You’ve decided solar is worth it. You understand the ROI. You know your system size.
Now comes a critical decision that many homeowners overlook:
How do you actually PAY for it?
This choice is just as important as the system itself. Choose wisely, and you could save an extra $5,000-15,000 over 25 years. Choose poorly, and you might end up paying more than the system is worth.
Here’s the challenge: You have FOUR main financing options, and each has vastly different implications for your finances, ownership, and long-term savings:
- Cash – Pay upfront, own everything, maximum savings
- Solar Loan – Borrow money, own the system, grow equity
- Solar Lease – Rent panels, minimal upfront cost, limited savings
- Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) – Pay per kWh, zero upfront, lowest control
Each option has tradeoffs. The “best” choice depends on YOUR financial situation, priorities, and timeline.
In this guide, we’ll compare all four options side-by-side with real numbers so you can make the decision that maximizes YOUR benefit.
The 4 Solar Financing Options at a Glance
Option 1: Cash Purchase
You pay the full system cost upfront in cash.
Upfront cost: $8,000-25,000 (depending on system size)
Monthly payment: $0 (no loan)
Ownership: You own it 100%
Savings benefits: 100% of savings go to you
Tax credits: You get the full 30% federal credit
Performance: Maximum incentive to maintain it well
Long-term value: Highest (you own an appreciating asset)
Pros: ✓ Maximum long-term savings (100% of electricity savings) ✓ No interest payments (saves $1,000-3,000 over 25 years) ✓ Full federal tax credit ($2,400-7,500) ✓ Own the system outright ✓ Leverage home equity if needed ✓ Simplest option (no contracts, flexibility)
Cons: ✗ Requires $8,000-25,000 upfront (significant capital) ✗ Ties up money that could be invested elsewhere ✗ Liquidity risk (can’t quickly access the cash) ✗ Requires strong emergency fund first
Option 2: Solar Loan
You borrow money to buy the system, then own it and pay back the loan.
System cost: $12,000
Loan amount: $12,000
Interest rate: 4-8% (depending on credit)
Loan term: 5-20 years
Monthly payment: $200-300
Ownership: You own it (after paying off loan)
Savings benefits: ~80% of savings (rest goes to loan)
Tax credits: You get the full 30% federal credit
Pros: ✓ No large upfront cost (pay over time) ✓ Federal tax credit reduces effective loan cost ✓ Own the system after loan is paid ✓ Monthly payment often less than electricity savings ✓ Builds equity over time (you own more each year) ✓ Flexible loan terms (5-20 years) ✓ Can refinance if rates drop
Cons: ✗ Pay interest over time ($1,200-3,000 total depending on rate) ✗ Tied to loan contract (less flexibility) ✗ Must have good credit (typically 650+ score) ✗ Home equity line requires home as collateral ✗ Can complicate home sale (loan transfers to buyer)
Option 3: Solar Lease
You rent the solar panels from a company. You don’t own them.
Upfront cost: $0-1,000 (minimal, maybe just permits)
Monthly payment: $100-150 (for panel rental)
Loan repayment term: 15-20 years
Ownership: Leasing company owns the panels
Savings benefits: 50-70% of savings (rest to lessor)
Tax credits: Leasing company gets the credit (not you)
Maintenance: Lessor handles everything
Degradation: Lessor's responsibility
Pros: ✓ Zero or minimal upfront cost (accessible to more people) ✓ All maintenance included (lessor’s responsibility) ✓ Fixed monthly payment (predictable cost) ✓ No impact on home sale (lease transfers or can be terminated) ✓ Low risk (lessor handles failures and repairs)
Cons: ✗ You DON’T get federal tax credit ($2,400-7,500 loss) ✗ You DON’T own the panels (no long-term asset) ✗ Monthly payment reduces your electricity savings (50% less benefit) ✗ Locked into contract (25-30 years typically) ✗ Difficult to change providers mid-contract ✗ Home equity stays with lessor (you don’t build ownership) ✗ If you move, lease transfers (complicates sale) ✗ Price escalation clauses (payment increases annually)
Option 4: Power Purchase Agreement (PPA)
You don’t buy or rent panels. You buy the ELECTRICITY they produce.
Upfront cost: $0 (nothing, zero dollars)
Monthly payment: $0-50 (just for electricity produced)
Contract term: 20-25 years
Ownership: PPA company owns the panels
Savings benefits: 30-50% of savings (depends on rates)
Tax credits: PPA company gets the credit
Electricity price: Fixed or slightly escalating
How PPAs work:
- PPA company installs panels on your roof (costs them money)
- You pay them only for the electricity the panels produce
- Example: Panels produce 6,000 kWh/year, you pay $0.10/kWh = $600/year
- Your grid electricity remains full price for any excess usage
- Contract typically escalates 2-3% per year
Pros: ✓ Zero upfront cost (if credit-qualified) ✓ Lowest immediate entry barrier ✓ Fixed or predictable electricity rate ✓ Lessor handles all maintenance and repairs ✓ Performance guarantee (lessor replaces underperforming panels) ✓ No impact if you sell (contract transfers)
Cons: ✗ Lowest long-term savings (30-50% of full benefit) ✗ YOU don’t get federal tax credit (huge loss: $2,400-7,500) ✗ Locked into 20-25 year contract (no exit without penalty) ✗ Price escalation (payment increases annually ~2-3%) ✗ Don’t own the panels or asset ✗ Limited to PPA company’s service area ✗ Home equity remains with lessor ✗ Most expensive option long-term (overall cost of electricity)
Side-by-Side Financial Comparison
Scenario: 6 kW System in Austin, Texas
System specs:
- Cost: $12,000 (pre-incentives)
- Annual production: 6,500 kWh
- Electricity rate: $0.13/kWh
- Annual savings (pre-financing): $845/year
Option 1: Cash Purchase
YEAR 1:
Upfront cost: $12,000
Federal tax credit (30%): -$3,600
Net cost: $8,400
Electricity cost without solar: $1,300/year
Solar production saves: $845/year
Net cost (with savings): $455/year
Monthly bill: $38/month (down from $108/month)
YEAR 10:
Total cash invested: $8,400
Cumulative savings: $8,450
System still producing: Yes (95% of original)
Break-even: ✓ Achieved!
YEAR 25:
Total cash invested: $8,400
Cumulative savings: $21,125
Net profit: $12,725
ROI: 151%
Cost per kWh over 25 years:
Total system cost: $8,400 (after incentives)
Total kWh produced: 150,000 kWh (25 years)
Cost per kWh: $0.056/kWh
Grid electricity rate: $0.13/kWh
Savings vs. grid: 57% cheaper
Option 2: Solar Loan
Assumptions:
- Loan amount: $12,000
- Interest rate: 6% (typical)
- Loan term: 15 years
- Monthly payment: $178
YEAR 1:
Monthly payment: $178
Electricity saved: $845/year
Net monthly benefit: $70/month savings
Federal tax credit received: $3,600 (reduces taxes)
Effective first-year cost: $178 × 12 = $2,136
minus $845 savings = $1,291
After tax credit applied: $1,291 - $3,600 = PROFIT
YEAR 5:
Total payments made: $178 × 60 = $10,680
Cumulative savings: $4,225
Loan balance: ~$5,000 (halfway through)
Net position: You've paid $10,680, saved $4,225
= $6,455 net cost
YEAR 15:
Total payments: $178 × 180 = $32,040
Cumulative savings: $12,675
Loan balance: $0 (PAID OFF!)
Net cost: $32,040 - $12,675 = $19,365
BUT you own the system free & clear
And continue saving $845/year with no payment
YEAR 25:
Total loan payments: $32,040
Total savings (25 years): $21,125
Net profit: -$10,915 (loss during loan period)
BUT from Year 15-25 (10 years free):
Additional savings: $8,450
TOTAL 25-year profit: -$10,915 + $8,450 = -$2,465
Wait, that's negative? See "Interest" below...
Wait, the math changed! What happened?
The loan costs you $3,600 in interest ($32,040 paid vs. $12,000 borrowed, minus tax credit offset). This reduces your net benefit.
Adjusted 25-year calculation:
Total savings: $21,125
Total loan payments: $32,040
Loan interest (net): ~$3,600
Tax credit value: +$3,600
Net 25-year position: $21,125 - $32,040 + $3,600 = -$7,315
WAIT, still negative. Why choose a loan?
The answer: Monthly cash flow vs. upfront capital
With a loan, you’re paying $178/month for electricity you would have paid $108/month for anyway.
Better way to think about it:
Without solar:
Year 1-25 electricity cost: $1,300 × 25 = $32,500
With solar (loan):
Loan payments (15 years): $32,040
Remaining electricity (rest): $455 × 10 = $4,550
Total out-of-pocket: $36,590
Comparison: $32,500 vs. $36,590
Loss of $4,090
BUT the system adds home value: ~$24,000
AND you own it after 15 years: Asset worth $3,000-5,000
So actual net position: Break-even to small gain
Option 3: Solar Lease
Assumptions:
- Monthly lease payment: $125
- Lease term: 20 years
- No upfront cost
- Price escalation: 2%/year
YEAR 1:
Monthly lease payment: $125
Electricity cost without solar: $108/month
TOTAL monthly cost: $233/month
Compared to no solar: $108/month
ADDITIONAL cost: +$125/month ($1,500/year)
WAIT—you save $845/year from panels,
but pay $1,500/year in lease?
ACTUAL net cost: -$655/year (COST INCREASE!)
Hold on—how can this be?
The lease payment is higher than the electricity savings! This is the problem with leases.
YEAR 1 detailed:
Electricity produced: 6,500 kWh
Value of production at rates: 6,500 × $0.13 = $845/year
BUT you pay lease: $125/month = $1,500/year
Difference: $1,500 - $845 = $655/year YOU PAY EXTRA
Why would anyone choose this?
The lease payment assumes you don’t own the panels, so the lessor keeps the tax credit and financing costs. They built their profit into the lease payment. They’re betting you’ll pay more than the savings.
Let’s see 20-year outcomes:
YEAR 5:
Cumulative lease payments: $125 × 60 = $7,500
Cumulative "savings": $4,225
Actual cost: $7,500 - $4,225 = $3,275 MORE than no solar
You're PAYING EXTRA to have solar!
YEAR 10:
Cumulative lease payments: $125 × 12 × 10 = $15,000
BUT with 2% escalation: ~$16,500 (higher later payments)
Cumulative "savings": $8,450
Actual cost: $16,500 - $8,450 = $8,050 MORE than no solar
YEAR 20:
Cumulative lease payments: ~$35,000 (with escalation)
Cumulative "savings": $17,000
Actual net cost: $35,000 - $17,000 = $18,000 LOSS
You paid $18,000 MORE over 20 years to have "free" solar!
When do leases make sense?
Leases only make sense if:
- You can’t afford upfront costs
- You have very high electricity rates ($0.18+/kWh)
- You really value $0 upfront (psychological benefit)
Otherwise, lease is typically the most expensive option.
Option 4: Power Purchase Agreement (PPA)
Assumptions:
- Solar production: 6,500 kWh/year
- PPA rate: $0.11/kWh (locked for 5 years, then escalates 2%/year)
- Contract term: 25 years
YEAR 1:
Electricity you buy from grid: ~3,500 kWh (leftover usage)
Electricity price: $0.13/kWh
Grid electricity cost: $455/month
Electricity from PPA panels: 6,500 kWh
PPA price: $0.11/kWh
PPA cost: $715/year = $60/month
Total electricity cost (Year 1): $455 + $60 = $515/month
Without solar (all from grid): $108/month
Cost increase with PPA: +$407/month more than no solar!
Wait, this is also MORE EXPENSIVE than no solar?
Yes! Here’s why:
Grid electricity: $0.13/kWh
PPA rate: $0.11/kWh (looks cheaper!)
BUT the grid offers solar:
If you owned solar: ~$845/year savings
With PPA: You pay $0.11/kWh
But lessor gets the tax credit ($3,600)
Lessor gets loan interest profit
Lessor gets system ownership
All that lessor value comes from YOUR bill!
25-year PPA outcome:
YEAR 1-25 total electricity cost:
Without solar: $1,300 × 25 = $32,500
Grid electricity (with PPA): $455 × 25 = $11,375
PPA payments (with escalation): ~$20,000
Total: $11,375 + $20,000 = $31,375
Savings vs. no solar: $32,500 - $31,375 = $1,125
BUT you didn't get the tax credit: -$3,600
Real net position: $1,125 - $3,600 = -$2,475 (LOSS)
When do PPAs make sense?
PPAs make sense if:
- You have zero credit access (can’t get a loan)
- Electricity rates are VERY high ($0.18+/kWh)
- You want zero upfront cost (even if it costs more long-term)
- You can’t qualify for other financing
Otherwise, PPA is expensive in the long run.
The Complete 25-Year Comparison
Scenario: 6 kW System, 25 Years
| Metric | Cash | Loan (6%) | Lease | PPA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront Cost | $8,400 | $0* | $0 | $0 |
| Monthly Payment | $0 | $178 | $125 | $60 |
| 25-Year Total Paid | $8,400 | $32,040 | $37,500 | $20,000 |
| 25-Year Savings | $21,125 | $21,125 | $21,125 | $21,125 |
| Tax Credit Benefit | $3,600 | $3,600 | $0 | $0 |
| Net 25-Year Profit/Loss | +$16,325 | -$7,315 | -$16,375 | -$1,875 |
| Ownership at End | ✓ You own | ✓ You own | ✗ They own | ✗ They own |
| Home Equity | Increases | Increases | No change | No change |
*After federal tax credit applied
Key Insight: CASH IS KING (Financially)
The data is clear: Paying cash results in:
- Maximum savings ($21,125 total)
- Maximum ownership
- Maximum home equity
- No interest payments
- Greatest flexibility
But cash isn’t always possible (requires $8,400+ liquid capital).
When Each Option Makes Sense
Choose CASH If:
✓ You have $8,000-25,000 in savings ✓ You don’t have better uses for the cash (not paying high-interest debt) ✓ You want maximum long-term savings ✓ You want complete ownership and control ✓ Your emergency fund is already solid (6+ months expenses)
Best for: Financially stable homeowners with capital available
Choose a SOLAR LOAN If:
✓ You want to own the system but don’t have upfront cash ✓ You have good credit (650+ score) ✓ Monthly payment < electricity savings ✓ You plan to stay in the home 10+ years ✓ You can afford the monthly payment comfortably
Monthly payment rule of thumb: Payment should be 60-80% of expected electricity savings.
- Annual savings: $845
- Monthly equivalent: $70
- Max safe payment: $42-56/month
- Most loans: $150-300/month (often too high!)
Best for: Homeowners who want ownership but need financing
Choose a LEASE If:
✓ You have NO access to other financing ✓ You’re very risk-averse (don’t want to manage system) ✓ You want absolutely zero upfront cost ✓ Maintenance is important to you (lessor handles it) ✓ You don’t mind lower long-term savings
Reality check: Leases are typically the second-most expensive option (after PPAs).
Best for: Very conservative homeowners with no capital and no credit
Choose a PPA If:
✓ You have zero ability to finance (no credit, no capital) ✓ Your electricity rates are VERY high ($0.18-0.25/kWh) ✓ You want the absolute lowest upfront barrier ✓ You don’t want to own anything ✓ You trust the PPA company long-term
Reality check: PPAs are typically the most expensive option long-term.
Best for: People with very high rates and zero other options
Hidden Costs You Need to Know About
Cash Purchase
- Opportunity cost – Could that $8,400 earn money elsewhere?
- Liquidity risk – Capital is tied up (can’t access if emergency)
- Inflation – Worth less in 10 years (2.5% inflation)
Solar Loan
- Interest paid – $1,200-3,000 over loan term
- Home equity collateral – Mortgage company has security interest
- Refinancing complexity – If you move, loan must be paid or transferred
- HELOC alternative cost – Home equity lines have variable rates (risky)
Solar Lease
- Price escalation – Payment increases 2-3% annually ($1,500 Year 1 → $2,400 Year 20)
- Lost tax credits – You don’t get the $3,600 federal credit
- No home equity – Panels don’t add to your net worth
- Transfer complications – If you move, lease transfers (complicates sale)
- Early termination fees – Canceling early costs $10,000-15,000+
PPA
- Lowest savings – You only get 30-50% of the benefit
- Lost tax credits – No $3,600 federal credit for you
- Price escalation – Similar to leases, increases 2-3%/year
- Long lock-in – 20-25 year contracts with limited exit
- Home value impact – Panels reduce home value (PPA company owns them)
The Financing Decision Matrix
Answer these 4 questions to find your best option:
Question 1: Do you have $8,000+ in cash reserves?
YES → Consider CASH or LOAN
NO → Consider LEASE or PPA
Question 2: Can you qualify for a loan (credit score 650+)?
YES → LOAN becomes attractive option
NO → LEASE or PPA more likely
Question 3: How much is your electricity monthly bill?
Above $150/month → LOAN or CASH most attractive
$100-150/month → LOAN or CASH decent
Below $100/month → PPA/LEASE might be only option
Question 4: How long will you stay in this home?
20+ years → CASH or LOAN (max savings)
10-20 yrs → LOAN or CASH
5-10 yrs → LOAN marginal, CASH better
<5 years → SKIP SOLAR entirely
Real-World Scenarios: Which Option Wins?
Scenario 1: Middle-Class Homeowner (Austin, Texas)
Profile:
- Age: 45, stable job
- Savings: $25,000 available
- Credit score: 750 (excellent)
- Electricity bill: $120/month ($1,440/year)
- Plans to stay: 25+ years
Recommendation: CASH
Reasoning:
✓ Has sufficient savings
✓ No high-interest debt to pay
✓ Excellent credit (could get 4% loan if needed)
✓ Long ownership horizon
✓ Risk tolerance: medium-high
✓ Priority: Maximum savings
25-year outcome with CASH:
Investment: $8,400
Profit: $16,325
Monthly bill reduction: $70/month
Home equity gain: $24,000
Overall: OPTIMAL CHOICE
Scenario 2: Young Professional (California)
Profile:
- Age: 32, career growth potential
- Savings: $12,000 (wants to keep for other investments)
- Credit score: 720 (good)
- Electricity bill: $180/month ($2,160/year)
- Plans to stay: 8-10 years
Recommendation: SOLAR LOAN
Reasoning:
✓ High electricity bill ($0.19/kWh)
✓ Good credit for favorable rates
✓ Wants to preserve savings for other investments
✓ Loan payment (~$250) < electricity savings ($180)
= $70/month cash flow positive
✓ Even with early move (7-10 years),
benefits likely exceed costs
25-year outcome with LOAN:
Investment: $0 upfront
Estimated profit: -$2,000-3,000 (break-even-ish)
BUT built equity, home value increase offsets
Overall: REASONABLE CHOICE (better than lease/PPA)
Scenario 3: Retiree (Louisiana)
Profile:
- Age: 68, fixed income
- Savings: $10,000 (need emergency fund)
- Credit score: 620 (fair/poor)
- Electricity bill: $90/month ($1,080/year)
- Plans to stay: 15-20 years
- Priority: Reduce monthly expenses
Recommendation: SKIP SOLAR (or minimal lease if must)
Reasoning:
✗ Low electricity bill → low savings potential
✗ Fair credit → poor loan rates
✗ Limited savings → loan scary, cash not available
✗ Fixed income → monthly payment risky
✗ Age → might move in 10-15 years (not ideal)
Even with lease/PPA:
Monthly cost: ~$80
Monthly savings: ~$45
Net cost: +$35/month (increases with age!)
Overall: NOT RECOMMENDED
Better option: Focus on energy efficiency (LEDs, insulation)
Scenario 4: Tech Executive (San Francisco)
Profile:
- Age: 40, high income
- Savings: $100,000+ available
- Credit score: 780 (excellent)
- Electricity bill: $250/month ($3,000/year, high rates)
- Plans to stay: uncertain (might move for job)
Recommendation: LOAN or consider LEASE
Reasoning:
✓ Excellent rates available (3-4%)
✓ High electricity bill makes solar very valuable
✓ Can comfortably afford loan payment
✓ BUT: Job uncertainty means might move in 3-5 years
If moving likely:
CASH: Risk of moving before break-even
LOAN: Can transfer to buyer, but complicates sale
LEASE: Transfers with house, minimal hassle
RECOMMENDATION: LOAN with assumption that
buyer assumes (common in CA)
or LEASE for mobility flexibility
25-year outcome (if stays):
Any option works well (rates are great)
CASH still has best ROI
But LOAN flexibility might be worth the interest cost
The Often-Forgotten Option: Combination Financing
You don’t have to choose just ONE option!
Some homeowners do hybrid approaches:
Example: 30% Down Payment + Loan
System cost: $12,000
Cash down payment (30%): $3,600
Loan for remainder: $8,400
Loan payment: $125/month (much lower!)
Tax credit applied to: Down payment (reduces effective cost to $0)
Result:
Minimal monthly payment ($125)
Own the system (loan transfers)
Lower monthly cost ($70/month savings > payment)
Best of both worlds!
Example: Lease + Future Buyout
Some leases allow buyout after 10 years at discounted rate.
Years 1-10: Lease for $125/month (low commitment)
Year 10: Option to buy remaining system at discount
(~$4,000-6,000)
Years 11-25: Own the system, keep savings
Benefit:
Lock in low early payments while deciding
Option to own later if you want
Problem:
Buyout price often isn't that discounted
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Mistake #1: Choosing Lease Because “Zero Money Down”
“Zero money down” is enticing, but ignores the true cost.
Lease payment: $125/month × 360 months = $45,000 total
Loan payment: $178/month × 180 months = $32,040 total
Savings from system: Only $21,125
LEASE NET COST: $45,000 - $21,125 = -$23,875 (LOSS)
LOAN NET COST: $32,040 - $21,125 = -$10,915 (LOSS)
CASH NET COST: $8,400 - (-$21,125) = $16,325 (GAIN)
"Zero money down" cost you $12,960 MORE than a loan!
❌ Mistake #2: Accepting First Loan Offer
Loan rates vary widely (4-8%) based on credit and lender.
Scenario: $12,000 system, 15-year loan
At 4% rate: Payment = $148/month, Interest = $2,640 total
At 6% rate: Payment = $178/month, Interest = $3,600 total
At 8% rate: Payment = $214/month, Interest = $4,520 total
Difference between best and worst: $1,880 in extra interest!
ACTION: Shop with 3-5 lenders before committing
❌ Mistake #3: Not Comparing Monthly Cost vs. Savings
Many people approve loans where payment exceeds savings.
Monthly electricity savings: $70/month (annual bill reduction ÷ 12)
Loan payment offered: $200/month
Net monthly cost: -$130/month EXTRA cost!
You're PAYING more to have solar!
ACTION: Reject any loan where payment > 80% of monthly savings
❌ Mistake #4: Ignoring Tax Credit Timing
The 30% federal tax credit is valuable, but timing matters.
With CASH: Pay $12,000, claim $3,600 credit on taxes
Effective cost: $8,400 ✓
With LOAN: Borrow $12,000, claim $3,600 credit on taxes
Reduces effective loan cost
You benefit from credit
With LEASE/PPA: Lessor gets $3,600 credit (not you!)
You lose this value
ACTION: Only CASH and LOAN owners get federal credit
LEASE/PPA benefits lessor (cost passed to you)
❌ Mistake #5: Not Understanding Lease Price Escalation
Leases often have annual increases (2-3%).
Year 1: $125/month
Year 10: $154/month (23% higher)
Year 20: $190/month (52% higher)
Over 20 years, escalation adds ~$15,000-20,000 to total cost
Many people sign without realizing this!
ACTION: Ask about escalation clause
Get exact payment schedule before signing
The Financing Checklist
Before choosing a financing option:
- [ ] Calculate monthly electricity savings (annual savings ÷ 12)
- [ ] Determine your available capital (cash on hand)
- [ ] Check credit score (affects loan rates)
- [ ] Understand tax credit value ($3,600 potential)
- [ ] Get quotes from 3+ lenders (for loan option)
- [ ] Calculate actual monthly cost (payment – savings)
- [ ] Verify loan terms (interest rate, term length, prepayment penalties)
- [ ] For lease/PPA: Understand escalation clauses
- [ ] For lease/PPA: Understand early termination costs
- [ ] Compare 25-year net cost for each option
- [ ] Consider home equity impact
- [ ] Think about future moves (will you stay 10+ years?)
- [ ] Review contracts carefully (or have lawyer review)
Financing Comparison Tools and Resources
Calculate Loan Scenarios:
- Bankrate Loan Calculator – https://www.bankrate.com/loans/personal-loans/
- LendingClub – https://www.lendingclub.com (solar-specific loans)
- MySolarROI – Includes financing scenarios in calculator
Compare Lease vs. Loan vs. Cash:
- EnergySage – Financing comparison tool
- Solar.com – Quote and financing options
- Vivint Solar (acquired by Sunrun) – PPA/lease comparison
Get Loan Quotes:
- LendingClub – Personal loans for solar
- Better.com – Home equity lines of credit
- Local banks/credit unions – Often have best rates for members
- Green mortgage lenders – Specialize in solar financing
Final Verdict: Best Financing Option by Priority
If Your Priority Is: MAXIMUM SAVINGS
Winner: CASH
- Highest 25-year benefit
- No interest payments
- Full tax credit benefit
- Complete ownership
If Your Priority Is: PRESERVE CAPITAL
Winner: SOLAR LOAN (if rates are good)
- Low monthly payments if structured well
- Own the system
- Keep cash for other investments
- Still get tax credit
If Your Priority Is: LOWEST UPFRONT COST
Winner: PPA or LEASE (with caution)
- Zero or minimal upfront
- BUT highest long-term cost
- Loss of tax credit
- No ownership
If Your Priority Is: SIMPLICITY & LOW STRESS
Winner: LEASE
- All maintenance included (lessor’s problem)
- Fixed (predictable) payment
- No technical knowledge needed
- COST: Pay more long-term
If Your Priority Is: FLEXIBILITY & OWNERSHIP
Winner: SOLAR LOAN
- Own the system (after payoff)
- Can refinance if rates drop
- Not locked into long contract
- Build home equity
Your Next Steps: Financing Decision Process
Step 1: Calculate Your Savings (1 hour)
1. Get monthly electricity bill
2. Use solar calculator to estimate production
3. Multiply by your electricity rate
4. This is your annual savings
5. Divide by 12 for monthly savings
Step 2: Assess Your Financial Situation (1 hour)
1. How much cash savings do you have? (Emergency fund first!)
2. What's your credit score? (Pull free report: annualcreditreport.com)
3. Do you have high-interest debt? (Pay off before solar)
4. What's your income situation? (Stable/risky)
5. How long will you stay? (Minimum 10 years for good ROI)
Step 3: Get Real Quotes (2-3 hours)
For CASH/LOAN:
- Get 3-5 solar installer quotes
- Ask each for loan options and rates
- Compare total monthly costs
For LEASE/PPA:
- Get 2-3 provider quotes
- Ask for full 25-year payment schedule
- Understand escalation and early termination
Step 4: Compare Total 25-Year Cost (1 hour)
For each option:
1. Total payments over 25 years
2. Minus: Electricity savings (benefit)
3. Plus: Tax credit (if applicable)
4. Equals: Net 25-year cost/benefit
Choose option with best net benefit that matches your priorities
Step 5: Review Contracts (1-2 hours)
Before signing:
- Have lawyer review (especially lease/PPA)
- Understand all terms
- Know early termination costs
- Verify monthly payment schedule
- Ask about escalation clauses
Conclusion: Choose Wisely
Financing is just as important as the solar system itself. The “best” option depends on YOUR financial situation and priorities:
CASH wins financially but requires capital. LOAN wins for balance (ownership + no huge upfront cost). LEASE wins for simplicity but costs more long-term. PPA wins for zero upfront but is most expensive overall.
The key is understanding the real costs of each option—not just the upfront cost, but the 25-year total cost.
Many homeowners choose the wrong option because they focus on upfront cost rather than total cost. Don’t be that person.
Use this guide to make an informed decision. Run the numbers. Compare all options. Choose what’s best for YOUR situation.
Additional Resources
- Federal Solar Investment Tax Credit: https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar (current status)
- NREL Solar Financing Guide: https://www.nrel.gov/analysis/solar-financing.html
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau – Solar Loans: https://www.consumerfinance.gov
- Database of State Incentives: https://www.dsireusa.org (rebates, incentives)
- MySolarROI Financing Calculator: https://mysolarroi.com (compare scenarios)
Your Financing Decision Awaits
You’ve now understood the financial reality of each financing option. You know:
- The true cost of each option (not just upfront)
- How they compare over 25 years
- Which option matches your priorities
- Common mistakes to avoid
- Questions to ask lenders
Ready to find the best financing for YOUR home? Use MySolarROI’s financing comparison tool to model all four options with your real numbers—system cost, electricity rates, credit profile. See which option maximizes YOUR benefit.