How much does solar panel installation cost in 2026?
A typical home solar system runs $15,000–$25,000 installed before incentives. Here's what sits inside that number, the five things that move it, and how to compare quotes without getting talked past.
Ask three installers what solar costs and you'll get three different answers, all technically correct. "A solar system" isn't one product — it's equipment, labor, permits and a set of choices about size and quality that can legitimately swing the total by ten thousand dollars. Here's the whole thing, taken apart.
What solar actually costs
For a typical single-family home, expect $15,000–$25,000 installed for a 5–8 kilowatt system, before tax credits or rebates. Priced per watt — the metric installers actually use — that's roughly $2.50–$3.50 per watt. Learn that number, because it lets you compare quotes for differently sized systems on equal footing. If a quote won't state the system size in kilowatts and the price per watt, that's your first red flag.
The five factors that move your price
Almost every difference between two honest quotes traces back to one of these.
- System size is the biggest lever. Bigger systems cost more overall but usually less per watt, because fixed costs spread across more panels. Your size is set by how much power you use — pull 12 months of utility bills.
- Panel type and efficiency. Premium high-efficiency panels cost more per watt but generate more from the same roof area — worth it if your roof space is tight, often not if you have room to add standard panels instead.
- Roof complexity. A simple, unshaded, south-facing asphalt roof is the cheap case. Steep pitches, multiple facets, and tile or slate all add cost. If your roof is near end of life, re-roof first.
- Location and local labor. Labor rates, permit fees and how competitive your local installer market is all move the total, and sunnier regions need fewer panels for the same output.
- Add-ons, especially batteries. A backup battery is the most common way a $20,000 project becomes $30,000-plus. Budget it separately and decide deliberately.
Incentives and the real net cost
This is the section that changed the most going into 2026, so don't rely on older articles or an installer's assumptions here. The 30% federal residential solar tax credit (the Residential Clean Energy Credit, IRS Section 25D) ended on December 31, 2025. It was eliminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025 — with no phase-down period. If you buy a system with cash or a loan and it's placed in service in 2026 or later, you get $0 federal tax credit. That credit previously covered 30% of the total cost with no cap, so its removal is the single biggest change to the solar-cost math in years.
There's one federal pathway that survives: solar leases and power-purchase agreements (PPAs), where a third party owns the system, can still carry a federal commercial credit (Section 48E) that the financing company claims — not you — and may pass through as a lower monthly payment or rate. That's a business decision by the leasing company, not a guarantee, and it only applies if you don't own the system outright.
What's still worth checking for your specific address:
- State tax credits and rebates — several states run their own incentive programs independent of the federal credit, and a few offer meaningful upfront rebates. These vary enormously and change on their own schedules.
- Utility rebates and SREC markets — some utilities pay you for the solar credits your system generates, separate from any tax incentive.
- Net metering rules — how your utility credits exported power is often worth more to your lifetime savings than any single rebate, and it's set at the state or utility level, not federally.
If an installer's quoted "net price" assumes a federal tax credit for a cash or loan purchase, that's out of date as of 2026 — ask them to remove it and re-quote. For any state or utility incentive they cite, ask for the current program page in writing; state programs run out of funding or change eligibility without much notice.
How to read and compare quotes
Get at least three quotes, and insist each is itemized rather than a single lump sum. A comparable quote should spell out:
- System size in kW and price per watt — the only fair way to compare proposals.
- Specific equipment — panel make/model and inverter type, not just "premium panels."
- Production estimate in annual kWh, and the assumptions behind it.
- Warranties, split into equipment, workmanship and any production guarantee.
- What's included vs. extra — panel upgrades, roof work and permit fees named up front.
Walk away from high-pressure "today only" pricing, a refusal to name equipment or system size, and any 2026 quote for a cash or loan purchase that still bakes in a 30% federal credit.
Mistakes that inflate the price or stall the project
- Not checking roof condition first. Installing panels on a roof that needs replacing within the next few years means paying to remove and reinstall the system later — re-roof first if your roof is already near end of life.
- Undersizing for future electrification. If an EV or heat pump is a few years out, sizing the system without that future load in mind often means a second, less-efficient install later instead of one right-sized system now.
- Assuming an incentive that's already gone. As covered above, quotes that still assume the expired 30% federal credit for a cash or loan purchase will understate your real net cost.
- Skipping the production-guarantee conversation. Without a documented production estimate and guarantee, there's no baseline to hold the installer to if the system underperforms.
Why solar isn't a DIY install
DIY solar kits exist and can lower equipment cost, but the labor and paperwork side of a solar install is not a casual weekend project. Working at height on a roof, tying into your home's electrical system, and navigating permitting and utility interconnection all carry real risk and, in most areas, legal requirements for licensed electrical work. Utilities generally won't approve interconnection for a system that wasn't installed and signed off by a licensed professional, which removes most of the theoretical DIY savings anyway. If you want to cut cost, the more realistic lever is shopping multiple licensed installers rather than self-installing.
What actually happens, from signing to switch-on
- Site assessment and design (1–2 weeks). A technician checks your roof's condition, shading, and structure, and finalizes the system layout and equipment list.
- Permitting (2–8 weeks, the biggest wildcard). Your installer submits plans to your local building department and utility for interconnection approval. Timelines vary enormously by jurisdiction — this is usually the slowest part of the whole process, not the physical install.
- Installation (1–3 days). Mounting hardware goes up first, then panels, then the inverter and electrical connections. Most homes are done in a single day; larger or more complex roofs can take two to three.
- Inspection (a few days to a few weeks after install). A local inspector verifies the electrical work meets code before the utility will authorize connection.
- Utility interconnection and permission to operate (1–4 weeks). Your utility has to approve the system and often swap your meter before you can legally turn it on — skipping this step, even after installation is physically complete, is not allowed.
The panels going up takes a day or two. The paperwork on either side of that — permitting before, utility sign-off after — is what actually stretches a solar project to two or three months from contract to power-on. Ask your installer for a realistic total timeline, not just an install date.
Frequently asked questions
Is solar still worth it in 2026?
The math changed with the federal tax credit gone for cash and loan purchases, but it can still work — especially with enough sun, higher-than-average electricity rates, and a state or utility incentive that still applies to you. Run your own payback number (net cost after any incentives you actually qualify for, divided by estimated annual savings) rather than trusting a blanket yes or no, and rule out a lease or PPA if you want to compare that path too.
How long do solar panels last?
Most carry performance warranties around 25 years and often keep producing beyond that at reduced output. Inverters have shorter lifespans and may need one replacement during the system's life.
Do I need a battery?
Not for the system to work — without one you use the grid when the sun isn't out. A battery mainly buys backup power during outages. It's a meaningful added cost, so decide deliberately.
How long does the whole process take, start to finish?
Typically two to four months from signed contract to permission to operate, driven mostly by local permitting timelines and utility interconnection — not by the one-to-three-day physical installation.
What happens to my solar system if I sell my home?
An owned system (cash or loan) generally transfers with the home and can be a selling point. A leased system or PPA requires the buyer to qualify for and assume the agreement, which can complicate or slow a sale — worth factoring in if you might move within the system's contract term.
Does solar work if my roof faces the wrong direction?
South-facing roofs are ideal in the northern hemisphere, but east- and west-facing roofs still produce meaningful power, just less of it. A site assessment will size the system to your actual roof, and panel efficiency improvements have narrowed the gap between orientations over time.
Sources & further reading
- IRS, Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D) — guidance on the credit's expiration for property placed in service after December 31, 2025.
- One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1, signed July 4, 2025) — the legislation that terminated the 30% residential credit ahead of its original 2034 schedule.
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmark — the primary source behind the $2.50–$3.50 per watt residential installed-cost range cited above.
- DSIRE (Database of State Incentives for Renewables & Efficiency), dsireusa.org — state and utility incentive programs vary by location and change frequently; check this database or your utility directly for what currently applies to your address.
This guide reflects independent research using public pricing data and industry sources, not a professional site assessment. Cost ranges are estimates for planning only and vary by region, home and market conditions — always confirm with local quotes and current incentive rules.