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We match homeowners with vetted local installers — each passes our 54-question screen on licensing, insurance, and workmanship. Compare real quotes side by side and decide on your terms. We don't sell products or push installers.

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Modern suburban home with a full rooftop solar panel array in warm late-afternoon sunlight
A typical rooftop solar installation. Your real system size and savings depend on your home, roof, and utility.

How it works

Three simple steps — free, online, and no pressure.

1

Tell us about your home

Answer a few quick questions about your roof, electric bill, and goals. Takes about 30 seconds — no account needed.

2

Get matched with vetted installers

We connect you only with pre-screened local pros who pass our 54-question vetting on licensing, insurance, and workmanship.

3

Compare quotes & save

Review competitive, no-pressure offers side by side and choose what's right for your home and budget.

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54question installer vetting
$0cost — quotes are always free
100%unbiased — we don't sell installs

Why homeowners trust Solar Energy Nerds

We're an unbiased, homeowner-first platform — we don't sell products or push installers. Our only goal is the right outcome for you.

Vetted installers only

Every installer passes our 54-question survey covering licensing, insurance, workmanship, and customer service.

Competitive quotes

Compare multiple offers and choose on value, expertise, and fit — without pressure.

Instant estimates

See estimated system size, annual production, and potential savings in minutes.

Completely unbiased

Honest, verified guidance and transparent matching — your interests come first.

Understand solar in 2026

The rules changed this year — the 30% federal tax credit expired December 31, 2025. Our honest, verified guides explain what it means for your wallet:

Solar by state

Incentives and net metering vary widely by state. See your state's 2026 picture:

California · Texas · Florida · New York · Louisiana · Mississippi · All states →

Going solar in 2026: what homeowners should know

2026 is a different landscape than the last decade of solar. The biggest change: the 30% federal residential tax credit (Section 25D) expired on December 31, 2025. Homeowners who buy a system with cash or a loan this year no longer get that credit — though a federal benefit still flows through leases and PPAs, where the installer claims the commercial credit and passes savings through lower payments. The practical takeaway: your savings now depend far more on where you live — your state incentives, your utility's net-metering rules, and your electricity rate — than on a single federal number.

What solar actually costs now

A typical home system runs about $2.50–$3.50 per watt — roughly $15,000–$30,000 before incentives. Quick breakdown:

Our 2026 cost guide breaks it down by system size and shows what pushes your quote up or down.

Typical U.S. home solar cost in 2026 before incentives A typical home solar system costs about $15,000 to $30,000 before incentives in 2026. Typical system $15,000–$30,000 $0 $10k $20k $30k
Typical 2026 home solar cost before incentives — about $2.50–$3.50 per watt. The 30% federal credit no longer applies to purchases in 2026. Source: 2026 cost guide.

What still makes solar worth it

Even without the federal credit, solar still pays off for many homeowners. The case is strongest where three things line up:

See Is Solar Worth It in 2026? and our state-by-state incentives guide.

How your savings are calculated

Your savings come from offsetting the electricity you'd otherwise buy, plus credits for power you export. Two rules shape the math:

Where exports are credited below retail, using your own power as it's produced — and sometimes adding a battery — protects your savings. Payback periods in 2026 typically run 8–15 years for purchased systems, and under 8 in the highest-rate markets.

When solar makes the most sense

The only way to know your real numbers is your own roof, rate, and usage — which is exactly what a quote shows you.

See What Solar Would Save You in 2026

Incentives now depend on your state, utility, and roof. Get a free, no-obligation estimate.

See My Solar Savings →

Written and reviewed by the Solar Energy Nerds Editorial Team. Last updated June 2026. We verify costs, incentives, and policy claims against the IRS, DSIRE, and official state & utility sources.

Solar Energy Nerds provides general information, not tax or financial advice. Incentives and costs vary by state, utility, and household — verify current figures for your address before deciding.