The cheapest battery in your home is the boiler
Autorius
Volton Editorial Team
Paskelbta
A 100–150L hot-water tank stores 4–8 kWh as heat — about the same usable capacity as a small home battery. A €50 smart relay on the existing tank, scheduled to heat only during cheap spot hours, pays itself back within the first heating season. The cheapest battery in your home isn't a battery; it's the boiler you already own.
The boiler in most Estonian homes is, structurally, a battery. Nobody calls it that, partly because nobody thinks of hot water as energy storage. But that is exactly what it is — a tank of warm water with a heating element, holding a few kilowatt-hours of energy at a time, ready to give it back when the tap opens. The fact that hardly anyone treats it that way makes it the lowest-effort flexibility upgrade in the average house.
Hot water is the second-largest electricity load in most Estonian homes, behind space heating. Depending on family size and habits, it accounts for 10 to 25 percent of the annual bill. The boiler also has a useful property that radiators and EV chargers do not: it does not care when you heat it, only that the water is warm by the time someone turns the tap.
That decoupling between when you pay and when you use is the entire game on the day-ahead spot market. A typical winter day in Estonia has a 4-6x ratio between the cheapest night hour and the most expensive morning hour. A boiler running on a dumb thermostat reheats whenever the temperature drops, which on average means it draws power during the day, when prices are highest. A smart boiler heats overnight (usually between 02:00 and 06:00), coasts through the morning peak on stored heat, and tops up again in the cheap afternoon trough if needed.
The retrofit is almost embarrassingly simple
You do not need a new tank. You do not need a plumber. A WiFi smart relay rated for the boiler's current — a Shelly Pro or a Sonoff POW, typically 30 to 80 euros — wires inline with the existing power feed. From there, software decides when the relay closes. The tank, the heating element, the thermostat all stay exactly as they are.
Two heating windows of about 90 minutes each, placed at the two cheapest hours of the day, will beat a 24/7 thermostat by a wide margin without anyone in the house noticing. The control horizon you need is 24 hours; tomorrow's prices are published by Nord Pool every afternoon, which is plenty of warning to plan tonight's heating.
Compare the economics to a real battery. A 5 kWh lithium home battery in 2025 costs roughly 600 to 1100 euros per kWh installed. The thermal equivalent already exists in your boiler; the marginal cost to make it dispatchable is the price of one smart relay. Round-trip efficiency is lower than a lithium pack — call it 80-85 percent including standby losses — but the kWh you store comes back to you as hot water at retail price, not as electricity sold to the grid at wholesale. A 50-euro relay that saves 150 to 250 euros a year is, in our opinion, the highest-IRR thing you can do to a house in 2025. Nothing else comes close.
There are caveats. The tank has to be reasonably well insulated; an old, uninsulated cylinder in a cold garage will lose enough heat overnight to eat into the savings. Legionella risk means the water has to reach 60-65 °C at least once a week, which any serious controller handles automatically. And households with very irregular hot-water demand — guests, shift work — benefit from a controller that learns usage patterns rather than running a fixed schedule.
Volton Home runs this on the boiler the same way you would run it yourself if you had the patience to do it manually. A customer plugs a Shelly relay onto the tank, the app discovers it, and tomorrow's heating windows get scheduled against published spot prices each evening. Of every device the platform controls, the boiler retrofit pays itself back fastest — usually inside the first heating season.
Skaityti toliau

How Can We Reach Cheap Electricity in Estonia?
Why simply building more wind and solar is not enough — and how hybrid parks, storage and flexibility are the real path to cheap electricity in Estonia.

How Much Can You Really Earn with a Battery on Estonia's Flexibility Markets?
A real-world case study of the economics of a 1 MW / 2 MWh BESS project on the mFRR market in Estonia — capex, monthly costs, revenue and 15-month payback.

Electricity Markets Explained: From Spot Prices to Frequency Reserves
A plain-language guide to the key terms used in wholesale and flexibility markets — spot price, aFRR, mFRR, BRP, BSP, BESS and aggregators.

In 2026, building Battery Energy Storage in Estonia is getting even more profitable
From 2026 Estonia will calculate grid fees and renewable charges on net consumption only — a major step that can save a 100 MW BESS over €3M per year.

What is a Balance Service Provider (BSP)?
A BSP is a market participant certified by the TSO to deliver balancing services — frequency reserves like FCR, aFRR and mFRR. Here is how the role works in Europe and Estonia, and where aggregators fit in.

Inside Nord Pool
Nord Pool clears the day-ahead and intraday markets across the Nordics, Baltics, and much of Western Europe. We unpack the auction, market coupling, and what it takes to be a member.

Balance Responsible Party (BRP): who pays for every imbalanced kilowatt-hour
Every kilowatt-hour on the grid has a Balance Responsible Party that is contractually accountable for it. Here is how the BRP regime works under Elering and why aggregation matters.

REMIT Article 15 and the algorithmic-trading notification
REMIT Article 15 brings algorithmic energy trading under ACER oversight. We explain the notification regime, what counts as algorithmic, and why this matters for asset owners.

Day-ahead market: pricing an hour that has not happened yet
Every day at noon CET, an algorithm sets the price of electricity for every hour of tomorrow. The day-ahead auction is the reference the rest of the energy industry hangs off.

Intraday market — after the auction, reality drifts
After the noon auction closes, intraday opens — a continuous order book that runs until close to delivery. It is where flexibility actually pays.

Power futures: how a wind farm gets its loan approved
Forward contracts on electricity, traded on Nasdaq Commodities and EEX, let buyers fix a price for delivery months or years ahead. Most settle financially against the day-ahead spot.

PPAs — how long-term contracts financed the renewable boom
Power Purchase Agreements are 5–15 year bilateral contracts between renewable generators and corporate offtakers. They probably did more for Europe’s energy transition than any subsidy.

FCR: what catches the grid when a reactor trips
Frequency Containment Reserve activates within 30 seconds of a frequency deviation, fully automatic, no TSO signal. Batteries dominate it. It is what made grid-scale storage economically viable.

aFRR, the reserve in the middle
Automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve activates in ~30 seconds via TSO control signal, follows it on a 4-second cycle, and pulls the grid back to 50 Hz. Estonia joined the EU PICASSO platform on 9 April 2025; cross-border aFRR clears every 4 seconds across the continent.

mFRR — where Estonian battery profits come from
Manual Frequency Restoration Reserve is activated by a human operator, with full delivery in 12.5 minutes. In Estonia, it is currently the most lucrative balancing market for batteries.

Heat pumps run on dumb thermostats
A heat pump is the largest steady electrical load in winter, paired with a thermal mass that doubles as a battery. Price-aware scheduling captures spreads of 5-10x between cheap night hours and expensive mornings.

EV charging: plug in at six, leave at eight
A 50 kWh top-up costs about €15 at 02:00 or €45 at 18:00. Smart charging on OCPP-compatible wallboxes re-optimises every day against tomorrow’s spot prices, saving 50-70% on EV charging.

When your solar panels lose you money
On a sunny April afternoon, a 10 kW rooftop array can produce 8 kWh and lose money in the same hour. Smart self-consumption + curtailment + battery routing is what makes solar pay in 2025 Estonia.

Home batteries, two stacked revenue streams
A 10 kWh home battery earns ~€730/year from spot arbitrage alone. Stacked with aggregated frequency-reserve revenue (only available via a BSP), the same hardware can clear above 10% IRR.

Floor heating is the most flexible heater in your house
Resistive floor heating is in most Estonian homes and most of it runs dumb. The slab is essentially a thermal battery; price-aware scheduling captures spot-price spreads while the room temperature barely moves.