Educational Tool Only: This calculator provides general estimates for informational purposes. It is
not tax, energy, or financial advice. Incentive amounts change frequently — always verify current federal and state incentives at
dsireusa.org and consult a licensed tax advisor before making any decisions.
How to Use the Solar Panel ROI Calculator
- Select Residential or Commercial mode. Commercial mode adds MACRS depreciation tax benefit (Year 1 bonus depreciation + remaining 5-year MACRS schedule), which can significantly improve ROI for business owners.
- Enter your system size in kilowatts (kW). A typical US home solar system ranges from 6 to 12 kW. Your installer's quote will include a recommended system size based on your energy usage.
- Enter your total system cost (fully installed, before incentives) — or switch to $/W entry. The national average installed cost in 2025–2026 is approximately $2.50–$3.50 per watt. Divide your installer quote by 1000 × system kW to get $/W.
- Set your incentives — this is the most critical step. The default federal ITC is set to 0% because the residential credit status is uncertain in 2026. Update this to your verified rate after checking dsireusa.org or consulting a tax professional. Also enter any state tax credits or utility rebates.
- Set annual production. Use Auto-Estimate (system kW × daily sun hours × 365 × 0.80 efficiency factor), or enter kWh directly from your installer's PVWatts report. Peak sun hours vary: US average ~4.5, Southwest 5.5–6.5, Northeast/Northwest 3.5–4.0.
- Enter your current electricity rate ($/kWh). Find this on your utility bill — total charge divided by total kWh used. US average is ~$0.13–$0.17/kWh, but rates vary widely ($0.09 in Louisiana to $0.35+ in Hawaii/California).
- Set electricity inflation (historical US average ~3%/yr). This significantly impacts long-term savings — solar panels "lock in" your energy cost while grid rates rise.
- Panel degradation (default 0.5%/yr) means panels lose about 0.5% of their output annually. Quality Tier 1 panels typically guarantee ≤0.5%/yr degradation and ≥80% output at 25 years.
- Optionally enter financing details for a solar loan. The cash flow table will reflect loan payments in the early years versus electricity bill savings.
- Click Calculate Solar ROI to see your payback period, 25-year net ROI, LCOE, and the full year-by-year cash flow table.
Understanding Solar Panel ROI — Key Concepts
Solar panel ROI analysis goes beyond simple payback. The real question is: over the life of the system (typically 25–30 years), how much does solar energy cost you compared to what you would have paid the grid? And does the net present value justify the upfront investment?
Payback Period: The number of years before cumulative energy savings equal the net system cost (after incentives). A payback of 6–9 years is considered excellent; 10–12 years is typical in many US markets. Since panels are warranted for 25 years and often last 30+, even a 12-year payback leaves 13+ years of essentially free electricity.
Net ROI: Total savings over the analysis period, divided by net system cost, expressed as a percentage. A 25-year net ROI of 200–300% is achievable in high-rate markets. Compare this to alternative investments — solar ROI is essentially risk-free (utility bills are unavoidable) and partially immune to inflation.
LCOE (Levelized Cost of Energy): The total cost of ownership divided by total lifetime energy produced, in $/kWh. This lets you compare solar's all-in cost against your utility rate. If your LCOE is $0.06/kWh and you pay $0.15/kWh to the grid, solar delivers a ~60% cost reduction per kWh over its lifetime — even without counting incentives.
Panel Degradation: Solar panels degrade gradually — typically 0.3–0.8% per year. A 0.5%/yr degradation rate means a panel producing 1,000 kWh in Year 1 produces ~950 kWh in Year 10 and ~880 kWh in Year 25. Quality panels from Tier 1 manufacturers (SunPower, LG, REC) may degrade at only 0.25–0.3%/yr. Always check the power output warranty (not just the product warranty).
Electricity Price Inflation: US retail electricity rates have increased an average of ~2.7%/yr over the past 20 years (EIA data), but with significant year-to-year volatility. Higher electricity prices are your friend with solar — they increase the value of every kWh your panels produce. A 3%/yr electricity inflation assumption is reasonable and conservative; some markets have seen 5–6%/yr.
Net Metering: Most US states require utilities to credit solar customers for excess electricity sent to the grid (net metering or net energy metering / NEM). If your system produces more than you consume during the day, you earn credits to offset electricity drawn at night. Net metering policies vary by state and utility — some pay full retail value, others pay lower "avoided cost" rates, and a few states have eliminated net metering for new customers. Verify your utility's current net metering policy before assuming full retail credit for all production.
2026 Federal Solar Incentive Status — What You Need to Know
The federal solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) has historically been one of the most valuable incentives for solar adoption. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022 set the residential ITC (Section 25D) at 30% through 2032 and the commercial ITC (Section 48E) at similar levels. However, legislative changes enacted or proposed in 2025–2026 may have altered these rates for new installations. As of mid-2026, the status of the residential 30% ITC is uncertain and may have been reduced, phased out, or made subject to income or other restrictions depending on legislation enacted after August 2025 (the knowledge cutoff for this tool). Do not assume you qualify for any specific federal credit rate without verifying at dsireusa.org or consulting a licensed tax professional.
This calculator intentionally defaults the federal ITC to 0% to avoid giving false confidence in a credit that may not apply. Enter your verified rate in the Federal Tax Credit field. If you are purchasing solar in 2026, get a written statement from your installer and tax advisor about the specific credit you can claim. The commercial ITC (Section 48E) and MACRS depreciation may remain available at varying rates for business taxpayers — the commercial mode in this calculator estimates those benefits based on your inputs.
State Incentives: Many states offer their own solar incentives independent of federal policy, including state tax credits (Arizona: 25%, New York: 25%, Massachusetts: 15%, etc.), sales tax exemptions, property tax exemptions, and utility rebates. Some states also have solar renewable energy certificate (SREC) markets that can generate ongoing income. Check DSIRE (dsireusa.org) for your state's current programs — state incentives are often more stable than federal ones and can add $1,000–$10,000+ in value.
Commercial Solar & MACRS Depreciation
For business owners, solar economics are often even more attractive because commercial solar systems qualify for federal MACRS (Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System) depreciation. Solar is classified as 5-year property under MACRS, and with bonus depreciation (also subject to current law — check your situation), a large portion of the system cost can be deducted in Year 1. This tax shield can reduce the effective net cost of a commercial system by 20–35% depending on your tax rate. The commercial mode in this calculator estimates the PV of the MACRS tax benefit and incorporates it into the net cost and ROI figures. Always work with a CPA experienced in commercial solar to optimize your depreciation strategy.
How to Get Solar Quotes and What to Compare
- Get at least 3 quotes: Solar pricing varies significantly by installer. EnergySage's marketplace lets you compare quotes from pre-screened installers online — typically 20–30% lower than going direct to a single installer.
- Compare system size vs. your annual usage: A properly sized system should offset 90–100% of your annual usage. An oversized system wastes money if your utility doesn't offer full retail net metering for excess production.
- Evaluate equipment: Not all panels are equal. Tier 1 panels have better degradation rates, longer warranties (25-year product + power warranty), and more established manufacturers. High-efficiency panels (SunPower, REC, Panasonic) produce more power per square foot, important if roof space is limited.
- Verify the installer: Check NABCEP certification, state licensing, insurance, and reviews. A poor installation can cause performance problems, roof leaks, and warranty complications.
- Understand the monitoring system: Most modern systems include app-based monitoring (Enphase, SolarEdge). Verify you can track actual production vs. estimated to catch performance issues early.
- Check inverter type: String inverters (one central unit) are cheaper but less efficient if any panel is shaded. Microinverters (Enphase) or DC optimizers (SolarEdge) optimize each panel independently — worth the extra cost for roofs with partial shading or multiple orientations.
- Battery storage: Solar + battery storage (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase IQ Battery) provides backup power and helps in states with less favorable net metering. Batteries add $8,000–$15,000+ to system cost but may qualify for separate ITC credits. Run a separate analysis for storage ROI.
Frequently Asked Questions
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How accurate is the auto-estimated annual production?
The auto-estimate (system kW × peak sun hours × 365 × 0.80) is a reasonable first approximation. The 0.80 factor accounts for real-world losses: inverter efficiency, wiring losses, temperature de-rating, soiling, and shading. For a more accurate estimate, use NREL's free PVWatts calculator (pvwatts.nrel.gov) — it uses weather data for your specific location and allows you to specify roof tilt and azimuth. Installer quotes should also include a production estimate from PVWatts or similar software.
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Does this calculator account for net metering?
Yes, indirectly — annual savings = annual production × electricity rate, which implicitly assumes you receive full retail value for all electricity produced (either self-consumed or credited back via net metering). If your utility pays a lower rate for exported energy, your actual savings may be lower than calculated. Some utilities have moved to "net billing" at avoided cost rates rather than retail net metering; in those cases, the self-consumption portion still saves at retail rate, but excess export earns less. Adjust the electricity rate input downward if your utility pays below retail for exports.
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What is LCOE and why does it matter?
LCOE (Levelized Cost of Energy) is the total all-in cost of your solar system divided by the total electricity it produces over its lifetime, measured in $/kWh. If your solar LCOE is $0.07/kWh and your grid electricity costs $0.15/kWh, solar is delivering energy at less than half the grid rate — over the entire analysis period, even after accounting for degradation and O&M costs. LCOE lets you compare solar to grid electricity and to other energy sources on an apples-to-apples basis.
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Should I buy solar with cash or a loan?
Cash purchases maximize ROI because you avoid interest payments and get the full benefit from day one. However, solar loans can make sense if your loan rate is low (e.g., 5–7%) and your alternative use of that cash would earn less. Some solar loans allow you to use the ITC tax credit (if applicable) to pay down principal in Year 1, reducing the effective balance. Never roll solar into a home equity loan unless you're comfortable with your home as collateral. Avoid solar leases and PPAs — you forego the tax credits and typically earn much lower long-term value compared to ownership.
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Will solar increase my home's value?
Multiple studies, including research from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, have found that solar installations increase home sale prices by an average of $4,000–$6,000 per kilowatt of system size (roughly $24,000–$48,000 for an 8 kW system). The Zillow analysis found solar homes sold for 4.1% more on average. However, this benefit is not reflected in the ROI calculator — consider it a bonus on top of the energy savings.
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What happens after the analysis period?
Most quality solar panels last 30–35 years, producing electricity beyond the 25-year analysis period. Inverters typically need replacement at 10–15 years (~$1,000–$3,000). After the analysis period ends, panels continue producing at degraded output with no remaining capital cost to recover — essentially free electricity until end of life. This means the 25-year analysis is conservative; actual lifetime value often exceeds the modeled figure.