If you manage a housing society, you probably hear a lot about solar, subsidies, and saving on electricity bills. The problem is, most explanations are full of jargon. Virtual net metering sounds like one more technical term on that list.
In reality, it is a simple idea. Your society installs one solar power system. The electricity it generates is shared, on paper, between the flats and common areas. Everyone gets their share of savings directly on their light bill.
This guide will walk you through what virtual net metering actually is, how it works for societies, what the rules say across India and in Maharashtra, and whether it makes sense for your building.
Virtual net metering is a billing system that allows one solar plant to give bill credits to many electricity connections. These connections can belong to different flats in the same society, or to common area meters in the same premises.
You do not need separate solar panels for every flat. The DISCOM measures how much solar power your plant sends to the grid, then distributes that as credits to all participating consumers as per a pre-decided percentage.
There are three reasons housing societies are hearing more about virtual net metering in 2025:
This makes virtual net metering one of the easiest ways for a society to go solar together.
Here is the basic flow for a typical society:
1: The society installs a solar plant on the main terrace or another approved location.
2: The plant is connected to the grid with a bi-directional meter.
3: The DISCOM records how much solar power is exported each month.
4: Credits are divided between members and common meters as per a fixed sharing pattern decided by the society at the time of application.
5: Each member sees reduced units on their bill, based on their share of credits.
You still draw power from the grid as usual. The difference is that part of your monthly bill is paid by your society’s solar plant.
Virtual net metering is now supported in multiple states, though the exact rules vary:
Always check with your state DISCOM or work with an experienced solar EPC partner to understand the latest local requirements.
For Maharashtra, MERC has given a specific place to virtual net metering within its rooftop renewable energy regulations:
Maharashtra is one of the most proactive states on this front. Societies here have clearer paths, better regulatory support, and faster approvals compared to many other parts of India.
Want a detailed, step-by-step breakdown for Maharashtra housing societies?
We have written a complete guide that covers MERC’s order, the application process, documentation, FAQs, and real examples:
Virtual Net Metering for Housing Societies: MERC Order Explained
For a housing society, virtual net metering solves a few everyday problems:
In short, it turns solar into a community decision instead of a flat-by-flat struggle.
This depends on:
Most housing societies see payback periods of 4 to 6 years, with 20+ years of system life. After payback, it is essentially free electricity. Common areas like lifts, water pumps, and society lighting can run mostly on solar, cutting your monthly maintenance charges.
A good solar EPC partner can give you a free assessment and show you exact numbers based on your society’s data.
Virtual net metering is ideal if your society has:
It also works well for gated communities, apartment complexes, and retirement housing, where collective decisions are easier to implement.
Yes. MERC’s 2024 amendment to its rooftop renewable energy regulations has formally included virtual net metering for residential multi‑storied buildings and housing societies within the same DISCOM area. Societies can now use one shared plant and get bill credits on multiple meters as per an approved sharing pattern.
Virtual net metering lets multiple consumers, such as different flats in a housing society, share power from one plant and receive separate credits. Group net metering usually helps a single consumer with multiple connections, like one company with many meters, to offset bills across its own accounts. Both rely on similar metering and billing software but serve different consumer structures.
No, not yet. A few state and joint commissions have already notified virtual and group net metering regulations, while others are still using pilots or standard net metering only. Your EPC partner can confirm the latest status with your DISCOM before you plan a shared solar project.
In some states, yes. Virtual net metering often allows off-site generation as long as the plant and consumers are within the same DISCOM service area. Check your state’s specific rules.
The new owner can take over the same credit allocation, or the society can reassign shares as per its internal agreement. This flexibility is built into most virtual net metering models.
Yes, for the residential portion of the system. Subsidy amounts depend on system size and the number of beneficiaries. Work with your EPC to ensure proper subsidy documentation.
Common methods include equal share per flat, proportional to flat area, or based on past electricity consumption. The society decides what is fair, and it is locked into the DISCOM agreement.
No. Members who do not want to participate can opt out. The solar credits go only to those who join the scheme.
At Infisol Energy, we specialise in residential solar solutions for housing societies and group housing across Maharashtra and India. Our team works as your solar EPC partner, handling design, installation, virtual net metering approvals, and long-term O&M support.
We have helped dozens of societies go solar using virtual net metering, and we understand the unique needs of managing committees and resident groups.
Ready to explore solar for your society?
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Virtual net metering is making solar energy accessible and practical for housing societies across India. It removes the complexity of individual installations, spreads the benefits fairly, and gives your society a clear path to lower electricity bills and a cleaner future.
If you are in Maharashtra, the rules are especially clear and supportive. For a detailed guide on MERC’s virtual net metering regulations, do not miss our step-by-step article linked above.
Have questions or ready to take the next step? Reach out to us. We are here to make solar simple for your society.