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From Electricity Savings to Investment Growth: A Thought Experiment

A €25 smart plug saves ~1,940 kr per year on your water heater electricity bill. What if you never touched that money and invested it instead? Here is what 20–30 years of compound interest looks like.

This article is a thought experiment and educational illustration only. It does not constitute financial advice. Investment returns are not guaranteed. Past performance of any fund or index does not predict future results. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Source: Google Gemini

The Device That Pays For Itself — And Keeps Paying

A Shelly Plug S Gen3 costs around €25. Connected to a 200-litre water heater and managed by Elewatt, it runs the heater exclusively during the cheapest hours of each day — typically 1am–5am, when Nord Pool spot prices in Estonia are lowest.

The math works out like this: a 2 kW water heater running for 3 hours costs roughly 2–3 times less per kWh at night than during morning peak hours. Over a full year, the difference in electricity cost for that single device adds up to €400–500. The device pays for itself in under three weeks. After that, it is generating pure savings every single day.

Device cost

187 kr

Shelly Plug S Gen3

per year, 200L water heater

~€400–500

per year, 200L water heater

to recoup the cost

2–3 weeks

to recoup the cost

The Thought Experiment

Now here is the question this article is really about: what if, instead of letting those savings disappear into everyday spending, you treated them as a fixed investment budget?

1,940 kr per year is 164 kr per month. On its own, that does not sound like much. But invested consistently over a long period, compound interest turns it into something that surprises most people.

The table below shows what 1,940 kr/year grows to over time, assuming you invest it at the start of each year and leave it untouched.

Energy · Time

11.6 kWh · ~6 h

Nord Pool avg (Mar 2025–Mar 2026) · c/kWh

0:00 · 14.0c
1:00 · 13.9c
2:00 · 13.0c
3:00 · 12.6c
4:00 · 12.5c
5:00 · 13.1c
6:00 · 16.1c
7:00 · 22.2c
8:00 · 24.5c
9:00 · 26.3c
10:00 · 24.0c
11:00 · 22.5c
12:00 · 18.3c
13:00 · 18.2c
14:00 · 18.2c
15:00 · 18.6c
16:00 · 23.0c
17:00 · 24.6c
18:00 · 27.2c
19:00 · 29.2c
20:00 · 26.3c
21:00 · 24.6c
22:00 · 18.6c
23:00 · 16.2c
Cheapest 6hPeak 6h

With Elewatt

13.2 c/kWh

11.44 kr

Without Elewatt

26.4 c/kWh

22.89 kr

Your savings

Per day

11.45 kr

Per month

343.43 kr

Per year

4178.45 kr

Yearly avg Nord Pool prices, Estonia. Assumes 1 cycle/day, 2 kW heater. Grid fees: Elektrilevi.

Based on your heater settings above: 1936 kr/yr invested annually
10y
Total invested
19,359 kr
At 5%/year
24,349 kr+4,991 kr
At 7%/year
26,744 kr+7,385 kr
III sammas 7%
32,675 kr
15y
Total invested
29,042 kr
At 5%/year
41,776 kr+12,734 kr
At 7%/year
48,647 kr+19,605 kr
III sammas 7%
59,426 kr
20y
Total invested
38,717 kr
At 5%/year
64,014 kr+25,297 kr
At 7%/year
79,359 kr+40,642 kr
III sammas 7%
96,950 kr
25y
Total invested
48,400 kr
At 5%/year
92,392 kr+43,992 kr
At 7%/year
122,441 kr+74,041 kr
III sammas 7%
149,573 kr
30y
Total invested
58,076 kr
At 5%/year
128,618 kr+70,542 kr
At 7%/year
182,867 kr+124,791 kr
III sammas 7%
223,382 kr

Assumes 1936 kr/yr invested at the start of each year, compound growth, no withdrawals. 5% approximates a conservative balanced fund; 7% approximates a broad global equity index fund long-term average. Returns are not guaranteed.

The Estonian Advantage: III Sammas

For Estonian residents, there is an extra layer to this thought experiment: the third pillar pension (III sammas). Contributions to a voluntary pension fund are deductible from your taxable income — up to 15% of your gross annual income or €6,000, whichever is lower.

At Estonia's 22% income tax rate, investing 1,940 kr into a third pillar fund gives you approximately 425 kr back as a tax refund. Your net cost is just 1,514 kr — but your invested amount is still 1,940 kr. That is a guaranteed 28% return on your first euro before your fund earns a single cent.

If you reinvest the tax refund as well, you are investing ~2,365 kr per year for the out-of-pocket cost of 1,940 kr. After 30 years at 7%, that grows to roughly 223,382 kr.

The tax bonus in numbers

1,940 kr invested in III sammas → ~425 kr tax refund → effective cost 1,514 kr. Or: invest both 1,940 kr + 425 kr refund = 2,365 kr/year. At 7% annual return over 30 years, 2,365 kr/year grows to approximately 223,382 kr.

You invest

1,940 kr

into III sammas per year

Tax refund

~425 kr

returned at 22% income tax

Net cost

1,514 kr

actual out-of-pocket per year

Keeping It in Perspective

None of this is a recommendation. Whether to invest, where, and how much depends on your personal circumstances, income, existing savings, debts, and risk tolerance — things only you (and ideally a financial advisor) can assess.

What this exercise does show is that the compounding effect of a consistent, modest annual contribution is significant over long time horizons. And electricity savings are a real, recurring source of that kind of modest annual sum.

The first step is reducing the electricity bill. The second step — if and when it makes sense for you — is deciding what to do with the difference.

Start Here: Get the Savings First

Before any of the above becomes relevant, you need the 1,940 kr/year in savings to exist. That starts with smart automation — connecting your water heater, EV charger, or other high-consumption devices to a system that acts on real electricity prices.

Automate your savings with Elewatt

Elewatt connects to your Shelly devices and automatically runs them during the cheapest hours of each day. Set it up once — it handles the rest.

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