The Jousto Energy Hub is your home's energy brain, automatically optimising solar, battery, and appliances to slash power bills and boost self-sufficiency.
Diminishing feed-in tariffs and wasted energy are costing Australian homeowners thousands.
Remember when feeding solar into the grid actually paid off? Those days are fading fast. A decade ago, you might've earned 50–60¢/kWh for exports; now many Aussies get as little as 5¢ – or even near $0.
Worse, you still pay high rates when the sun isn't shining. Peak-time electricity in the evening can cost 30–40¢/kWh (or even more on hot days), while your midday solar earns next to nothing.
It's a classic mismatch: solar when you don't fully need it, expensive grid power when you do. The result? Underperforming solar investments and the sinking feeling that you're not getting the savings you hoped for.
Your home's energy brain that automatically manages when to use, store, or share energy.
The Jousto Energy Hub is a compact plug-and-play device (built on the powerful Home Assistant Green hardware) that plugs into your router and immediately gets to work connecting all your energy equipment.
Think of Jousto Hub as the conductor of your home energy orchestra: it listens to your solar inverter, battery, EV charger, thermostats, smart plugs – and decides the optimal way to distribute energy moment by moment.
By monitoring your solar output, home consumption, battery level, and even external signals like electricity tariffs or weather forecasts, Jousto orchestrates your devices with precision.
Whenever the sun is shining and your panels are generating more power than your home is using, Jousto springs into action to use that surplus on-site.
Your EV can be scheduled to start charging late morning and pause in the afternoon exactly following your solar curve. If a cloud passes over, Jousto can momentarily pause the EV charger.
Jousto is constantly aware of the time and price of energy and will schedule or automate accordingly, ensuring your battery charges during cheap periods and discharges during expensive peaks.
The Hub's built-in energy monitoring dashboard gives you real-time and historical insight into your generation, usage, imports/exports, and savings.
Jousto Energy Hub seamlessly integrates with your solar system, battery storage, heat pumps, EV chargers, and more.
Jousto works with most solar inverters including Fronius, SolarEdge, SMA, Enphase, GoodWe, Sungrow, and Growatt.
Learn MoreIntegrate with EV chargers such as Zappi, Wallbox, Tesla, ChargePoint and others to charge your vehicle with excess solar.
Learn MoreCompatible with Tesla Powerwall, LG Chem, Sonnen and many other battery systems to optimize charging and discharging.
Learn MoreControl your heat pump hot water system to heat water using excess solar power during the day.
Learn MoreWhy Australian homeowners choose Jousto Energy Hub
By using more of your own solar power (and buying less from the grid), you can slash your electricity bills by up to 70–90% in the right setup.
Energy prices and plans are getting more complex. Jousto keeps you ahead of the curve, automatically adapting to any tariff structure.
It's painful seeing your solar exports earn 5¢ while you later buy electricity at 30¢. Jousto puts an end to that waste by finding uses for surplus solar.
By combining solar, storage, and smart controls, you move towards true grid independence. Many Jousto users cover the vast majority of their needs with sunshine.
No more rushing to turn things on/off at certain times. Jousto's automations run quietly in the background, making micro-adjustments every minute.
Built on Home Assistant's open platform, Jousto is inherently flexible and future-proof. Adding a battery next year? It'll integrate. Switching to an EV? No problem.
The Jousto Energy Hub makes your home's devices work in unison, ensuring every ray of sunshine is put to work for you.
The display shows solar power flowing to charge an EV and top up the battery while powering the home, with minimal draw from the grid.
Get Started Today"I used to export most of my solar for a measly 5 cents. What a waste! Since installing Jousto, my pool pump and water heater automatically run on sunshine, and my battery is always strategically charged. Last quarter, my grid imports were almost zero and my bill was $22 – down from $380 the same period last year. I feel like I'm finally getting full value from my solar."
"We're not tech people, so I was a bit nervous about the 'smart home' aspect. But Jousto made it incredibly easy. They set everything up – our EV charger, the ducted air conditioning, even a couple of smart plugs for our dishwasher and dryer. Now it's like our house runs itself in sync with the solar. I especially love the dashboard; seeing 'Grid: 0 kW' and 'Savings: $1.50 today' by midday gives me a little thrill. In the first 6 weeks we already saved $200 on electricity."
"I considered joining a VPP (virtual power plant) program, but I didn't like the idea of someone else controlling my battery for their benefit. Jousto was the perfect alternative – I stay in control of my battery, but it still does all the smart charge/discharge at the right times. When wholesale prices spiked to $5/kWh one evening, I watched on the app as my house seamlessly switched to battery and even sold a bit back – all automatically. No bill shock for me. This tech is a game-changer for anyone on a plan like Amber."
Not necessarily. While having a battery or EV unlocks the full potential (by providing more storage for excess solar and flexibility), Jousto can deliver great value even with just rooftop solar and some smart appliances. It will still manage your hot water system, pool pump, air conditioning, etc. to maximise solar self-use and minimise peak grid use.
Many customers start with Jousto on solar-only; the system is ready to integrate a battery or EV whenever you add one. Plus, Jousto's smart control can help you determine the optimal battery size if you decide to get one – you'll clearly see how much surplus solar you have to store.
Think of those as pieces of the puzzle, while Jousto is the glue that brings it all together. A typical inverter or battery app might show you basic status and allow some limited scheduling, but they operate in silos. For example, your inverter can't know when your EV is plugged in, and your battery might not know your time-of-use tariff schedule – so they can't coordinate.
Jousto, on the other hand, monitors everything and can control multiple devices in concert. It's the difference between having isolated smart devices vs. a truly smart home energy system. Also, many built-in inverter "smart" functions are quite rudimentary or inflexible. Jousto's logic is far more advanced and customisable.
In all likelihood, yes! Jousto is built on Home Assistant which has thousands of integrations. We specifically support popular Australian inverter brands like Fronius, SolarEdge, SMA, Enphase, GoodWe, Sungrow, Growatt, etc., as well as Tesla Powerwall, LG Chem, Sonnen and many other battery systems. EV chargers such as Zappi, Wallbox, Tesla, ChargePoint and others can interface too.
Even if a device isn't directly integrated, we can often communicate via open standards (Modbus, MQTT, WiFi APIs) or add an intermediary smart switch. The philosophy is: if there's a way to get data from it or send commands to it, Jousto will make it work.
You'll receive a small hardware hub (the size of a TV box) that runs the Home Assistant-based Jousto software. It comes pre-loaded with our Jousto Energy Automation profile and pre-configured for your setup (we discuss your devices and programs beforehand).
The package includes remote onboarding support – an expert will help you connect the hub to your home network and link your inverter, battery, etc., typically via a secure cloud link. You also get our Tier 1 Smart Automation Service included, which means we set up 3–5 core automations tailored to your needs and provide ongoing chat/email support to adjust things.
Essentially, it's a turnkey solution: hardware + software + configuration service. You can self-install the hub in minutes (it's basically plug in power and Ethernet), or opt for a professional install if you want hands-off.
No – Jousto operates non-invasively. We integrate via the standard communication interfaces provided by your devices (for example, reading data via Ethernet/WiFi APIs, sending commands through official channels). We don't "hack" or alter your inverter's internal settings in any unsupported way.
In fact, the automations we perform (like adjusting a battery's charge/discharge setpoint or turning an EV charger on/off) are analogous to what a user might do manually with the manufacturer's app – just automated and smarter. This means it preserves compliance and warranty.
Absolutely. We designed Jousto for regular homeowners, not just gadget geeks. If you can use a smartphone, you can use Jousto. The beauty is that after installation, you don't have to actively do much at all – that's the point of automation!
The interface you'll see is a clean dashboard with intuitive icons for solar, home, battery, grid, etc., and simple controls like on/off toggles or mode selections (e.g., "Max Savings mode" vs "Comfort mode"). And remember, our team is here to support you. We will handle all the complex configuration in the background.
It's easy to get started with Jousto Energy Hub.
Chat with our energy experts to discuss your home setup and goals. We'll give honest advice on how Jousto can help and what kind of savings to expect in your scenario.
We'll pre-configure it and ship it to your door. (Installation can be DIY in 10 minutes or arranged with a pro – your choice.)
Our team will guide you through connecting the hub and will fine-tune the automations to fit your lifestyle. It's a white-glove, hassle-free process.
Watch as your solar self-consumption soars, your bills plummet, and your home runs smoother than ever. You'll wonder how you lived without it!
Don't let another summer go by where you're dumping excess solar back to the grid for crumbs while paying through the nose after dark. With the Jousto Energy Hub, you can turn the tables on big utilities: you decide how to use your power, you keep the savings.
Join the energy revolution that thousands of Australian homeowners are already discovering.
Negative electricity prices might sound like a strange concept—after all, we are used to paying for electricity, not being paid to use it. However, in certain situations, electricity prices can drop below zero, meaning that power generators are effectively paying consumers to take electricity off the grid.
While this may seem like a financial win for consumers, the reality is more complex. Negative electricity prices are a sign of market imbalances, and they have significant implications for energy producers, businesses, and households.
In this article, we will explain why electricity prices go negative, what happens when they do, and how consumers can take advantage of these rare events.
Electricity prices are determined by supply and demand. Normally, when demand increases, prices rise, and when demand falls, prices drop. However, in some cases, supply can far exceed demand, leading to negative pricing. This happens for a few key reasons:
Renewable energy sources like solar and wind generate electricity whenever conditions allow, regardless of demand. If the grid receives an excess of renewable energy—especially during periods of low demand—prices can drop below zero.
For example:
Solar energy oversupply – On sunny days, solar panels can generate more electricity than is needed, particularly around midday when demand is lower.
Strong wind conditions – Wind turbines continue generating power as long as the wind blows, sometimes producing excess electricity overnight when demand is low.
Since renewable energy has very low operating costs and does not shut down easily, generators may keep supplying electricity even when demand drops, leading to negative pricing.
Some traditional power plants, such as nuclear and coal-fired stations, cannot quickly adjust their output. Unlike gas plants, which can ramp production up and down easily, these facilities may find it more expensive to shut down and restart than to continue running even when demand is low.
As a result, they may sell electricity at negative prices just to keep operating, rather than shutting down temporarily and incurring higher restart costs later.
Electricity demand fluctuates throughout the day and across seasons. Negative pricing is more likely to occur:
At night, when households and businesses use less electricity but some generators continue operating.
On mild weather days, when there is little need for heating or cooling.
During holidays and weekends, when industrial and commercial demand is lower than usual.
Even if there is excess electricity in one region, it cannot always be transported to areas where demand is higher. Grid constraints and transmission bottlenecks can prevent surplus electricity from reaching consumers, causing localised negative pricing.
Some renewable energy generators receive subsidies or incentives for producing electricity, even if there is no demand for it. This means they may continue supplying power even at negative prices because they still receive financial benefits from government schemes or contracts.
When electricity prices go negative, different groups experience different effects. Here’s what happens for various stakeholders:
If you are on a wholesale electricity plan or a dynamic pricing contract, you might actually get paid to use electricity when prices go negative. This can be a great opportunity to:
Charge battery storage systems for later use.
Run high-energy appliances, such as washing machines or electric heaters.
Charge electric vehicles (EVs) at no cost—or even get paid to do so.
However, most residential consumers are on fixed-rate electricity plans, meaning they won’t directly benefit from negative prices unless their provider offers time-of-use pricing.
Battery storage systems, such as those integrated with Jousto, can take full advantage of negative prices by charging when electricity is free or even profitable to store. Later, when prices rise, stored energy can be used instead of drawing from the grid.
For businesses and homeowners with battery storage, this means:
Lower electricity costs overall.
Reduced reliance on the grid during peak pricing periods.
The potential to sell stored energy back to the grid at a profit.
Negative pricing can be problematic for renewable energy producers, especially those without energy storage. In many cases, they may be forced to:
Continue generating electricity at a loss.
Shut down temporarily if possible (which is easier for solar than for wind).
Look for alternative ways to use excess power, such as selling to battery operators or hydrogen producers.
For coal, nuclear, and some gas power plants, negative pricing is a sign of inefficiency. Since these plants cannot quickly reduce output, they may be forced to operate at a loss or pay others to take their electricity. Over time, repeated negative pricing events can make these power stations less viable and accelerate the shift towards more flexible energy solutions.
Energy traders and market operators monitor negative pricing closely. When prices go negative, electricity retailers and large industrial consumers may increase their usage to take advantage of the situation. At the same time, energy storage operators can charge their batteries and prepare to sell electricity back to the grid when prices rise again.
If you are a consumer or business looking to make the most of negative electricity prices, here are some practical steps:
Jousto’s intelligent energy management system can automatically optimise when you consume electricity based on price fluctuations. This ensures you are using or storing electricity at the most cost-effective times.
Battery storage allows you to take full advantage of negative prices by charging when electricity is free and discharging when prices rise. Visit Jousto to learn how battery storage can save you money.
Some energy retailers offer wholesale electricity pricing, which gives consumers direct access to market price fluctuations. This can be beneficial if you have flexible energy usage habits.
If you know when negative pricing is likely to occur, plan high-energy activities such as:
Charging electric vehicles.
Running air conditioning or heating systems.
Operating heavy machinery (for businesses).
Understanding market trends can help businesses and households plan for negative price events. Many energy providers and government websites offer real-time electricity price tracking.
As renewable energy capacity grows and battery storage technology improves, negative electricity prices may become more common. Future developments to watch include:
Better grid management – Smarter energy distribution and demand-response programs will help reduce price volatility.
Wider adoption of battery storage – More homes and businesses investing in energy storage will help stabilise supply and demand.
Dynamic pricing models for consumers – More energy providers may offer flexible pricing plans that allow consumers to benefit from negative prices.
Negative electricity prices are a fascinating aspect of modern energy markets, reflecting the growing influence of renewable energy and the challenges of balancing supply and demand. While they present difficulties for power generators, they offer exciting opportunities for consumers, businesses, and battery storage users.
With the right strategies—such as using energy storage, adopting smart energy management systems like Jousto, and shifting energy usage—consumers can turn negative electricity prices into a financial advantage. As the energy landscape evolves, those who embrace flexibility and innovation will be best positioned to benefit.
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185 Morphett St, Adelaide, SA, 5000