🛠️ How-To Guides

Net Metering in UP: How All 6 DISCOMs Handle Your Solar Export

👤 SolarSahi Team
📅 May 2026
🔄 Regular updates
✓ Market verified

APPC rate UPRs 3-4 per unit
🏙️DISCOMs coveredAll 6 UP DISCOMs
📊Billing cycleMonthly + annual
⏱️Net meter install7-25 days by DISCOM
Max system sizeUp to 500 kW

Net Metering in UP: How All 6 DISCOMs Handle Your Solar Export

Residential system installed or plannedNet metering is mandatory for all grid-connected residential solar in UP under UPERC rules.

Understanding APPC rate before installingSelf-consumption at Rs 7-8/unit always beats export at Rs 3-4/unit. Design accordingly.

Wanting to maximise financial returnShifting heavy appliances to solar hours is the single most impactful financial optimisation.

Expecting to profit primarily from grid exportExport rate Rs 3-4/unit is half your retail rate. Self-consumption is always the better strategy.

Gross metering for residential systemUPERC mandates net metering for residential. Gross metering applies to larger commercial systems.

Assuming net meter is automatic post-installDISCOM must physically install the bi-directional meter. This takes 7-25 days and needs follow-up.

Net metering is the mechanism that makes residential solar financially compelling. Without it, all the electricity your panels generate but do not immediately consume would be wasted. With it, surplus generation flows to the grid, earns you credits, and reduces your monthly electricity bill.

In Uttar Pradesh, net metering is governed by UPERC, the Uttar Pradesh Electricity Regulatory Commission, and is mandatory for all six UP DISCOMs. But how each DISCOM actually implements net metering, processing timelines, billing cycles, and practical steps, differs meaningfully. This guide explains both the rules and the practical realities for each DISCOM.

What Net Metering Is and How It Works in UP

When your solar panels generate more electricity than your home consumes at that moment, the surplus flows back to your DISCOM’s grid through a bi-directional (net) meter. The meter records:

  • Import: Units you consume from the grid (mainly at night, cloudy days, or when consumption exceeds generation)
  • Export: Units your panels send to the grid (mainly during sunny daytime hours when generation exceeds consumption)

At the end of each billing cycle, you are charged for net units: Import minus Export. If imports exceed exports, you pay for the difference at your regular tariff. If exports exceed imports in a given month, the surplus credit carries forward to the next month.

At the end of the financial year (March 31), any remaining credit balance is settled by the DISCOM at the APPC rate, the Average Pooled Power Purchase Cost, which is approximately Rs 3-4 per unit for UP’s DISCOMs. This is significantly lower than your retail tariff of Rs 6-9 per unit, which is why financial planning around maximising daytime self-consumption always beats maximising grid export.

Net Metering Rules in UP Under UPERC Regulations

Key regulatory parameters set by UPERC that apply to all six UP DISCOMs:

Parameter UP Rule
Maximum system size for net metering Up to 500 kW for residential (residential consumers typically limited to connection load)
Maximum system size relative to sanctioned load System capacity must not exceed your sanctioned connection load in kW
Billing cycle Monthly
Annual surplus settlement rate APPC rate (approximately Rs 3-4/unit, varies by DISCOM)
Net meter type Bi-directional smart meter (installed by DISCOM at their cost)
Connection categories eligible Residential (LMV-1), small commercial (LMV-2), others with separate rules
💡
Since exported units earn Rs 3-4 per unit at APPC rate versus Rs 6-9 per unit at your retail tariff, every unit you consume directly from your panels is worth twice what you would earn from exporting it. Shift your heavy loads to solar hours and maximise the financial return.
SolarSahi market data

DISCOM-Wise Net Metering: Practical Realities

LESA: Lucknow Electricity Supply Administration

Coverage Lucknow city
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline Fastest in UP: approximately 22-40 days from commissioning report submission to net meter installation
Billing Monthly, with annual true-up in April
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3-3.5 per unit
LESA’s advantage The highest installation volume in UP has forced LESA to develop efficient solar processing workflows. Lucknow homeowners get the fastest net metering experience in the state.
Practical tip for LESA consumers After commissioning report submission, track LESA’s scheduled inspection date through the PM Surya Ghar portal. If the inspection is delayed beyond 15 days, follow up with the LESA solar cell at their divisional office.

KESCO: Kanpur Electricity Supply Company

Coverage Kanpur city
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline 30-55 days from commissioning report to net meter
Billing Monthly, annual true-up
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3.2-3.8 per unit
Key note KESCO processes solar applications through its commercial circle office in Kanpur. Your vendor should submit the commissioning report to the correct circle office for your area within Kanpur city.

PVVNL: Pashchimanchal Vidyut Vitaran Nigam

Coverage Meerut, Ghaziabad, Saharanpur, Moradabad, Hapur, Bulandshahr, and western UP
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline 25-45 days in Meerut and Ghaziabad; longer in smaller towns
Billing Monthly, annual true-up
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3.2-3.8 per unit
Key note PVVNL covers a geographically large zone. Processing efficiency is higher in Meerut and Ghaziabad due to higher volume. Saharanpur and Moradabad consumers may see longer timelines.

MVVNL: Madhyanchal Vidyut Vitaran Nigam

Coverage Bareilly, Sitapur, Lakhimpur Kheri, Hardoi, Shahjahanpur, and central UP
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline 40-65 days: one of the slower DISCOMs for solar processing
Billing Monthly, annual true-up
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3.2-3.6 per unit
Key note MVVNL’s large rural coverage area means its solar processing capacity is less developed in smaller towns. Bareilly city is better served than rural MVVNL areas. Follow up persistently after commissioning report submission.

PuVVNL: Purvanchal Vidyut Vitaran Nigam

Coverage Varanasi, Gorakhpur, Prayagraj, Azamgarh, Jaunpur, Chandauli, and eastern UP
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline 35-60 days in major cities; longer in rural areas
Billing Monthly, annual true-up
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3-3.5 per unit
Key note PuVVNL covers UP’s large eastern region with significant rural load. Varanasi and Prayagraj are better served than smaller PuVVNL towns. The PuVVNL headquarter in Varanasi provides somewhat more responsive processing for Varanasi city applications.

DVVNL: Dakshinanchal Vidyut Vitaran Nigam

Coverage Agra, Aligarh, Jhansi, Mathura, Firozabad, Hathras, and southern UP
Feasibility-to-net-meter timeline 35-55 days in major cities
Billing Monthly, annual true-up
APPC rate Approximately Rs 3.2-3.8 per unit
Key note DVVNL covers significant industrial and rural load in southern UP. Agra city has seen higher solar adoption and correspondingly better DVVNL solar processing capacity. Jhansi and rural DVVNL areas have longer timelines.

How Net Metering Billing Actually Works: A Worked Example

Let us trace a complete billing year for a 3 kW system in Lucknow under LESA.

System: 3 kW, annual generation approximately 4,600 units

Household monthly consumption: 380 units

Month Solar Generation Home Consumption Net Export (+) / Import (-) Bill Status
April 420 350 +70 (surplus) Credit: 70 units
May 440 430 +10 Credit: 80 units
June 400 500 -100 (import) Net: -20 units, pay Rs 140
July 240 350 -110 Net: -130 units, pay Rs 910
August 220 300 -80 Net: -210 units, pay Rs 560
September 400 330 +70 Credit: -140 units (pay Rs 980 and credit 70)
October 420 300 +120 Credit: 190 units
November 350 280 +70 Credit: 260 units
December 290 340 -50 Net: 210 units
January 280 360 -80 Net: 130 units
February 320 340 -20 Net: 110 units
March 380 330 +50 Year-end credit: 160 units

Year-end settlement: 160 units remaining credit settled at Rs 3.5/unit = Rs 560 paid to homeowner by LESA.

Annual net savings: Sum of reduced bills across the year plus year-end settlement. In this example, approximately Rs 28,000-32,000 annual saving depending on exact tariff slabs.

Self-Consumption Optimisation: Getting the Most From Net Metering

Since exported units are worth Rs 3-4 at APPC settlement versus Rs 6-9 if consumed directly, maximising daytime self-consumption always beats maximising export. Practical steps for UP homeowners:

Shift heavy appliances to daytime hours (9 AM to 3 PM) Washing machine, water heater, dishwasher, air conditioner, and water pump should run during solar generation hours whenever possible.
Charge batteries and EVs during peak solar hours If you have a home battery or EV charger, schedule charging from approximately 10 AM to 2 PM.
Programme inverter for self-consumption priority mode Most quality inverters allow setting self-consumption priority. Verify your vendor has configured this correctly during installation.
Monitor your generation vs consumption A monitoring app linked to your inverter (most Tier-1 brands include this) lets you see real-time generation and adjust your usage patterns accordingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between net metering and gross metering in UP?
Under net metering (current standard for residential in UP), you are billed only on the difference between import and export. Under gross metering, all your generation goes to the grid and all your consumption comes from the grid: you are paid for everything you generate and charged for everything you consume. UPERC regulations currently mandate net metering for residential systems. Gross metering applies to some larger commercial/industrial systems.

My solar system is generating but my bill has not changed. Is the net meter working?
Confirm with your DISCOM that the net meter has been activated in their billing system after installation. Sometimes there is a 1-2 billing cycle lag between physical meter installation and billing system activation. Check your meter reading directly: the bi-directional meter shows both import and export registers.

Can a DISCOM refuse to install a net meter?
Under UPERC regulations (uperc.org), DISCOMs are obligated to install net meters for eligible rooftop solar installations. Refusal or unreasonable delay can be escalated to UPERC as a consumer complaint.

Does monsoon affect net metering settlement?
Yes, in July-August, most homeowners import more than they export due to lower solar generation. These months typically result in a net payment to the DISCOM. The surplus from April-June and September-November compensates over the full year.

Apni solar savings calculate karo Free. Koi signup nahi. Real numbers.
Calculator kholo →