See your estimated long-term savings, likely system size, and financing paths in one simple report — before you talk to anyone, commit to anything, or guess what solar might cost.
Utility companies raise rates every year. You have no control — just bigger bills.
Over 25 years, many homeowners pay $40k–$60k in electric bills, with nothing to show for it.
You heard the 30% federal credit ended and assumed solar is too expensive now. Often, it still pencils.
Rates keep climbing. The sooner you know your options, the more you can save.
Answer 6 quick questions and get a personalized estimate showing potential long-term savings, likely system size, and common financing paths for your situation.
Estimated savings, likely system size, and a clearer view of purchase vs. low-upfront options.
Southern California homeowners across SCE, SDG&E, LADWP, and nearby utility territories.
You review the numbers first, then decide whether it makes sense to take the next step.
This page is designed to help homeowners understand whether solar is even worth looking at before getting pulled into a sales process.
Use the report to review your options first. No obligation, no commitment, and no pressure to move forward unless the numbers make sense.
Often yes. Rising utility rates mean solar can still save many homeowners tens of thousands over 25 years.
NEM 3.0 reduced payouts for exporting power, making self-consumption (and batteries) more valuable.
Often yes — loans, leases, and PPAs can offer $0 down options depending on qualification.
Many solar loans prefer ~650+. Some lease/PPA options may accept lower.
Typically 1–3 months including permits and utility approval.
Solar can increase home value; systems can be transferred or paid off at sale.