Two solar battery ads can use almost the exact same words, “no interest,” “no upfront cost,” “bundled solar and battery deal”, and one of them can be a genuinely good offer while the other is a trap designed to look like one. The marketing language alone won’t tell you which is which. What matters is what’s actually behind the claim, and whether the installer can back it up in writing.
With battery rebates now bigger and more widely available than ever, this matters more than usual. Marketing around batteries has gotten louder as demand has surged, and phrases like “free solar” and “no-interest finance” show up constantly in ads. Some of those claims are genuine. Plenty aren’t. Ruling out an entire category of deal just because a scammer once used the same words isn’t the answer; you need a way to actually tell the difference.
Here’s how to separate the real thing from the imitation, case by case.
“No-interest finance”
What a legitimate version looks like: Some finance offers are genuinely interest-free, most commonly when they’re tied to a subsidised or government-backed loan product, such as a state-based low-interest home energy loan scheme. In these cases, the rate really is zero (or close to it) because a third party, not the retailer, is absorbing the cost.
What the red flag version looks like: Plenty of “interest-free” plans advertised directly by an installer or a private finance partner simply build the cost of that financing into a higher purchase price. The customer pays no visible interest, but only because the “cash price” was never on offer to begin with.
How to tell them apart: Ask for the cash price and the financed price side by side, in writing. If they’re identical, that’s your answer, the interest cost hasn’t disappeared, it’s just been hidden inside the sticker price. A legitimate interest-free offer should show a genuine cash-price discount if you choose to pay upfront instead.
“Free solar” or “no net cost” bundles
What a legitimate version looks like: With the current level of rebate stacking available, particularly for correctly sized systems that qualify for multiple incentives, it’s entirely possible for the combined rebate to cover most or even all of the upfront cost on paper. When that’s genuinely the case, the installer should be able to show you exactly how.
What the red flag version looks like: A vague “free” or “no net cost” claim with no itemised breakdown is a warning sign regardless of whether it turns out to be true. Even if the underlying maths works out, an installer who won’t show their working is asking you to trust the headline rather than the arithmetic.
How to tell them apart: Insist on an itemised, written quote that shows the gross price of the system, each rebate applied and its dollar value, and the resulting net cost. If an installer hesitates to provide this, or gives you a single bottom-line number without the breakdown, treat that as the actual problem, not the word “free” itself.
Bundled solar and battery deals
What a legitimate version looks like: Pairing solar and battery in a single install can genuinely save money, shared labour costs, one visit instead of two, and in some cases, a specific bonus incentive for installing both together. Done properly, this is a real saving, not a trick.
What the red flag version looks like: The same bundling can be used to push a system that’s oversized or mismatched for the property, not because the household needs that much capacity, but because a bigger bundle hits a higher rebate threshold or a better commission for the seller.
How to tell them apart: Ask the installer to explain how the system size was chosen. A legitimate quote will reference your actual electricity usage, your roof space, and your household’s consumption patterns. A red flag quote will reference rebate thresholds and little else. If nobody has asked about your energy bills before quoting you a system size, that’s worth questioning.
The real filter
None of this comes down to which words appear in the ad. “No interest,” “free,” and “bundled” are just marketing shorthand, and shorthand can describe an honest deal just as easily as a dishonest one.
What actually separates the two is much simpler: can the installer explain, clearly and without pushback, exactly how they got from the full price of the system to the number they’re quoting you? A legitimate offer survives that question easily. A dressed-up one usually can’t answer it at all, or answers it in a way that quietly changes once you start asking. That willingness to explain, not the phrase that caught your attention in the first place, is the real thing worth watching for.
Not sure how to read a quote you’ve already been given? Get a personalised solar and battery quote and see how it compares.
The post “No Interest,” “Free Solar,” “Bundled Deal”: How To Tell A Good Battery Offer From A Bad One appeared first on Energy Matters.


















