Skip to content
Wattcrunch

Solar Savings Calculator

Project your savings over 25 years, with payback, ROI, and NPV — using accurate 2026 federal tax rules.

Simple vs advanced

Keep the main economics visible first. Open advanced only when you want to tune the assumptions yourself.

kW
$/kWh

This tool is best for answering the homeowner question that matters most: “Will solar actually save me enough to be worth doing?”

What really drives solar savings

Solar savings come down to a simple trade: you pay for a system once, and in return you stop buying decades of electricity from your utility. Whether that trade is a good one depends on four variables — how much sun your roof gets, how much you pay per kilowatt-hour today, how fast those rates rise, and what you pay for the system after incentives. This calculator models all four over a 25-year horizon so you can see the full picture rather than a single first-year number.

Important 2026 update: the homeowner tax credit has ended

For more than a decade the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D) was the biggest lever in solar economics. That changed on January 1, 2026. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill, signed July 4, 2025, the homeowner credit was terminated for any system placed in service after December 31, 2025 — so a home solar system you buy with cash or a loan in 2026 receives $0 in federal credit. Many competing calculators still quietly apply 30%, which now overstates savings by thousands of dollars. We default to the correct 2026 rules and only apply the credit if you specifically model a system that was placed in service in 2025 or earlier. One nuance worth knowing: leases and power-purchase agreements can still pass through federal value, because the third-party owner claims the separate commercial 48E credit.

Why we escalate rates and degrade production

Two long-run effects pull in opposite directions. Utility electricity prices have risen roughly 2.5% per year over the long term, which makes each kWh your panels produce more valuable as time goes on. Working against that, solar modules lose about 0.5% of their output annually as they age. A credible savings model has to account for both, which is why our year-by-year table shows production gently declining while the value of each kWh climbs. The net effect for most homeowners is still strongly positive.

Payback, ROI, and NPV — three lenses

We report three complementary metrics. Payback period tells you when cumulative savings cover your net cost — intuitive, but it ignores everything after that date. ROI expresses lifetime net profit as a percentage of what you put in. Net present value is the most rigorous: it discounts every future dollar of savings back to today (we use 4%) so you can compare solar against simply investing the money. A positive NPV means the panels beat that alternative.

Net metering is the wildcard

How your utility credits the energy you export to the grid can swing savings by thousands of dollars. Under full retail net metering, every exported kWh offsets one you would have bought. Under newer net-billing tariffs, exports may be worth only a fraction of retail, which rewards self-consumption and batteries. Check your state’s rules in our Incentive Finder, then revisit this calculator with a realistic export assumption.

As always, treat these figures as a well-informed estimate. Final numbers depend on a professional shade study, your exact rate schedule, and the equipment quoted. But walking into a sales conversation already knowing your payback and ROI is the best protection against an inflated pitch.

Frequently asked questions

How much will I save with solar over 25 years?

It depends on your system size, local sunshine, electricity rate, and net-metering rules. A typical 8 kW system can save a US homeowner roughly $18,000–$40,000 over 25 years. Note that, as of 2026, homeowner-owned systems no longer receive the federal tax credit, so net savings are lower than older estimates suggest. Enter your numbers above for a personalized figure.

What is solar payback period?

Payback is the number of years until your cumulative electricity savings equal your net system cost (after incentives). Most US homeowners reach payback in 7–12 years, after which the energy is essentially free for the panels’ remaining 15+ year warranty.

Is there still a federal solar tax credit in 2026?

Not for homeowner-owned systems. The 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit (Section 25D) ended December 31, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill. Systems placed in service through 2025 still qualify; cash or loan purchases in 2026 get $0. Leases and PPAs can still pass through federal value via the commercial 48E credit. Our calculator uses these 2026 rules by default.

What electricity rate should I use?

Use your effective rate: divide a recent bill’s total by the kWh used. The US average is about $0.17/kWh but ranges from under $0.11 to over $0.30. We escalate the rate 2.5% per year to reflect historical utility inflation.

What is NPV and why does it matter?

Net present value discounts future savings back to today’s dollars (we use 4%). A positive NPV means solar beats keeping that money invested at the discount rate — a more rigorous test than simple payback.

Or browse all calculators, find rebates in the Incentive Finder, or read our solar guides.