EcoPower vs Flogas for Solar Panels: Which Pays More?
Both EcoPower and Flogas pay solar households for the electricity they export to the grid under the Clean Export Guarantee scheme, but the rates, payment cadences and conditions differ. Here is a side-by-side comparison from a solar owner's perspective: who pays more, who pays faster, and which suits which household.
Last verified 6 May 2026
Fact-checked by John Rooney, Solar Energy Editor. Editorial policy
Quick Answer
Flogas pays the higher CEG rate at 18.50 c/kWh versus EcoPower at 15.20 c/kWh. For a typical 4.4 kWp Irish solar home exporting 2,000 kWh/year, the difference is €66 per year. The cheaper rate isn't always the wrong call though, import unit rates, standing charges and contract terms can offset a small CEG gap. Always compare the total annual bill rather than the export rate alone.
EcoPower vs Flogas at a Glance
| Feature | EcoPower | Flogas |
|---|---|---|
| CEG export rate | 15.20 c/kWh | 18.50 c/kWh |
| Payment frequency | Quarterly | Every 2 months |
| Cap on paid exports | None published | None published |
| Smart meter required | Yes | Yes |
| Customer base | Smaller supplier | ~80,000 electricity customers |
| Parent company | EcoPower (Irish-owned) | DCC plc |
| Annual CEG earnings (4.4 kWp, 2,000 kWh export) | €304 | €370 |
CEG Rate: EcoPower vs Flogas
EcoPower
15.20 c/kWh
Lowest published standard CEG rate of the active suppliers tracked.
Read full EcoPower review →Flogas
18.50 c/kWh
Standard CEG rate effective 6 Nov 2023: 18.5 c/kWh ex-VAT (20.0 c/kWh inc 9% VAT). Bi-monthly credit.
Read full Flogas review →On rate alone, Flogas wins by 3.30 c/kWh. On a typical 4.4 kWp system exporting around 2,000 kWh per year, that adds up to €66 per year in additional export earnings.
Earnings by System Size
| System | Annual export | EcoPower | Flogas | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.6 kWp (6 panels) | 1,200 kWh | €182 | €222 | €40 |
| 3.5 kWp (8 panels) | 1,600 kWh | €243 | €296 | €53 |
| 4.4 kWp (10 panels) | 2,000 kWh | €304 | €370 | €66 |
| 5.3 kWp (12 panels) | 2,400 kWh | €365 | €444 | €79 |
| 5.3 kWp + battery | 1,400 kWh | €213 | €259 | €46 |
Verdict: EcoPower or Flogas?
Flogas wins on rate at 18.50 c/kWh versus EcoPower at 15.20 c/kWh, a 3.30 c/kWh gap worth roughly €66 per year on a typical 4.4 kWp Irish system exporting 2,000 kWh. That gap is significant enough to be worth switching for, assuming import unit rates are broadly comparable.
Whichever you pick, also consider the import unit rate, standing charge, and any sign-up bonuses, CEG income is rarely the deciding factor on its own. See our full CEG rate comparison for all eleven Irish suppliers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who pays more for solar export, EcoPower or Flogas?
Flogas pays 18.50 c/kWh versus EcoPower at 15.20 c/kWh. The difference is 3.30 c/kWh, worth roughly €66 per year on a typical 4.4 kWp Irish home system.
How often does EcoPower pay CEG?
EcoPower pays CEG quarterly.
How often does Flogas pay CEG?
Flogas pays CEG every 2 months.
Can I switch suppliers without losing CEG payments?
Yes. Switching takes 2–14 days and you don't lose power. Outstanding CEG with your old supplier clears on your final bill; you re-register the microgenerator with your new supplier and CEG resumes from the next bill.
Does either supplier cap how much export it pays for?
EcoPower: None published. Flogas: None published.
Is the CEG payment taxable?
Under Section 216D of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 (as extended by Finance Act 2025 to 31 December 2028), the first €400 per year of CEG export income is exempt from income tax. Income above that is taxable.
Compare other suppliers
Sources
- EcoPower , ecopower.ie
- Flogas , flogas.ie
Last verified: 6 May 2026
Fact-checked by John Rooney, Solar Energy Editor. Editorial policy
John Rooney is the founder of Solar Info and has been covering the Irish solar energy market since 2023. He fact-checks all content against official SEAI data and maintains relationships with SEAI-registered installers across Ireland.
Compare All CEG Rates
EcoPower and Flogas are two of eleven Irish suppliers offering a Clean Export Guarantee tariff. See how all of them rank on our full comparison.