When do solar panels pay for themselves?
Payback period is the question almost every homeowner asks first, and for good reason: it is the cleanest way to judge whether solar is a smart purchase. It answers a simple question — how many years until the money you save on electricity equals what you spent on the system? Once you pass that line, every kilowatt-hour your panels produce is essentially free for the rest of their 25-plus-year life.
How the end of the federal tax credit lengthened payback
For years, the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D) was the single biggest factor shortening payback, cutting your effective cost by nearly a third. That credit ended on December 31, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill, so a homeowner-owned system bought in 2026 no longer benefits from it — which pushes typical payback periods out by roughly two to four years compared with 2025. Calculators that still bake in 30% now understate payback. Ours defaults to the 2026 rules and only applies the credit if you model a system placed in service in 2025 or earlier.
Why we report ROI and NPV too
Payback has one blind spot: it stops counting the day you break even, ignoring a decade or more of pure savings that follow. That is why we pair it with two forward-looking measures. Return on investment captures your full 25-year net profit as a percentage of what you invested. Net present value goes further still, discounting every future dollar of savings back to today so you can compare solar head-to-head with leaving the money invested elsewhere. A positive NPV means the panels win that comparison.
What moves your payback the most
Three levers dominate. First, your electricity rate — the more you pay per kilowatt-hour today, the faster solar pays back, and we escalate that rate 2.5% per year to reflect decades of utility price history. Second, local sunshine, which determines how many kilowatt-hours each panel actually produces. Third, your installed price per watt, where shopping multiple quotes can swing payback by a year or more. Adjust any of these inputs above to see your break-even update instantly, and copy the page URL to revisit or share your exact scenario.