Bosnia and Herzegovina Solar & Battery Guide

Quick Verdict

Solar panels: Very poor — only for energy independence Payback 30.8 years (reference model: 5 kWp, 8,500 kWh demand, no battery).
Batteries: Don't buy.
Key insight: Solar economics in this country depend on the combination of electricity prices, solar yields, and available subsidies. Use the calculator for a personalized assessment.

Key Statistics
30.8 yr
Simple Payback
€-4312
NPV (25yr, 6%)
€10c
Electricity / kWh
€0c
Feed-in / kWh
1250 kWh
Solar Yield / kWp
€1200
System Cost / kWp
45.8%
Self-Consumption
6,250 kWh
Annual Production

56%
Fossil Grid Mix
0%
Nuclear
43%
Renewable Grid
4 MWh
Household Elec/yr
65%
Heating of Total

Electricity Prices (2025–2026)

TariffPriceNotes
Standard residential €0.1/kWh Flat rate — same price 24/7
Feed-in (export) €0/kWh What the grid pays for excess solar
Gas ~€0.06/m³ ~10 kWh/m³

kWh = kilowatt-hour: The unit on your electricity bill. A 1,000-watt appliance running for one hour uses 1 kWh. An average European home uses about 250–350 kWh per month.

Feed-in tariff warning: The grid pays very little for your excess solar. Self-consumption is where almost all the value is.


Solar Potential

RegionSolar Output per kWp5 kWp System Annual
Bosnia and Herzegovina (average) 1250 kWh/yr 6,250 kWh

kWp (kilowatt-peak): The maximum power a solar system can produce in perfect midday sun. A 5 kWp system = roughly 12–15 panels. Think of it as the "engine size" of your solar setup.

Bosnia and Herzegovina has good solar potential. Above average for Europe.


Electricity Generation Mix

Understanding how Bosnia and Herzegovina generates its electricity helps explain why solar is (or isn't) incentivised.

SourceShare
Coal55.4%
Hydro36.6%
Solar PV4.1%

Source: Our World in Data (2025). Total generation: 14 TWh.

Fossil-heavy grid: Bosnia and Herzegovina relies heavily on coal and gas for electricity. Solar displaces expensive fossil fuel imports directly — strong economic and environmental case for rooftop PV.

Who Uses the Electricity?

SectorShare of Consumption
Industry22.9%
Residential (households)47.1%
Commercial & Public26%
Transport0.6%

A large share of electricity goes to households — meaning rooftop solar has a big addressable market.


Subsidies & Incentives

ProgramTypeStatusNotes
FBiH Prosumer Grant grant Active Up to BAM 7,000 (~€3,580) or 60% of investment cost for households consuming >5,500 kWh/year. Vulnerable households eligible at >3,500 kWh/year.
ERS On-Bill Financing loan Active Target: 50,000 residential systems (~250 MW) in Republika Srpska. Financed via electricity bills. World Bank co-financing.
World Bank SURE Project grant Active €232M IBRD loan + €5M household co-financing to scale residential solar across all entities.
Net Metering net-metering Active 1:1 kWh credit for up to 10.8 kW (FBiH) for 10 years, then net billing. Max 150 kW per plant.
VAT / sales tax17%StandardNo reduction identified

Reference Model Results

Using our calculator with a 5 kWp system, 8,500 kWh annual demand, no battery:

MetricValue
Annual generation6,250 kWh
Self-consumption45.8% (2,860 kWh)
Export54.2% (3,371 kWh)
Self-consumed value€275/year
Export value€0/year
Gross annual saving€275/year
Simple payback30.8 years
NPV (6%, 25 yr)€-4312
VerdictVery poor — only for energy independence

NPV: Net Present Value. Adds up 25 years of savings, discounted at 6%, and compares to keeping the money in the bank. Positive = solar beats the bank. Negative = you'd be better off investing elsewhere.


Battery Economics

Battery viability depends on whether time-of-use tariffs exist and the retail-to-feed-in price spread. Check the electricity price table above.


Country-Specific Considerations

Solar economics in this country depend on the combination of electricity prices, solar yields, and available subsidies. Use the calculator for a personalized assessment.

Grid Connection


Red Flags for Bosnia and Herzegovina Installers


When Solar Makes Sense in Bosnia and Herzegovina


Verdict Summary

StrategyPaybackNotes
5 kWp solar only30.8 yearsVery poor — only for energy independence
With batteryAdd 4–8 yearsDon't buy
With subsidiesSubtract 1–3 yearsCheck current programs
With EV chargingSubtract 1–2 yearsIncreases self-consumption

Solar economics in this country depend on the combination of electricity prices, solar yields, and available subsidies. Use the calculator for a personalized assessment.


Data as of: 2026-05. Prices and subsidies change — verify with local sources before making decisions.