Solar in New York 2026: Is It Worth It?

A homeowner's guide to solar panel costs, incentives, and payback periods in New York after the federal solar tax credit expired on December 31, 2025.

State Guide

2026 Update: The 30% federal residential solar Investment Tax Credit (Section 25D) expired on December 31, 2025. Homeowners who placed systems in service in 2025 or earlier can still claim it on their 2025 return. Systems installed in 2026 and beyond receive no federal residential solar credit. This guide focuses on New York-specific incentives and economics post-ITC.

TL;DR — New York Solar in 2026

A 7 kW system in New York costs about $19,600-$23,800 in 2026. Thanks to the 25% state tax credit (up to $5,000), NY-Sun rebates, full retail net metering via VDER, and sales/property exemptions, payback is 6-8 years — faster than most sunnier states.

Average Solar Cost in New York

In 2026, residential solar installations in New York average about $3.10 per watt installed before any rebates or incentives. For a typical 7 kW (7,000 watt) rooftop system — enough to cover the electricity use of an average New York home — that works out to:

  • Low end: ~$19,600 (efficient installers, modest equipment)
  • Typical: ~$21,700
  • High end: ~$23,800 (premium panels, microinverters, full-service installer)

Battery storage is a separate line item. A typical 10 kWh battery (Tesla Powerwall 3, Enphase IQ 5P, or similar) adds about $10,000 to $14,000 before any applicable state battery incentives. In states with reduced net metering or frequent outages, batteries have become close to standard rather than optional.

Why prices are where they are: hardware costs have fallen roughly 70% over the past decade, but soft costs (permitting, labor, sales, interconnection, customer acquisition) have stayed sticky. New York's install costs reflect local labor rates, permitting complexity, and how competitive the installer market is in your area.

New York Solar Incentives in 2026

State income tax credit: 25% of system cost, capped at $5,000. One of the strongest remaining state credits in 2026.

Here is the full list of state-level and utility-level incentives currently active in New York:

  • NY State Solar Tax Credit (Form IT-255): 25% of total system cost up to $5,000, claimable against NYS personal income tax. Unused credit carries forward 5 years. This applies to owned systems (not leases or PPAs).
  • NY-Sun Megawatt Block program: NYSERDA incentive that pays upfront per-watt rebates that step down as each regional block fills. In 2026, residential incentives in many regions are around $200-$400/kW depending on block status.
  • Property tax exemption (RPTL 487): 15-year exemption on added home value from solar. Municipalities can opt out but most have not.
  • Sales tax exemption: 100% NYS sales tax exemption on residential solar equipment and installation labor. Saves 4-8.875% depending on county.
  • VDER (Value of Distributed Energy Resources): New York's successor to traditional net metering. Residential systems up to 25 kW on mass-market tariffs still effectively receive near-retail credit. Commercial and community systems use a more complex Value Stack calculation.

Note: incentive budgets and terms change frequently. Confirm the current status of any program with the administering agency or utility before signing a solar contract. For a deeper breakdown, see Solar Energy Simplified's New York incentives page.

Payback Period and 25-Year Savings

Here is how the math works out for a typical New York homeowner installing a 7 kW system in 2026:

MetricValue (7 kW system in New York)
Installed cost (before incentives)$21,700
Average peak sun hours4.2 hrs/day
Annual production estimate~8,700 kWh
Retail electricity rate$0.24/kWh
Estimated year 1 bill savings~$2,088
Simple payback (solar only)~7 years
Net 25-year savings (after payback)~$84,000

These are estimates only. Your actual payback depends on roof orientation, shading, future electricity rate inflation (historically 2-4% per year), system degradation (~0.5% per year for tier-1 panels), and whether your utility offers full retail net metering or a reduced export rate. The payback calculator lets you model your specific situation.

Best Utilities and Net Metering in New York

Residential customers under 25 kW are on the 'Phase One NEM' or 'Mass Market VDER' tariff, which credits exports at essentially the full retail rate (including supply, delivery, and fixed charges are applied separately). A monthly Customer Benefit Contribution (CBC) adds a small fixed charge per kW of installed capacity. The net impact is still very favorable compared to NEM 3.0 states.

Utility landscape

Major utilities include Con Edison (NYC), National Grid (upstate/LI), NYSEG, RG&E, Central Hudson, Orange & Rockland, and PSEG Long Island. All follow NY Public Service Commission rules. Con Edison and PSEG-LI have the highest retail rates ($0.28-$0.32/kWh), making solar especially attractive there.

Before you sign a contract: verify which utility serves your address, the specific rate plan you'll be moved to as a solar customer, and how your export compensation is calculated. These details matter more than the sticker price of the system.

Sun Hours and ROI by Region

New York has an average of 4.2 peak sun hours per day, but production varies meaningfully by region:

RegionPeak Sun Hours & Notes
Long Island (Suffolk, Nassau)4.3-4.5 peak sun hours. PSEG-LI runs its own NY-Sun adjacent program. High rates = fast payback.
NYC metro (Con Edison)4.1-4.3 peak sun hours. Highest retail rates in the state. Roof space is the main constraint, not sun.
Hudson Valley (Central Hudson, Orange & Rockland)4.2-4.4 peak sun hours. Central Hudson territory has especially generous NY-Sun blocks as of 2026.
Upstate (Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo)3.9-4.2 peak sun hours. Lower production but also lower install costs. Net production is excellent in summer months.
Adirondacks / North Country3.8-4.1 peak sun hours. Snowfall affects annual output; steeper tilt helps self-clearing.

Peak sun hours are a proxy for production potential. One peak sun hour equals 1 kWh per kilowatt of installed capacity, minus system losses (typically 14-18% for a well-designed residential system).

Who Solar Is Worth It For in New York

NY homeowners with $130+ monthly bills, south- or west-facing roofs, and NY state tax liability of $1,000+ per year benefit most. The stacked incentive package (25% state credit + NY-Sun rebate + VDER + sales/property exemption) keeps NY as one of the top 3 states for solar economics in 2026 despite lower sun hours.

Situations where solar typically is not worth it in New York:

  • You plan to move within 3-4 years (you may recoup the investment in home value, but not in bill savings).
  • Your roof is heavily shaded or faces mostly north.
  • Your monthly electric bill is under $60 — there simply isn't enough consumption to justify a system.
  • Your roof has less than 8-10 years of useful life left (replace the roof first, or pair the two projects).
  • You rent or live in a condo without approval authority over the roof (look into community solar instead).

Financing Solar in New York Without the Federal Credit

With the 30% federal tax credit gone, the cash-purchase breakeven in New York has stretched by 2-3 years. That makes the choice of financing even more consequential than before. Here are the three practical paths for New York homeowners in 2026:

1. Cash purchase

Still the shortest path to highest lifetime savings. You own the system, claim any state credits directly, keep all SREC or production-incentive revenue, and avoid any finance costs. Good fit if you have $18K-$25K liquid and will live in the home 7+ years.

2. Solar loan

Typical secured solar loans in New York run 4.99%-8.99% APR over 10-25 years. Watch carefully for dealer fees — many low-APR loans include a 15-30% dealer fee baked into your system price, which inflates the total amount financed. Ask for a "cash price" and a "loan price" quote side by side; if they differ materially, the difference is the dealer fee. This guide covers the pattern in detail.

3. Lease or PPA

Because the commercial ITC under Section 48E is still active through 2027, third-party-ownership (TPO) providers can still claim tax credits on panels they own and lease to you. The trade-off: you don't own the system, can't claim New York state incentives yourself, and typically pay a higher effective rate over 20-25 years than cash or loan. Leases/PPAs can still make sense for homeowners with no state tax liability or who can't afford a down payment.

Rule of thumb: If the all-in financed monthly payment is higher than your current average electric bill, the loan is probably structured around dealer fees rather than your interests. Walk away and get another quote.

Common Mistakes New York Homeowners Make

Across thousands of solar shopper conversations, the same handful of missteps account for most of the regret:

  • Oversizing the system. Many installers quote systems sized to 100-110% of annual usage when New York's export compensation penalizes overproduction. For utilities with reduced export rates, sizing to 85-95% of usage plus a battery typically delivers better ROI than a bigger grid-tied-only system.
  • Accepting the first quote. Install prices for the same equipment vary by 20-40% across New York installers. Always get three quotes.
  • Ignoring the interconnection timeline. In New York, utility interconnection approval can take 2-12+ weeks depending on the utility. This matters for incentive enrollment windows and for NEM grandfathering where applicable.
  • Believing the 25-year warranty without reading it. Panel product warranties (10-25 years) and performance warranties (25-30 years) are usually fine. The risk is the installer workmanship warranty — often 10 years, sometimes 2 years. A bankrupt installer's workmanship warranty is worthless; stick with installers who've been in business 8+ years in New York.
  • Not modeling future rate inflation. Electricity prices in New York have risen 2-6% annually for the last decade. A solar system's savings grow with every rate increase, but most quotes understate this by assuming flat future prices.
  • Signing before permitting approval. In some New York municipalities, permit plan review reveals structural or setback issues that block the install. Make sure your contract has an exit clause if the permit is rejected.

Recommended Equipment for New York Homes

These are the most commonly recommended components for New York residential solar in 2026. All links go to Amazon and include our affiliate tag — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Note: Most residential solar is installed as a turnkey package by a licensed installer. The equipment above is useful for understanding what's inside a system, for DIY-curious homeowners building off-grid setups, or for monitoring add-ons you can install yourself.

Run Your Own Numbers

Every home is different. Use our free calculators to estimate costs, payback, and incentives based on your specific situation:

Frequently Asked Questions

Does New York still have a state solar tax credit in 2026?
Yes. The NY Solar Energy System Equipment Credit provides 25% of cost up to $5,000 on Form IT-255. It remains one of the strongest state credits in the U.S. after the federal ITC expired.
What is VDER?
Value of Distributed Energy Resources — New York's successor to traditional net metering. For residential systems under 25 kW, it effectively still delivers near-retail credit for exports. Larger and commercial systems use a component-based 'Value Stack' instead.
How does the NY-Sun rebate work?
NYSERDA's Megawatt Block program provides upfront per-watt incentives that step down as regional blocks fill. Your installer applies the rebate directly to your contract price. In 2026, most regions are paying $200-$400/kW for residential systems.
How much does solar cost in New York in 2026?
About $2.80-$3.40 per watt installed. A 7 kW system is $19,600-$23,800 before the NY-Sun rebate and state credit.
Can I combine the NY state credit with NY-Sun?
Yes. The 25% state credit is calculated on your net system cost after NY-Sun rebates, but you can stack both. With the state credit, NY-Sun rebate, and sales/property exemptions, total NY-level benefits can exceed 30-40% of gross system cost.

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