🇮🇳 India Regulatory Guide 14 min read

PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana 2026

Complete guide to PM Surya Ghar scheme: Rs. 78,000 max subsidy for 3 kW, eligibility rules, national portal application process, DISCOM approval steps.

Rainer Neumann

Written by

Rainer Neumann

Content Head · SurgePV

Keyur Rakholiya

Reviewed by

Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Published ·Last reviewed ·Regulator: Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)

India’s PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana is the single largest residential solar subsidy programme ever launched in the country. Announced by the Prime Minister in February 2024, the scheme targets 1 crore (10 million) households, offers central subsidies of up to Rs. 78,000 per installation, and promises 300 units of free electricity per month.

For solar installers in India, PM Surya Ghar shapes every residential rooftop conversation. Understanding the scheme mechanics — subsidy structure, eligibility, the national portal workflow, and common pitfalls — is now a core business skill.

Scheme
PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana
Launch Date
February 2024
Target
1 crore (10 million) households
Maximum Subsidy
Rs. 78,000 for 3 kW residential system
National Portal
Implementing Agency
MNRE + State DISCOMs

Subsidy Structure

The central financial assistance (CFA) is structured by system size:

System SizeCFA RateCFA Amount
First 2 kWRs. 30,000 per kWRs. 60,000
Third kW (2–3 kW)Rs. 18,000 per kWRs. 18,000
Above 3 kWNil
Maximum CFARs. 78,000

A consumer installing a 3 kW system at Rs. 70,000 per kW gross cost:

  • Gross system cost: Rs. 2,10,000
  • Central CFA: Rs. 78,000
  • Net cost to consumer: Rs. 1,32,000 (before state subsidy)

With a state top-up (e.g., Karnataka’s Rs. 10,000–Rs. 20,000 subsidy), the net cost drops further.

Subsidy Is Paid to the Consumer, Not the Installer

The CFA is disbursed directly to the customer’s registered bank account within 30 days of the DISCOM uploading the commissioning report. Installers cannot claim the subsidy on behalf of customers. Do not net the subsidy against your invoice — bill at full cost and explain how the customer will receive the CFA separately.

Eligibility Criteria

Who qualifies:

  • Residential households with a valid electricity service connection from a state DISCOM
  • Applicant must own the property where the system will be installed (or have documented consent from the owner)
  • System must be installed by a vendor registered on pmsuryaghar.gov.in
  • System components must be on the MNRE ALMM list

Who does not qualify:

  • Commercial, industrial, or government consumers (no central CFA — may get state subsidies separately)
  • Households that have previously received a central government solar subsidy for the same connection
  • RESCO/PPA installations where a third party owns the system
  • Renters without documented ownership or consent

Apartment buildings: Housing societies can apply for PM Surya Ghar on common area connections. Individual flat owners in multi-storey buildings where common metering exists can apply if the DISCOM and housing society structure permits.

The National Portal: Step-by-Step Application

1

Consumer Registration

Customer visits pmsuryaghar.gov.in and registers with their state, DISCOM name, electricity consumer account number, and Aadhaar-linked mobile number. OTP verification completes registration. An account is created linked to the electricity connection.

2

Application Submission

Customer logs in and completes the application form: rooftop ownership details, desired system size (1 kW to 10 kW, though subsidy caps at 3 kW), and bank account details for subsidy disbursement. They select an empanelled vendor from the portal’s state-specific list.

3

Vendor Site Survey

The selected empanelled vendor conducts a site survey: roof area, shading assessment, load profile, existing electrical installation. The vendor confirms the technical proposal — system size, panel layout, inverter specification — and uploads this to the portal.

4

DISCOM Feasibility Approval

The DISCOM reviews the application through the portal. It checks transformer loading capacity, verifies the connection details, and issues a technical feasibility sanction. Timeline: 15–30 days in active-portal states, up to 45 days in states with manual processes.

5

System Installation

After feasibility sanction, the vendor installs the solar PV system using ALMM-listed modules and inverters. All electrical work must comply with CEA Technical Standards and state DISCOM requirements. Installation documentation is prepared.

6

DISCOM Inspection and Net Meter Installation

The vendor notifies the DISCOM of installation completion. The DISCOM sends a technical team for commissioning inspection. After passing inspection, the DISCOM installs a bidirectional (two-register) net energy meter at the consumer’s cost (typically Rs. 2,000–Rs. 8,000 depending on DISCOM).

7

Commissioning Report and Subsidy Disbursement

The DISCOM uploads the commissioning report to the national portal. MNRE reviews and releases the central financial assistance directly to the consumer’s bank account within 30 days of report acceptance. The consumer also receives net metering from this date.

The 300 Free Units Calculation

The “300 units of free electricity per month” claim is based on:

  • A 3 kW rooftop solar system generates approximately 360–400 units per month at average Indian irradiance (4.5–5 peak sun hours daily)
  • A household consuming around 300 units per month will see its entire monthly consumption offset by solar generation
  • Net metering credits the surplus export at the APPC rate; self-consumed solar displaces grid import at the full retail rate

Worked Example (3 kW system, monthly basis):

ParameterValue
Solar generation375 units/month
Household consumption300 units/month
Self-consumed200 units (estimated)
Exported to grid175 units
Grid import100 units
Bill before solarRs. 1,800 (at Rs. 6/unit average)
Savings on self-consumedRs. 1,200
Export credit at APPC (Rs. 3.80/unit)Rs. 665
Net billRs. 1,800 − Rs. 1,200 − Rs. 665 = −Rs. 65 (credit)

In this scenario, the customer’s bill is effectively zero — and they carry a small credit forward. The “300 free units” marketing claim is roughly accurate for a household consuming 300 units per month in a state with a reasonably favourable APPC rate.

Pro Tip: Use Location-Specific Generation Estimates

Generation from a 3 kW system varies from roughly 300 units/month in less sunny northeastern states to 450 units/month in Rajasthan or Gujarat. Using location-specific irradiance data from solar design software gives customers accurate savings projections rather than national averages.

Concessional Loan Under PM Surya Ghar

Consumers who qualify for PM Surya Ghar can access a concessional loan of up to Rs. 2 lakh from participating nationalised banks. The scheme provides interest subvention to make the effective rate lower than standard personal loans.

Participating banks include: State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, and other nationalised banks.

Loan details (indicative):

ParameterValue
Maximum loanRs. 2,00,000
Indicative interest rate7% per annum (with subvention)
Tenure5 years
Approximate monthly EMIRs. 3,960
Total interest paid~Rs. 37,600

For a consumer who pays Rs. 1,500–Rs. 2,000 per month in electricity bills, the EMI is higher than the bill. But the solar system eliminates most of the bill, so the net monthly outgo (EMI minus bill savings) is typically Rs. 1,500–Rs. 2,000 — roughly breakeven from day one, with the system free and clear after 5 years.

State Top-Up Subsidies

Several states supplement the central CFA with additional subsidies:

StateState SchemeAdditional Subsidy
GujaratSurya GujaratRs. 10,000–Rs. 30,000 (varies)
RajasthanRRECL schemeBPL/low-income targeted
KarnatakaState contributionRs. 10,000–Rs. 20,000
MaharashtraMEDA schemesVaries by consumer category
UPMukhyamantri Solar Rooftop YojanaAs per current scheme notifications

State Subsidies Change Frequently

State top-up subsidies are revised annually and sometimes mid-year. Always check the current state government notification or DISCOM website before quoting total subsidy amounts to customers. Quoting outdated subsidy figures leads to customer disappointment and disputes.

What Happens If You Use a Non-Empanelled Vendor

Using a non-empanelled vendor for a PM Surya Ghar project has serious consequences:

  • The installation is not registered on the national portal
  • The DISCOM will not accept the commissioning report for subsidy release
  • The DISCOM may refuse to install the net meter under the PM Surya Ghar workflow
  • The consumer loses all central CFA
  • The consumer may still get a non-subsidised grid connection through the standard DISCOM process, but forfeits the subsidy

For installers: not being empanelled means being excluded from the residential market’s main driver. Empanelment should be completed before actively marketing to residential customers.

RESCO Exclusion from Subsidy

The PM Surya Ghar subsidy applies only to CAPEX (consumer-owned) installations. RESCO and PPA models, where a third party owns and finances the system, do not qualify.

ModelPM Surya Ghar EligibleNet MeteringLong-Term Savings
CAPEX (own the system)YesConsumer retainsHigher
RESCO / PPANoDepends on PPA termsLower (paying PPA rate)

For residential consumers with access to the concessional PM Surya Ghar loan, the CAPEX model nearly always delivers better economics.

Help Customers Understand Their PM Surya Ghar Savings

SurgePV generates location-specific solar proposals with subsidy calculations, net metering savings, concessional loan EMI, and payback period — ready for the customer and the DISCOM application.

Book a Demo

No commitment required · 20 minutes · Live project walkthrough

25-Year Savings Projection: Worked Example

For a 3 kW system in a state with Rs. 6/unit average retail rate and Rs. 3.80/unit APPC:

YearAnnual Bill SavingsCumulative Savings
1Rs. 22,800Rs. 22,800
5Rs. 25,200 (with tariff increase)Rs. 1,20,000
10Rs. 28,800Rs. 2,63,000
25Rs. 42,000Rs. 7,60,000

Assumes 4% annual electricity tariff escalation, 0.5% annual panel degradation, 5 kWh/day average generation.

System cost after subsidy: Rs. 1,32,000. Payback period: approximately 5–6 years. 25-year net savings: approximately Rs. 6,28,000.

Common Application Problems and Solutions

Problem: Consumer receives no SMS or email after registering on the portal. Solution: Verify mobile number is linked to Aadhaar. OTP may have gone to an older linked number.

Problem: DISCOM rejects application citing transformer overload. Solution: Request the specific transformer ID. Ask if a smaller system size (2 kW rather than 3 kW) would be approved. If the feeder is genuinely saturated, escalate to the DISCOM’s renewable energy cell — they sometimes have a separate queue for PM Surya Ghar applications.

Problem: Subsidy not received 30 days after commissioning report upload. Solution: Check the portal for the application status. If the commissioning report is “accepted” on the portal, contact the PM Surya Ghar helpline. If it is in “pending” status, follow up with the DISCOM to resolve any documentation issues on their end.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maximum subsidy under PM Surya Ghar?

Rs. 78,000 for a 3 kW system — Rs. 60,000 for the first 2 kW plus Rs. 18,000 for the third kW.

Who is eligible?

Residential households with valid DISCOM connections who own the rooftop. Installation must be by an empanelled vendor using ALMM-listed components.

How do you apply?

Register on pmsuryaghar.gov.in with electricity consumer number and Aadhaar. Select a system size and empanelled vendor. Track application through the portal.

What is the concessional loan?

Up to Rs. 2 lakh from nationalised banks at subsidised interest rates linked to the PM Surya Ghar scheme. EMI approximately Rs. 3,960 per month for 5 years.

How does PM Surya Ghar deliver 300 free units?

A 3 kW system generates roughly 360–400 units per month at Indian irradiance levels. For a household consuming 300 units, net metering credits fully offset the monthly bill.

About the Contributors

Author
Rainer Neumann
Rainer Neumann

Content Head · SurgePV

Rainer Neumann is Content Head at SurgePV and a solar PV engineer with 10+ years of experience designing commercial and utility-scale systems across Europe and MENA. He has delivered 500+ installations, tested 15+ solar design software platforms firsthand, and specialises in shading analysis, string sizing, and international electrical code compliance.

Editor
Keyur Rakholiya
Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Keyur Rakholiya is CEO & Co-Founder of SurgePV and Founder of Heaven Green Energy Limited, where he has delivered over 1 GW of solar projects across commercial, utility, and rooftop sectors in India. With 10+ years in the solar industry, he has managed 800+ project deliveries, evaluated 20+ solar design platforms firsthand, and led engineering teams of 50+ people.

PM Surya GharIndia solar subsidy 2026rooftop solar subsidy IndiaMNRE subsidy300 free units solarPM Surya Ghar application

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