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SolarResult is a solar monitoring and home energy management system (HEMS) from the Netherlands, primarily serving housing corporations and their tenants rather than general software developers. It offers an end-to-end solution covering DIN-rail energy meters, Gateways, P1 dongles, firmware, a cloud platform, a tenant app, and a housing corporation dashboard. Its goal is to help tenants increase direct self-consumption of their own solar generation and reduce feed-in costs after the Netherlands phases out net metering.
Functionally, it provides solar generation monitoring, actual-versus-expected yield comparison, anomaly alerts, revenue verification, visualization of tenants’ electricity/gas usage, and control of electric water heaters, heat pumps, and home batteries. Its Gateway V2 supports both monitoring and curtailment, allowing it to actively limit or stop electricity feed-in to the grid. The system claims to be inverter-vendor independent: almost all string inverters can be combined with a smart meter to set an export limit, and it supports string inverters, microinverters, and WaterAccu.
SolarResult stands out for its vertical integration: hardware, firmware, cloud platform, and app are all developed in-house, with secure updates delivered via FOTA. Communication does not rely on the tenant’s home internet connection; instead, it uses encrypted LTE-M / NB-IoT transmission. On the meter side, it supports P1/P4 ports, a P1 BLE dongle, and Modbus. Data is hosted in the EU/European cloud, with an emphasis on Privacy-by-Design and architecture aligned with the EU Cyber Resilience Act. Unfortunately, the available materials do not disclose any open API, SDK, programming languages, frameworks, or self-hosting options, so its friendliness for developer-side integration remains unclear.
Pricing is quote-based, with both hardware and services requiring a custom quotation. There is also a monthly subscription that includes active monitoring, fault detection, daily yield checks, automatic fault notifications, quarterly reports, and helpdesk support. The website does not list specific fees, payment methods, or SLA details.
Its strengths are integrated hardware and software, an independent communication link, strong security and compliance awareness, and a very close fit for centralized energy management by Dutch housing corporations. The drawbacks are opaque pricing, clear dependence on local geography and regulations, a lack of developer documentation and open interface information, and no indication of whether private deployment is possible. It is better suited to Dutch housing corporations, residential asset operators, and installers than to developers looking for an open energy management platform.
The source material does not provide information on website accessibility from mainland China, so the assessment is unknown. Since its business model, communications, meter interfaces, and regulatory assumptions are all heavily oriented toward the Netherlands, its practical value for Chinese users is limited. For more open or self-hostable alternatives, consider Home Assistant, OpenEMS, or monitoring platforms from inverter vendors such as SolarEdge, SMA, and Enphase.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on solarresult.nl official site.
solarresult.nl is an Netherlands Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach solarresult.nl directly.