Following record energy storage deployments in Q4 2025, Tesla's Powerwall home battery— which hit 1 million global sales in September 2025—is encountering downside risks from brand sentiment, per recent analyst reports. Installers cite negative feedback, leading to reduced promotion, while concerns over availability may shift market share.
Tesla launched the Powerwall in 2015 as a home energy storage solution for solar integration. By September 8, 2025, it reached 1 million sales across 30 countries, including the U.S. Tesla stated, “Since its launch in 2015, Powerwall has transformed how households generate, store and use clean energy. A decade later, the impact is global and measurable.”
This followed Tesla's record 14.2 GWh of energy storage deployments in Q4 2025. However, recent analyses point to potential declines for Powerwall. A ROTH Capital Partners note from April 1, 2025 (cited by PV Magazine’s Energy Storage) flagged “downside risks for the Powerwall 3 home battery and Tesla inverter,” based on installer discussions. One installer told ROTH, “expecting Tesla to fall to 20% of battery sales in [the] next six months. We are getting all types of nasty feedback if we even put pics of Powerwalls online. So we scrubbed all references and pics from all ads and online presence.”
Earlier, EnergySage's April 2025 report on 2024 trends showed Powerwall with 63% market share in quote requests. EnergySage President and COO Charlie Hadlow noted, “Tesla’s emerging dominance in both storage and inverter quotes reflects the market’s appetite for integrated, all-in-one solutions.” He added, “But as concerns around availability and brand sentiment surface, we’re watching closely to see whether this momentum holds or if consumer backlash will begin to shift installer and homeowner preferences.”
These developments signal a shift from dominance to challenges in residential energy storage, amid evolving Tesla strategies.