The soaring prices of electricity rates in Pakistan coupled with the extreme heat waves during summers are pushing the residential as well as commercial consumers to think of investing in a rooftop solar system for the first time. But if you will be switching to renewable energy this season, getting a grip of the drastically changed regulatory environment is of the utmost importance. The Prosumer Regulations 2026 have superseded the previous decade-old net metering regulations of NEPRA, which were first introduced in 2015. This policy shift fundamentally structuralizes how power is exchanged with the national grid, reshaping your monthly return on investment (ROI).
Net Metering vs. Net Billing: The Big 2026 Policy Shift
Until recently, solar consumers in Pakistan benefited from a traditional “net metering” mechanism operating on a “unit-for-unit” exchange swap (1:1 ratio). Under that old setup, if your array exported 100 units to the national grid during peak daylight hours and your household imported 100 units from the grid at night, your net consumption balance dropped to zero.
Under the new 2026 framework, net metering has been permanently replaced by a “Net Billing” system. All grid accounts are now calculated using a financial credit value rather than an equivalent energy unit volume:
- Low Export Tariff: When your solar system exports surplus electricity back to your local Distribution Company (DISCO like LESCO, IESCO, or K-Electric), the government purchases it at the National Average Energy Price, which sits around Rs. 11 to Rs. 13 per unit.
- High Import Retail Tariff: Conversely, when you pull electricity from the grid at night or during peak operational hours, you are billed the full commercial retail rate, currently fluctuating between Rs. 40 and Rs. 55 per unit (inclusive of standard taxes and surcharges).
This means, if you want to pay for 1 unit from the national grid at night, the rooftop system will have to pay for 4-5 units at peak daylight time. For the official legal updates and detailed operational terms and conditions please visit the NEPRA Official Portal and check the statutory updates.
Contract Duration and New Solar Induction Fees
NEPRA’s updated regulatory roadmap introduces two additional structural constraints that prospective solar buyers must account for:
- Shortened Agreement Lifespans: Standard net energy contracts between consumers and DISCOs were previously locked in for 7 fixed years. Under the new guidelines, the binding duration for new net billing applications has been trimmed down to 5 years, after which strict renewal evaluations apply.
- Previous exemptions on small-scale residential installations are removed under the new regulations. Today mandatory processing registration fees and induction charges, which are calculated at a per-kilowatt basis, also apply to smaller household arrays (less than 25 kilowatts or kW).
If you want to track dynamic tariff brackets, seasonal slab adjustments, or standard regional distribution fee updates across local networks, you can explore the centralized informational index provided by the Ministry of Energy (Power Division) Government of Pakistan.
Maximizing Your Financial Savings Under the New System
Due to this structural shift from unit swaps to monetary netting, the financial payback window (ROI timeline) for standard on-grid solar systems has expanded from 2.5 years up to 4 to 5 years. Nevertheless, considering the high baselines of conventional grid electricity, micro-generation remains highly lucrative over a long-term horizon.
Consumers need to shift their energy use practices to “Self-Consumption” to achieve maximum cost-effective energy use under these new surcharges. This implies careful planning of heavy electrical demands (local cooling units, air conditioners, deep water pumps etc.) to be made during daylight hours so they do not require the use of costly imports from the night time grid. Moreover, the combination of new lithium battery storage banks with hybrid systems is emerging as the preferred solution to keep free solar energy available for use at night.






