The distributed power plant era is here

Your home battery
is worth
real money.

Every Tesla Powerwall, Enphase IQ Battery, and Ford F-150 Lightning in your neighborhood is sitting on untapped grid value. VoltShare connects them to ISO wholesale markets — automatically — so owners earn $500 to $2,000 per year.

Live programs in CA · TX · NY · MA · MD
Wholesale grid price
$1,847
per MWh · Jul 29 2025 · CAISO
13 kWh
Your home
You earned $23.40 in 90 minutes

How it works

Three steps. Then you get paid.

01

Sign up in 5 minutes

Enter your battery serial number and utility account. VoltShare handles the ISO registration, aggregator agreements, and utility paperwork. You sign one digital form — that's it.

02

We dispatch for you

Our ML system watches real-time wholesale prices across CAISO, ERCOT, NYISO, and MISO. When grid demand spikes — typically 30-60 times per year — your battery releases energy automatically. You keep full backup power.

03

Checks arrive quarterly

VoltShare takes 30% of gross earnings. You receive 70% — typically $500 to $2,000 per year depending on battery size and location. No hidden fees. No equipment changes. Just free money for energy you're already storing.

1M+
US homes with solar+battery today, growing 40-50% per year
$1,847
CAISO wholesale price on peak summer days — that's $23 per 13 kWh discharge
37.5 GW
North American distributed battery capacity now participating in VPP programs
22.6%
VPP market CAGR — growing faster than solar or wind

Compatible hardware

OEM-agnostic. Works with what you have.

We've integrated directly with every major residential battery and EV manufacturer so you can enroll without changing a single setting.

Tesla Powerwall

13 kWh · AC coupled · Native Tesla API integration

Enphase IQ Battery

3.36–10.08 kWh · AC coupled · Envoy gateway integration

Ford F-150 Lightning

V2H capable · Extended range · Ford Pass integration

SolarEdge Home Battery

48V stackable · Hybrid inverter ready

Don't see your system? We're adding new integrations every month. Enroll and we'll notify you when your hardware is supported.

Why VoltShare

Competitors are leaving money on the table. Here's why.

Utility & ISO partnerships

Years of compliance work. Metering agreements. Aggregator registrations. Competitors haven't done this — and it can't be copied in a sprint.

ML dispatch algorithms

Fleet scale compounds daily. Every dispatch teaches our models which batteries respond fastest, which grids spike hardest, and where the margins are. Incumbents don't have this data. Ever.

OEM-agnostic integrations

Tesla, Enphase, SolarEdge, Ford — we integrate with every major manufacturer. Competitors lock you into one brand. We work with whatever you already have.

Real-time earnings dashboard

Most competitors send you a check and expect you to trust the math. We show you live: every dispatch, every kWh, every dollar earned — updated in real time.

Multi-program optimization

We route every device to the highest-paying program at any given moment — demand response, capacity, frequency regulation. Your battery always earns its maximum.

Monthly payouts

Competitors pay quarterly or semi-annually. We pay monthly. Cash flow matters, and your battery earned it every 30 days — not every 90.

TX/PJM geographic focus

ERCOT and PJM are the highest-value demand response markets in the country. Most national players treat Texas as an afterthought. We built for these grids first.

"Every home battery is a power plant that never got built."

The grid needs flexibility. Residential batteries have it. The problem isn't technology — it's bureaucracy. Every ISO has different forms, different metering rules, different aggregator agreements. It takes months of paperwork to enroll one home. So most homeowners leave their batteries idle while utilities pay billions to fire up gas peaker plants.

VoltShare handles the complexity. We've negotiated the utility agreements, integrated the ISO metering systems, and built the ML dispatch layer that turns a backyard battery into a grid-scale resource. You sign one form. We do the rest.

This is how the distributed power plant gets built — one homeowner at a time.