Residential Solar
Solar for Homes in Uganda
A properly sized hybrid solar system keeps your home powered through Kampala's evening blackouts, slashes your Yaka bill, and never needs you to babysit it.
NilePhase Energy has designed and installed hybrid solar systems across Uganda for homes ranging from one-bedroom apartments in Ntinda to four-bedroom family homes in Muyenga, Naalya and Kira. A residential hybrid system is not complicated: panels on the roof generate electricity during the day, a lithium battery bank stores the surplus for evenings, and your Yaka meter stays as a fallback for nights after bad weather. Most Kampala homeowners see their Yaka bill drop by 50–70% in month one.
What size solar system does a Ugandan home need?
- Home Essential (1.5–3 kW, 3–5 kWh): lights, fans, phones, router, small TV. 8–10 hours backup. Starting UGX 5.5M installed.
- Home Comfort (3–5 kW, 5–10 kWh): adds fridge, large TV, small AC. 6–12 hours backup. Starting UGX 10M installed.
- Home Full Power (5–8 kW, 10–20 kWh): whole-house coverage including kitchen loads. All-day solar with 10+ hour battery backup. Starting UGX 18M installed.
What you receive at handover
FAQ
Homes & Residences solar — common questions
How much does a solar system for a home cost in Uganda? +
A small backup system (1.5–3 kW with 3–5 kWh lithium storage) runs UGX 5.5–8M installed. A whole-house hybrid (5 kW, 10 kWh) runs UGX 10–18M. These are 2026 prices for Tier-1 components with full commissioning and documentation. Prices quoted without a load assessment are guesses.
Will solar actually pay for itself in a Kampala home? +
For most Kampala homeowners paying mid-range Yaka tariffs and using a generator for backup, a hybrid solar system pays back in 5–7 years. After payback, your electricity costs drop by 70%+ for the remaining 15+ year system life. Battery replacement (once, at year 8–12) is a one-time cost.
Do I need to disconnect from Yaka (UEDCL) when I install solar? +
No. A hybrid inverter sits between your Yaka meter and your house, switching automatically between solar, battery, and grid. You keep your Yaka connection as a fallback and pay only for the small amount of grid electricity you still draw — typically 30–50% of your previous bill.
What happens to my solar system if there is heavy rain or many cloudy days? +
During extended cloudy periods, your solar generation drops and the battery charges more slowly. The hybrid inverter automatically tops up from Yaka when needed — you may notice a slightly higher Yaka bill during a bad rainy-season month, but the system never leaves you without power. We size battery banks for typical Uganda rainy-season irradiance, not just sunny-day performance.
More questions? Read our complete solar guide or get a free quote.
Ready to solve your homes & residences power challenge?
Tell us your load, your site, and your budget. We come back with a specific technical proposal.