GM Software Update Lets EV Owners Sell Power Back to U.S. Grid


GM Vehicle-to-Grid: Software Update, Utility Pilots

CSA Z462 Arc Flash Training – Electrical Safety Compliance Course

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$249
Coupon Price:
$199
Reserve Your Seat Today
SAN FRANCISCO

GM Vehicle-to-Grid launches via a June 9 software update, allowing some U.S. EV owners to sell electricity to the grid through utility pilots, with bidirectional charging, grid services, and payments shared between drivers and GM.

 

What You Need to Know

  • Software update enables some GM EVs to feed the grid

  • V2H users may sell power at peaks; GM takes a share

  • Talks with about 10 utilities; capability still in pilots

  • Rollout eyed in months; CA, TX first; DTE pilot in MI

General Motors said on June 9 it is releasing a software update that will let some U.S. electric vehicle owners export power back to the electricity grid. The move broadens the company's energy ambitions by extending an existing vehicle-to-home feature to support transactions with utilities during periods of high demand.

According to the company, owners who already use its vehicle-to-home capability to keep essential loads running during outages will gain the option to feed energy to the grid at peak times. Drivers would be paid by partnering utilities for the power their vehicles supply, and GM would take a share of those payments, reflecting the platform and program services it provides.

The company indicated that only a limited number of utilities currently support this function and that the concept remains in pilot. GM is in discussions with around 10 utilities as it refines participation models and operational guardrails. Industry conversations also include how aggregated EVs could operate in concert with other distributed resources, a theme often associated with virtual power concepts that bundle small assets into grid-scale services today.

Commercial rollout is expected over the next few months, with initial activity focused on California and Texas. Separately, GM is working with a Michigan utility on a vehicle-to-grid pilot that involves 30 GM employees. As California programs evolve, storage adoption and fleet electrification intersect with initiatives related to California batteries, shaping how customers may eventually enroll in and transact with similar offerings.

Utilities have approached vehicle-to-grid cautiously, citing investment needs, technology maturity, and the pace of user participation. Technical planning in this space frequently references power electronics and interoperability considerations, including discussions around advanced inverters that underpin communications, controls, and protective functions as programs scale.

Automakers are seeking new revenue streams in energy, and GM's announcement underscores that shift. As companies build platforms that connect vehicles to homes and neighborhoods, home storage conversations often reference powerwall solutions alongside EV-based services, indicating a broader market interest in flexible, behind-the-meter capacity that can be scheduled for grid support.

Looking ahead, program details will depend on utility tariffs, interconnection rules, and customer experience. Engineers and planners are also examining international technical themes, such as grid forming inverters europe resilience stability, to understand how distribution-system controls and standards might evolve as more vehicles participate in capacity, peak-shaving, and resiliency services.

 

Related News

Related News

Canada could be electric, connected and clean — if it chooses

Canada Clean Energy Transition accelerates via carbon pricing, renewables, EV incentives, energy efficiency upgrades, smart…
View more

Electricity sales in the U.S. actually dropped over the past 7 years

US Electricity Sales Decline amid population growth and GDP gains, as DOE links reduced per…
View more

Manitoba Hydro hikes face opposition as hearings begin

Manitoba Hydro rate hikes face public hearings over electricity rates, utility bills, and debt, with…
View more

Power Outage in Northeast D.C.

Northeast D.C. Power Outage highlights Pepco substation equipment failure, widespread service disruptions, grid reliability concerns,…
View more

BC Hydro hoping to be able to charge customers time of use rates

BC Hydro Time-of-Use Rates propose off-peak credits and peak surcharges, with 5 cent/kWh differentials, encouraging…
View more

Electro-Federation Canada urges Ontario to speed grid modernization, supply chain

Ontario Grid Modernization gains momentum as industry leaders urge policy measures to accelerate smart grid…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Live Online & In-person Group Training

Advantages To Instructor-Led Training – Instructor-Led Course, Customized Training, Multiple Locations, Economical, CEU Credits, Course Discounts.

Request For Quotation

Whether you would prefer Live Online or In-Person instruction, our electrical training courses can be tailored to meet your company's specific requirements and delivered to your employees in one location or at various locations.