A steadier first step
Start with what your home is likely to need, what still needs checking, and which questions are worth asking before a quote.
Loading
This usually takes a moment while the latest review information is checked.
Hey!Energy helps UK homeowners understand solar, battery, EV charging, and tariff choices through a calm advisory review grounded in the realities of their home.
Energy intelligence
Home first. System second.
Clearer assumptions before quote conversations.
Advisory before decisions
The review is designed to make the energy decision feel legible. It separates what can be estimated now from what should be confirmed by survey, tariff review, or installer detail.
Start with what your home is likely to need, what still needs checking, and which questions are worth asking before a quote.
The review helps you understand trade-offs calmly, without treating your details as a lead to be chased.
You get a structured view of solar, battery, EV charging, and tariff considerations before installer conversations begin.
Educational guidance
Solar and battery decisions are rarely just about panel count. A good recommendation should connect your roof, usage, tariffs, budget, and future plans.
Pitch, shade, usable area, dormers, chimneys, roof age, and access can change the right system size.
Daytime use, work-from-home patterns, EV charging, and appliance timing often matter as much as annual consumption.
Storage can be helpful, but the right answer depends on usage shape, tariffs, backup needs, and budget comfort.
A driveway, charger location, cable run, and charging routine can all affect the practical recommendation.
Import and export rates, smart tariffs, and standing charges should be considered before relying on headline savings.
The best installer conversation should make roof, electrical, scaffold, warranty, and performance assumptions visible.
Reviewed homeowner summary
Calm guidance before installer conversations
What most installers do not explain
A homeowner should not need to decode a proposal alone. These are the areas where a calm advisory review can make the installer conversation more balanced.
1
Many proposals lean on export assumptions. A homeowner should know which tariff is being used and how sensitive the numbers are.
2
A desk estimate cannot fully see timber condition, access, shading at different times of year, or usable roof zones.
3
A battery may improve self-use, but it should not be treated as automatically sensible for every household.
4
Consumer unit capacity, inverter location, DNO requirements, and cable runs should be explained before installation day.
Realistic expectations
Premium advice should make uncertainty useful. Hey!Energy keeps the tone measured so homeowners can move forward with confidence instead of pressure.
Not every home should install solar immediately.
Estimated savings should be a range, not a promise.
Battery storage should earn its place in the plan.
A confident homeowner asks better installer questions.
Energy system overview
Solar, battery, EV, and tariff considerations
UK-home-specific advice
The review keeps UK property details close to the recommendation, from roof constraints to EV access and planning considerations.
Shared roof lines, chimneys, dormers, and scaffold access can affect panel layout and installation practicality.
Roof age, loft access, slate or tile type, and electrical upgrades may need attention before the energy case is clear.
Off-street parking, cable route, charging window, and smart tariff access can influence solar and charger planning.
Listed buildings, conservation areas, flats, and leasehold homes may need a more careful route before committing.
How it works
The flow gathers enough context to give you a grounded starting point while preserving the existing report journey.
1
Your home
2
Energy usage
3
What matters most
4
Budget approach
5
Your summary
UK home suitability
Property, roof, and usage context
Softer scenario framing
The product avoids guaranteed savings claims. Ranges are illustrative and should be checked against roof, tariff, usage, and survey detail.
Monthly bill: £120-£180
Illustrative range
£680-£1,050/yr
Suggested route: Solar-first review with roof and tariff caveats
Monthly bill: £180-£260
Illustrative range
£950-£1,350/yr
Suggested route: Solar, EV charging, and smart-tariff discussion
Monthly bill: £220+
Illustrative range
£900-£1,650/yr
Suggested route: Solar-first case, then separate battery sensitivity
Ready when you are
Use rough answers, see an advisory result, and decide whether a reviewed next-step summary is useful.
Homeowner advisory review
No payment. No quote pressure.