Solar panels for your Filipino home, without the guesswork
If your MERALCO bill keeps climbing, solar is worth a serious look — but only if the numbers work for your specific home. This is the homeowner's starting point: estimate your savings, learn how net metering and financing work, and connect with a trusted installer only when you are ready.
The three questions every homeowner asks
Going solar comes down to three honest questions. Apolaki is built to answer all three before anyone tries to sell you anything.
- Do the numbers work for my home? Your bill-backed report shows cost, savings and payback for your roof.
- How do I pay for it? Compare cash, loan and zero-down subscription as a monthly figure against your current bill.
- Who do I trust to install it? Connect with a screened installer, on your terms, with no cold calls.
Typical home systems in the Philippines
Most Filipino homes land between a 3 kWp entry system and a 10 kWp system, depending on the bill and daytime usage. As a rough guide, installed cost runs around ₱50,000 per kWp, and a well-sized grid-tied system with net metering commonly pays back in about three to five years. Your actual figures depend on your roof, your utility and how much of your power you use during daylight — which is exactly what the assessment works out for you.
Homeowner questions
How much do solar panels cost for a Philippine home?
As a planning figure, roughly ₱50,000 per kWp installed — so about ₱150,000 for a 3 kWp starter system and ₱250,000 for 5 kWp. Your assessment gives a range for your specific roof.
How much can I save on my electricity bill?
It depends on your bill and daytime usage, but many homes offset well over half their bill. The assessment estimates your monthly savings from your real bill rather than an average.
Do I need batteries?
Not for savings. A grid-tied system with net metering credits your excess to the grid, which is usually the most cost-effective setup. Batteries mainly add backup during brownouts.
Is my roof suitable for solar?
Most concrete and metal roofs with reasonable sun exposure work well. The assessment checks your rooftop against Google Solar data, and an installer confirms on a site visit.
Start with your bill.
Enter your real monthly bill and your roof. In a few minutes you get a clear, no-hype readiness report — cost, savings and payback for your home. Free. No cold calls.