/Three-phase | 5–7.5 kW | 5–10 kW | 2.4–5 kWh |
| 253–506 m² (≈ 10 marla–1 kanal) | Three-phase | 7.5–10 kW | 5–10 kW | 5–10 kWh |
| ≥506 m² (≈ ≥1 kanal) | Three-phase | ≥10 kW | ≥10 kW | ≥10 kWh |
Note: The storage capacity ranges provided in the table reflect typical configurations, estimated at 50% of the installed PV system capacity.
