X

This Smart Energy System Lets You Go Off Grid at the Touch of a Button

Savant's latest change to its home energy software makes it easy to customize all the ways you want to use -- or not use -- your electricity.

A tablet with an app showing different modes of home power.

Savant's smart energy system allows you to switch your home from on-grid to off-grid with a tap.

Jon Reed / CNET

If you've got solar panels and a battery, you might want to draw some power from the grid at times and be completely self-reliant at other times. What if you could switch easily in an app? That's the idea behind new features the energy tech company Savant introduced at CES 2024.

Savant is one of a growing number of companies (at CES and elsewhere) promising consumers more control over their home's energy use, and it does so by using sensors and controllers built into smart modules inserted into your home's existing circuit breaker. Those connect to an app, which allows you to see where your energy is going and turn circuits off and on from anywhere.

At CES in Las Vegas, I saw Ian Roberts, Savant's vice president of market development for power, use an app to remotely monitor the energy system the company installed in New York. It showed how much of the system's energy was coming from solar panels, from the battery and from the grid. It also showed how much each appliance was using.


Can solar panels save you money?

Interested in understanding the impact solar can have on your home? Enter some basic information below, and we’ll instantly provide a free estimate of your energy savings.


What's new at CES is that Savant has created customizable settings that allow you to change how your home runs at a moment's notice.

Called "modes" and "scenes," these settings let you identify common configurations of what you want on and what you want off all at once. You can also determine where your energy system should be drawing power.

The modes include a default called "eco mode," which will optimize the use of energy from your solar panels. You can also take it completely off the grid, selecting a mode that uses only solar panels and battery power. 

Another mode, called "storm watch," will ensure your battery is fully charged in advance of a coming storm. You can also set it to power outage mode, which will reduce your system to just the bare essentials to support longer battery life.

Considering Solar Panels?
Our email course will walk you through how to go solar
 

As for scenes, these can be set up by an installer and then customized later. You can create a scene that cuts off all but the basics you would want running while you're at work, ensuring no other circuits are wasting energy. Or you can have one with just your essential circuits for winter and another with summer essentials.
Catch all our favorite new tech from CES 2024.

Article updated on January 8, 2024 at 8:53 PM PST

Our Experts

Written by 
Jon Reed
CNET staff -- not advertisers, partners or business interests -- determine how we review the products and services we cover. If you buy through our links, we may get paid. Reviews ethics statement
Jon Reed Senior Editor
Jon Reed is a senior editor for CNET covering home energy, including solar panels and energy efficiency. Jon has spent more than a decade making a living by asking other people questions. He previously worked as an editor at NextAdvisor, focused on home loans and the housing market; as a statehouse reporter in Columbus, Ohio; and as a reporter in Birmingham, Alabama. When not asking people questions, he can usually be found half asleep trying to read a long history book while surrounded by cats.
Expertise solar, home energy
Why You Can Trust CNET
174175176177178179180+
Experts Interviewed
030405060708091011121314+
Companies Reviewed
108109110111112113+
Products Reviewed

We thoroughly evaluate each company and product we review and ensure our stories meet our high editorial standards.