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See what solar costs in your area — free.
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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- Find Incentives
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How it works
Three simple steps — free, online, and no pressure.
Tell us about your home
Answer a few quick questions about your roof, electric bill, and goals. Takes about 30 seconds — no account needed.
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.
Compare quotes & save
Review competitive, no-pressure offers side by side and choose what's right for your home and budget.
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:
- How Much Does Solar Cost in 2026?
- Solar Tax Credit 2026: What Changed
- Solar Incentives 2026 by State
- Is Solar Worth It in 2026?
- Is a Solar Battery Worth It in 2026?
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:
- Cost depends on system size, roof, equipment, and location.
- Most of the price is the inverter, racking, labor, permits, and interconnection — not the panels.
- With the federal credit gone for purchases, sticker price ≈ your real out-of-pocket cost.
Our 2026 cost guide breaks it down by system size and shows what pushes your quote up or down.
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:
- High electricity rates — every utility rate hike makes your panels' output more valuable.
- Good net metering — full retail credit for exports beats "net billing."
- Strong state incentives — NJ, MA, NY, and MD stack net metering with multi-year SREC income and tax exemptions; sun-rich states like AZ and NV lean on production and favorable buyback rates.
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:
- Net metering — how your utility credits exports (full retail is best; "net billing" pays less).
- Performance incentives like SRECs.
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
- ✅ A clear win if you pay a high electricity rate, use a lot of power, own your home and plan to stay, and have a good, mostly unshaded roof.
- ⚠️ A tougher call where power is cheap, the roof is shaded or needs replacing, or you're moving soon.
The only way to know your real numbers is your own roof, rate, and usage — which is exactly what a quote shows you.