possess pyroelectric properties, including the leaves of the palm-like plant Encephalartos. [4] While the physiological implications of pyroelectricity in plants and other biomaterials are still poorly understood, [4,5] the effect can already be utilized in artificial devices for applications including light detection [2d,6] and energy harvesting. [3,7] Pyroelectric polymers have attracted considerable attention owing to their mechanical flexibility, easy processing, and low cost. [4,5] While there are a number of pyroelectric polymers, such as poly(vinylchloride) and Nylon 11, poly(vinylidene fluoride) and its copolymer poly(vinylidenefluoride-cotrifluoroethylene) (P(VDF-TRFE)) are particularly promising due to high pyroelectric coefficients and good chemical stability. [2a,c,d,8] Typical application areas for these polymers include heat sensing, thermal imaging, and fire alarms. [2a] In addition, these polymers have been significantly explored based on their piezoelectric properties to harvest mechanical energy. [3,9] Their combination with plasmonic nanostructures was only recently reported, for laser-based patterned phase-control of ferroelectric polymers. [10] However, plasmonic heating was, to our knowledge, not previously investigated for pyroelectric energy harvesting.Here, we present a concept that converts temporal fluctuations in sunlight to electrical energy. The device combines a plasmonic metasurface consisting of gold nanodisks with a thin organic P(VDF-TrFE) copolymer film. The plasmonic nanostructures strongly absorb light through resonant excitation of plasmons (collective charge oscillations), which leads to local heating of both the nanostructure and the surrounding environment. [11] Such light-induced plasmonic heating can enable a wide range of applications, including solar-powered autoclaving, [12] plasmon-driven thermophoresis, [13] seawater catalysis, [14] plasmonic-thermoelectric light detection, [15] and desalination concepts. [14] In our hybrid plasmonic-pyroelectric device (referred to as hybrid device below), plasmonic heating of a gold nanodisk array modulates the temperature of a pyroelectric polymer. The polymer then converts these temperaturechanges to electrical signals through the pyroelectric effect.We demonstrate the concept by designing a device that powers an external load connected to the hybrid device, and by characterizing its performance in detail. Combined optical and thermal simulations of the hybrid device are in agreement with State-of-the-art solar energy harvesting systems based on photovoltaic technology require constant illumination for optimal operation. However, weather conditions and solar illumination tend to fluctuate. Here, a device is presented that extracts electrical energy from such light fluctuations. The concept combines light-induced heating of gold nanodisks (acting as plasmonic optical nanoantennas), and an organic pyroelectric copolymer film (poly(vinylidenefluoride-co-trifluoroethylene)), that converts temperature changes into electrical sig...