FWIW: I have roughly 40kWh of battery storage attached to our solar (a grid tied system). Costs on batteries have come way down, and there are reasonable options these days to roll your own battery from an electric car battery, e.g. a Leaf, especially if you aren't connected to the grid any longer.
A small hydropower system and batteries go a long, long way toward grid independence, and adding in a different source, e.g. solar can make a huge difference. 6kW of solar makes us grid positive for the year, and energy exporters for about eight months of the year.
The flip side to generating is consumption. You can get by on less power, if you have gone through your home to make it efficient. (LED lights, well insulated, etc.) I know of one person who put a cheap power controller ($40) on a chest freezer to make it into a refrigerator that used something like 160Wh of energy per day to keep his food cool. Of course, there are trade offs in terms of costs in efficiency vs adding more generating power and storage. I find these decisions are very local, what meets your needs will be different from the next person's needs.
Don't forget to look around for local energy programs and grants. About 90% of our battery and installation costs, wiring, two new service panels, breakers, etc., were paid for by our utility.
All the best,
Peter