Executive Summary
Vehicle-to-grid (V2G) and vehicle-to-home (V2H) concepts treat EV batteries as flexible distributed storage. Instead of drawing solely from the grid, homes and networks can tap parked EVs to shave peaks, provide backup power, and support renewable integration. At Energy Solutions, analysts combine tariff data, battery cost curves, and pilot results to frame where V2G/V2H is economically meaningful and where the value proposition remains marginal.
- In high-tariff markets with time-of-use (TOU) or demand-based charges, early pilots suggest that well-structured V2H/V2G can reduce household electricity bills by 5-15%, assuming regular overnight charging and occasional export during peaks.
- Battery wear remains a central concern. Under moderate cycling strategies, added degradation from V2G/V2H is typically in the 2-6% of pack lifetime range across 10 years, but aggressive strategies can push this much higher.
- When combined with rooftop solar, V2H systems can significantly increase self-consumption, improving the internal rate of return for both the EV and the home energy system.
- By 2030, Energy Solutions scenarios indicate that 5-12% of EVs in leading markets could be technically capable of bidirectional power, with a smaller subset enrolled in active grid services.
What This Market Intelligence Covers
- V2G/V2H Models, Tariffs, and Use Cases
- Economic Benchmarks: Savings, Revenues, and Battery Wear
- Stacking V2G with Solar, Storage, and Demand Response
- Case Studies: Residential, Fleet, and Campus V2G
- Global Perspective: US vs EU vs Asia
- Devil's Advocate: Technical, Regulatory, and OEM Constraints
- Outlook to 2030/2035: From Pilots to Portfolios
- FAQ: Battery Health, Hardware, and Bankability
V2G/V2H Models, Tariffs, and Use Cases
V2G and V2H deployments can be grouped into several archetypes: simple backup systems for homes, tariff arbitrage and self-consumption boosters, and fully integrated grid services where fleets or aggregators bid flexibility into markets. Tariff design---especially TOU spreads and demand charges---largely determines the depth of the savings pool.
Bidirectional chargers, compatible vehicles, and regulatory clarity are prerequisites. In many jurisdictions, V2G remains confined to pilots because interconnection rules, metering standards, and EV warranties are still evolving. Meanwhile, V2H backup for homes---particularly when paired with rooftop solar---has begun to see commercial deployments in selected markets.
Illustrative V2G/V2H Use Cases (2026 Snapshot)
| Use Case |
Primary Value Driver |
Typical Hardware |
Indicative Annual Savings/Revenue |
| Residential V2H backup + TOU shifting |
Avoiding peak prices, backup during outages |
11---15 kW bidirectional home charger |
USD 150---400/year on tariffs + resiliency value |
| Small fleet V2G with demand-charge reduction |
Reducing peak demand charges for depots |
Depot bidirectional chargers, EMS |
USD 30---90/kW-year of flexible capacity |
| Aggregated V2G for grid services |
Frequency regulation, capacity markets |
Aggregated EVs via aggregators/DSOs |
USD 70---150/kW-year (gross market value) |
Illustrative Annual Value by V2G/V2H Use Case
Source: Energy Solutions Intelligence (2025); stylised value ranges before platform fees and taxes.
Economic Benchmarks: Savings, Revenues, and Battery Wear
The economic signal for V2G/V2H is a balance between tariff differentials, grid-service revenues, and the cost of additional battery degradation. The table below summarises indicative economics for selected residential archetypes.
Indicative Residential V2H Economics (Illustrative EV & Tariff Profiles)
| Archetype |
Tariff Type |
Annual Energy Arbitrage Savings |
Backup/Outage Value* |
Estimated Added Battery Wear (10 years) |
| Urban TOU, modest solar |
Evening peak TOU |
USD 120---220/year |
USD 30---80/year equivalent |
---2---4% of pack lifetime |
| Suburban with large solar array |
Net billing / TOU |
USD 180---350/year |
USD 40---100/year equivalent |
---3---6% of pack lifetime |
*Backup value is an illustrative willingness-to-pay metric for outage mitigation.
Stylised 10-Year Net Benefit vs Estimated Battery Wear (Residential V2H)
Source: Energy Solutions modelling; excludes EV purchase CAPEX.
Stacking V2G with Solar, Storage, and Demand Response
V2G rarely operates in isolation. In many cases, EV flexibility is stacked with rooftop solar, stationary batteries, and tariff optimisation. As seen in the solar-plus-storage economics analysis, stacking multiple value streams increases overall project IRR but introduces additional complexity in forecasting, control, and measurement and verification (M&V).
Illustrative Contribution of Value Streams in a V2H + Solar Home
Source: Energy Solutions Intelligence (2025); stylised residential archetype.
Case Studies: Residential, Fleet, and Campus V2G
Case Study 1 --- Suburban V2H + Solar Pilot (EU)
A suburban pilot equipped households with bidirectional chargers, rooftop PV, and a simple home energy management system.
- Average system size: 7 kW PV + 11 kW V2H charger.
- Bill impact: median savings of 8---14% vs pre-pilot bills, with no major complaints on EV usability.
- Key driver: shifting car-charging and household loads away from evening peaks.
Case Study 2 --- Municipal Fleet V2G (US)
A city fleet of light-duty EVs participated in a demand-response and capacity programme through an aggregator.
- Fleet size: 120 vehicles, typical connection window 12---14 hours/day.
- Gross V2G revenue: USD 65---110/kW-year, net after fees --- USD 40---70/kW-year.
- Operational constraints: participation restricted to non-critical vehicles with predictable schedules.
Global Perspective: US vs EU vs Asia
Regional pathways for V2G are shaped by EV penetration, tariff design, and regulatory attention to flexibility. The US and parts of Europe are moving toward formal recognition of distributed resources, while Asian markets often focus on behind-the-meter resilience and pilot-scale flexibility.
- United States: Growing interest in V2H for resilience, especially in outage-prone regions; V2G pilots clustered around utilities and aggregators in states with strong DER policies.
- European Union: Emphasis on smart charging, flexibility platforms, and energy communities; increasing attention to how EVs interact with rooftop solar and local grid constraints.
- Asia: Early pilots linking V2H with severe weather resilience and microgrids; regulatory and market frameworks still forming in many jurisdictions.
Indicative Share of EV Fleet with Bidirectional Capability (%)
Source: Energy Solutions scenarios; technical capability, not necessarily active V2G participation.
Devil's Advocate: Technical, Regulatory, and OEM Constraints
Despite strong theoretical value, several risks and constraints currently limit V2G/V2H scaling:
- OEM warranty concerns: Not all manufacturers fully endorse V2G cycles within standard warranties, particularly where cycling profiles are aggressive.
- Hardware interoperability: Fragmentation in charger standards, communication protocols, and vehicle support complicates deployments.
- Regulatory clarity: In many markets, rules on exporting from EVs, metering, and settlement remain ambiguous, slowing commercial offers.
- Customer behaviour: Some drivers are reluctant to allow deep discharge of vehicle batteries, especially where access to public fast-charging is uneven.
Programmes that explicitly model battery health and incorporate conservative cycling strategies, transparent remuneration, and simple user experience are better placed to move beyond pilot status.
Outlook to 2030/2035: From Pilots to Portfolios
By 2030, bidirectional-capable EVs are expected to represent a meaningful minority of the global fleet. However, only a subset of these vehicles will be enrolled in V2G/V2H programmes. The most likely near-term growth areas are V2H for resilience and fleet V2G for depots with predictable schedules.
As tariff design, grid codes, and OEM warranties converge, V2G and V2H may become standard features in broader flexibility portfolios, alongside stationary storage, smart thermostats, and demand response. Tools such as the Solar ROI & LCOE Tool and Demand Response Planner will be central in structuring offers and communicating value to EV owners and fleets.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does V2H typically affect EV battery life?
Under moderate cycling strategies focused on evening peaks and occasional backup events, additional degradation is often estimated at 2---6% of pack lifetime over a decade. Aggressive daily cycling or poorly managed control strategies can materially increase this figure.
What hardware is needed for V2H or V2G at home?
A compatible EV, a certified bidirectional charger, and appropriate metering and protection equipment are required. In some markets, additional interconnection approvals or relay schemes are needed to satisfy grid codes and islanding requirements.
Are V2G revenues bankable from a lender's perspective?
Lenders often treat V2G revenues cautiously. Bankability improves when revenues come from long-term, rule-based programmes rather than short-term pilots, and when cycling profiles and warranty positions are clearly documented.
Which tools can help evaluate V2G/V2H business cases?
Analysts frequently use tariff and flexibility planners---such as demand response and bill analyzers---combined with EV battery cost models to quantify expected benefits, cycling, and long-term risk.
Methodology Note: The ranges and benchmarks in this report draw on Energy Solutions modelling, published pilot data, tariff structures, and anonymised fleet and residential profiles. Values are indicative and depend on specific EV models, charger characteristics, tariffs, and user behaviour; they should be interpreted as scenario guidance rather than precise forecasts.