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Solar Installation 50%
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Commercial Solar 50%
Gensun Solar has a single mission: to achieve complete customer satisfaction! We work with only the highest quality materials. See all 0 reviews →
Large-scale commercial and industrial solar projects. Browse 153+ verified contractors, compare pricing and reviews, and find the best fit for your project.
Jump to the highest-activity commercial markets: Pennsylvania · Illinois · Florida · New Jersey · California · Texas
Commercial solar is the design, financing, and installation of larger PV systems for businesses, nonprofits, schools, municipalities, agricultural operations, and industrial sites — typically systems above 50 kW and frequently in the 250 kW to several-megawatt range. The 153 commercial EPCs (engineering, procurement, construction firms) listed here handle utility interconnection studies, structural engineering, SCADA monitoring, fire-code compliance, long-term operations and maintenance contracts, and SREC or performance-incentive registration. Many also broker Power Purchase Agreements, Energy Service Company arrangements, and C-PACE financing so projects can be built with little or no capital expenditure from the host.
Average installed cost in 2026. Commercial systems install for $1.80–$2.50 per watt for projects above 100 kW, dropping below $1.50 per watt for ground-mount projects above 1 MW. A 250 kW rooftop typically costs $450,000–$625,000 before incentives. The Section 48E commercial Investment Tax Credit covers 30% of installed cost for projects that begin construction by July 4, 2026 under the OBBB Act, with bonus adders for Domestic Content (+10%), Energy Community (+10%), and Low-Income Community (+10%) stacking to a maximum of 40–60% total federal incentive on qualifying projects. MACRS five-year accelerated depreciation, state-level SREC markets (NJ, MA, IL, MD, PA), and utility performance-based rebates further compress payback to 4–7 years on owner-occupied installs.
Credentials and certifications that matter. Require an in-house NABCEP-certified designer, OSHA 30 compliance for crew leads, SEIA Code of Ethics designation, a current state contractor license in the electrical and (where applicable) general trades, and at least $2M general liability insurance plus workers' compensation. Documented experience with projects of similar size and complexity to yours is essential — a residential installer scaled up rarely delivers a clean commercial install. For tax-credit-driven deals, ask whether the EPC has experience with Domestic Content sourcing documentation and Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship compliance.
Red flags to watch for. Proposals that promise a single payback figure without an underlying utility-data analysis, EPCs that subcontract the entire build to a third-party crew they cannot vouch for, vague O&M language without performance guarantees, and any vendor unwilling to share three reference projects of similar scale. Be especially cautious with PPA pitches that include large escalation clauses (3% or higher annually) — over a 20-year term, escalation drives most of the savings erosion.
How our vetting process works for commercial EPCs. Commercial contractors badged on Top Solar Services have been verified for license status, $2M+ insurance, NABCEP credentials, SEIA membership, and reference projects with facility managers and CFOs at organizations of comparable size. Verification refreshes annually. Compare the 153 commercial EPCs below by portfolio, geography, and credentials, or request three written proposals through Get Matched at no cost.
Gensun Solar has a single mission: to achieve complete customer satisfaction! We work with only the highest quality materials. See all 0 reviews →
Ilumina Energy is a New Jersey-based solar procurement firm specializing in commercial and industrial renewable energy projects. Customized, cost-effective solutions. See all 0 reviews →
Sustainable Partners Ltd provides consultancy services in the renewable energy sector. Staffing, executive search, contract services, expert consultants for solar, EPC, BESS, wind, utility-scale projects. See all 0 reviews →
Solar Landscape is a leading commercial rooftop solar developer. 800+ megawatts of solar capacity developed. 150+ million square feet of rooftop space transformed. 350+ completed projects. See all 0 reviews →
The Sunshine Fund makes renewable infrastructure a high-performing investment, accessible to all, while driving the global shift to clean energy. Partnership with Lion Point Capital. See all 0 reviews →
PVOne is a strategic project development company focused on the development, finance, and operation of large scale net metered and grid tied solar electric generating systems. See all 0 reviews →
Riviera Power Services specializes in C&I project solutions, system optimization, turnkey solar project services, performance enhancement, project commissioning. See all 0 reviews →
Solar by Omega helps families find the best fit product or service and aims to simplify the process of going solar. See all 0 reviews →
A solar sales company to help homeowners make educated decisions about using renewable energy with integrity and service. See all 0 reviews →
Your Ultimate Solar Solution provider! Provides solar solutions to customers in NY, NJ, PA, and FL. Uses best technology from leading brands. See all 0 reviews →
New York (77) · New Jersey (48) · Pennsylvania (23) · Florida (1) · Iowa (1) · Illinois (1) · North Carolina (1) · Nevada (1)
Commercial PV systems install for $1.80–$2.50 per watt for rooftop projects above 100 kW and below $1.50 per watt for ground-mount projects above 1 MW. A 250 kW commercial rooftop typically costs $450,000–$625,000 all-in before incentives. Pricing varies substantially with roof type (membrane, ballasted vs penetrating racking, structural reinforcement requirements), site conditions (ground-mount soil and grading, distance to interconnection point), and equipment tier. Battery storage adds $400–$700 per kWh for commercial-scale lithium systems. Most commercial bids are structured around dollars-per-watt all-in, with a separate line for any battery and a separate O&M proposal — request that structure in every RFP response so you can compare apples to apples.
The Section 48E commercial Investment Tax Credit covers 30% of installed cost for projects that begin construction by July 4, 2026 under the OBBB Act, with up to four bonus adders that can stack: Domestic Content (+10% if a sufficient percentage of components are US-made), Energy Community (+10% if sited in qualifying brownfield or fossil-fuel-transition communities), and Low-Income Community (+10% to +20% depending on the program tier). A qualifying project can stack to 40–60% total federal credit. Direct-pay options under the Inflation Reduction Act also let tax-exempt entities — nonprofits, municipalities, schools, tribes, and rural cooperatives — monetize 48E even without tax liability. Confirm Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship compliance with your EPC to capture the full base credit.
A typical mid-size commercial project (250 kW–1 MW) takes 4–9 months from contract to commercial operation: 1–2 months of engineering and structural review, 1–3 months for utility interconnection study and agreement, 1–2 months for permitting and AHJ review, and 1–3 months of installation and commissioning depending on project size and crew availability. Larger projects (5–25 MW) extend to 12–18 months because of longer interconnection studies, more complex structural and geotechnical reviews, and equipment lead times for switchgear, transformers, and inverters that can run 30–52 weeks in tight supply cycles. Build a 20% schedule contingency into any commercial project plan.
Size your system to offset 70–100% of annual kilowatt-hour usage, capped by available roof or ground area. A 100 kW rooftop covers roughly 8,000–10,000 square feet of usable surface depending on row spacing and HVAC obstructions. The right way to size is a 12-month load analysis using your utility interval data (most utilities provide a Green Button download). That analysis reveals seasonal load patterns, peak demand windows, and how much production your roof can actually offset versus what you would export at lower compensation. Avoid bidders who size systems based on annual kWh alone without modeling time-of-use rates — under modern commercial tariffs, the difference between a well-sized and oversized system is significant.
Owner-occupied commercial solar typically pays back in 4–7 years when the 48E credit, MACRS five-year accelerated depreciation, and state incentives stack on a well-designed system. SREC states (New Jersey, Massachusetts, Illinois, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Washington DC) often see 3–5 year payback because SREC revenue is layered on top of avoided-cost savings. After payback, 20+ years of essentially free electricity follow with minimal maintenance — the system continues to produce, MACRS depreciation has been captured, and the credit has been monetized. For PPA-financed projects, the host pays nothing upfront but captures a smaller share of the lifetime savings (typically 10–20% reduction off retail rates).
Yes — commercial solar leases, Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), and Energy Service Company (ESCO) arrangements are common and well-suited to organizations that cannot directly use tax credits, including nonprofits, municipalities, schools, religious organizations, and many federal and state entities. Under a PPA, you pay the system owner a per-kWh rate (typically 10–20% below retail) for the energy the system produces; the system owner claims 48E and MACRS. Direct-pay options under the Inflation Reduction Act now let tax-exempt entities monetize 48E themselves, often making owner-financed deals more attractive than they were before. Compare PPA pricing against owned-system economics carefully — escalators above 2.5% annually significantly erode 20-year savings.
Commercial PV projects typically require a building permit, structural review (mandatory on older roofs or unusual roof types), an electrical permit, a fire-department setback and rapid-shutdown review, a utility interconnection study and signed agreement, and — for ground-mount or large rooftop — site plan review and zoning approval. Stormwater management permits and environmental reviews may apply to ground-mount projects on graded land. Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) requirements vary substantially by city and county, and a reputable EPC will list every required permit in the project schedule before signing. Permitting in dense metros and slow AHJs can extend total project timelines by 60–90 days, so confirm AHJ familiarity with your EPC.
Browse our directory filtered to Commercial Solar in your state, then sort by review count. Look for EPCs with at least one in-house NABCEP-certified designer, OSHA 30 compliance for crew leads, SEIA Code of Ethics designation, $2M+ general liability insurance plus workers' compensation, and documented experience with projects similar in size and complexity to yours. Request three written proposals before signing — and require each to include itemized equipment, production estimates, financing terms, O&M scope, and reference projects of similar scale. Use Get Matched to receive competitive proposals from vetted commercial EPCs in your state at no cost.