The #1 Directory for Solar Contractors in the USA

Top Solar Installation Companies in the USA

Residential and commercial solar panel installation. Browse 563+ verified contractors, compare pricing and reviews, and find the best fit for your project.

Solar installation is the design, permitting, mounting, wiring, and utility interconnection of a photovoltaic system on a residential or light-commercial property. A complete installation includes a structural review of the roof, an electrical service evaluation, the layout and pitch optimization of the array, the supply and mounting of panels and racking, DC wiring to a string inverter or AC wiring from microinverters, AC tie-in to the main panel through a backfed breaker or supply-side tap, monitoring portal setup, and final commissioning after the utility grants Permission to Operate (PTO). The 563 contractors listed here have been vetted for licensing, insurance, NABCEP credentials, written workmanship warranties, and verified customer reviews — the four signals that matter most for installer quality.

Average installed cost in 2026. A typical 6 kW–10 kW residential install runs $15,000–$30,000 all-in, or roughly $2.50–$3.50 per watt for premium-tier equipment and $2.10–$2.80 per watt for value-tier equipment. Battery storage adds $10,000–$16,000 for a single 10–13 kWh unit. Main service panel upgrades, when required, add $1,500–$3,500. The federal Section 25D residential solar tax credit expired on December 31, 2025, so direct-purchase residential systems no longer capture the 30% federal credit on your personal tax return; third-party-owned systems (leases and PPAs) can still pass through the commercial 48E credit through the system owner. State rebates, utility performance-based incentives, property-tax exemptions, and net-metering credits remain widely available and meaningfully change payback.

Credentials and certifications that matter. Require a current state contractor license in the electrical or general trade, NABCEP PV Installation Professional certification on at least one crew member, $1M+ general liability insurance and workers' compensation that names the project site, and a written workmanship warranty of 10 years or more covering both labor and roof penetrations. Manufacturer training certificates (Tesla, Enphase, SolarEdge, REC, Q CELLS) signal hands-on platform experience. A clean Better Business Bureau record and 30+ verified reviews on independent platforms add a final layer of confidence.

Red flags to watch for. High-pressure same-day sales pitches with a hard deadline, vague production estimates without a PVWatts or Aurora model, finance documents bundled into the contract without separate disclosure, dealer fees above 20% baked into the financed amount, oversized systems that exceed your actual usage by more than 15%, and requests for more than 10% down before any work begins. Walk away from any installer who refuses to provide their state license number, NABCEP credential number, or insurance certificates before you sign.

How our vetting process works for installers. Before a company earns a Verified or Premier Verified badge on Top Solar Services, we confirm their state license is current and in good standing, their insurance is in force, their NABCEP credentials are valid, and that we have spoken to at least three recent customers about quality, schedule, and warranty service. Verification refreshes annually. Browse the directory below to compare 563 vetted installers, then request up to five quotes with one Get Matched form.

How to hire a solar installation contractor

  1. Get at least three competing bids and require each in dollars-per-watt of DC capacity so you can compare them fairly.
  2. Verify the contractor's state license number with your state licensing board before signing anything.
  3. Confirm the NABCEP PV Installation Professional credential number at nabcep.org for at least one crew member on the project.
  4. Require a written 10-year (or longer) workmanship warranty covering labor and roof penetrations, separate from the panel and inverter warranties.
  5. Insist on a production estimate modeled in PVWatts, Aurora, or Helioscope — with the shading and tilt assumptions documented in writing.
  6. Ask for proof of $1M+ general liability and workers' compensation insurance certificates naming your address as the project site.
  7. Read the financing document separately from the install contract and verify dealer fees are not buried in the financed amount.
  8. Confirm the installer pulls every permit (building, electrical, utility interconnection) and is named as the responsible licensee — not you.
563 solar installation companies

Carson Power

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New York, NY
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  • Solar Installation 34%
  • Commercial Solar 33%
  • Battery Storage 33%

Carson Power is a developer and owner of solar and energy storage projects, primarily in New York and Illinois. Over 500 MW of solar and storage assets under development. Actively supports state renewable energy goals. See all 0 reviews →

Utility-Scale Community-Focused

CapeZero

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New York, NY
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2023
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  • Solar Installation 100%

CapeZero is a software-as-a-service (SaaS) company focused on financial technology solutions for the clean energy sector. Platform for modeling and deal analysis in tax equity and tax credit financing. See all 0 reviews →

Ampliform

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Ardmore, PA
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2022
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  • Solar Installation 50%
  • Commercial Solar 50%

Ampliform is a renewable energy company focusing on utility-scale solar and solar-plus-storage projects. Joint venture between Prospect14 and a group of experienced energy investors. Target 10GW by 2025. See all 0 reviews →

Experienced Utility-Scale

Browse solar installation companies by state

New York (292) · New Jersey (162) · Pennsylvania (94) · California (2) · North Carolina (2) · Texas (2) · Arizona (1) · Colorado (1) · Florida (1) · Georgia (1)

Frequently Asked Questions About Solar Installation

2026 Tax Credit Update: The federal residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired December 31, 2025. Commercial credits (48E) still apply. Learn more →
How much does solar installation cost in 2026?

A typical 6 kW–10 kW residential solar system installs for $15,000–$30,000 all-in in 2026, which works out to roughly $2.50–$3.50 per watt of DC capacity for premium-tier equipment and $2.10–$2.80 per watt for value-tier equipment. Battery storage adds $10,000–$16,000 for a single 10–13 kWh unit. The federal Section 25D residential solar tax credit expired on December 31, 2025, so homeowners who buy a system in 2026 cannot claim the 30% federal credit on their personal tax return. Third-party-owned systems (leases and PPAs) may still benefit from the commercial 48E credit through the system owner. State rebates, utility performance-based incentives, property-tax exemptions, and net metering remain widely available and continue to drive most of the post-incentive savings — ask each bidder to model your specific utility and ZIP code rather than a national average.

How long does solar installation take?

Physical installation of a residential PV system usually takes 1–3 days on the roof for a 20–30 panel array. The full timeline from contract signing to utility Permission to Operate (PTO) typically runs 4–12 weeks: 1–3 weeks for engineering and structural review, 1–4 weeks for permit issuance from the local Authority Having Jurisdiction, the install itself, then 1–6 weeks of utility interconnection review and inspection. Battery storage and main service panel upgrades add 1–4 weeks. Clear weather, an existing roof in good condition, a permit-friendly jurisdiction, and a cooperative HOA shorten that window significantly; high-volume utility queues and structural engineering exceptions can extend it to 16 weeks or more in dense metros.

What size solar system do I need for my home?

Most US homes need a 6–10 kW system to offset 80–100% of annual electricity use, but the right size for you depends on five factors: your last 12 months of utility kWh consumption, your roof orientation and pitch, your shading profile during peak generation hours, your local net-metering policy (full retail, net billing, or avoided cost), and whether you plan to add an EV, heat pump, or pool heater within the next five years. A reputable installer will model your usage with NREL PVWatts, Aurora, or Helioscope using your actual utility interval data and roof scan rather than a sales-team rule of thumb. Oversizing past 15% of actual usage wastes capital under most modern net-metering structures.

Do I need permits for solar installation?

Yes — every solar install requires at minimum a building permit, an electrical permit, and a utility interconnection approval. Many jurisdictions also require a structural review (especially for older roofs or unusual rafter spans), a fire-department setback review, and an HOA architectural approval if you are in a covenanted community. A reputable installer pulls every permit on your behalf as part of the contract and is named on the electrical permit as the responsible licensee. Never accept an offer where you are required to handle permits yourself: the licensee on the permit is the party financially responsible for code compliance, and homeowner-pulled permits leave you exposed if anything fails inspection.

What happens to my solar system if I sell my house?

Owned residential solar systems typically transfer with the home and can add 3–4% to resale value in most US markets, according to multiple appraisal studies including the LBNL Solar Premium research. Buyers usually love the system because it lowers their operating costs. Leased systems and PPAs are more complicated: the buyer must qualify with the lessor and assume the contract, or you must buy out the remaining balance before closing. Disclose your system type, monitoring credentials, warranty paperwork, and any active loan or lease as early as possible in the listing process. Many real estate agents now require a solar disclosure form at listing.

How do I find a certified solar installer near me?

Filter our directory to your state and to Solar Installation, then sort by review count and rating. Look for NABCEP PV Installation Professional certification on at least one crew member, a current state contractor license verifiable at your state licensing board, at least $1M in general liability insurance plus workers' compensation, a documented 10+ year workmanship warranty, and at least 25 verified independent reviews. The Verified and Premier Verified badges on Top Solar Services indicate we have personally confirmed each of those items within the past year. You can also use Get Matched to receive up to five competitive quotes from local installers with a single form — free of charge.

What warranty should a solar installation company offer?

Reputable installers bundle three distinct warranties, and you should require all three in writing before signing. First, the panel manufacturer warranty — typically 25 years on power output, guaranteeing the panel will still produce at least 85% of nameplate after 25 years. Second, the inverter warranty — 10–12 years for most string inverters, 20–25 years for microinverters like Enphase IQ8 and many DC optimizers. Third, the installer's own workmanship warranty — should be 10 years or longer and must cover both labor and roof penetrations, because that is where field issues actually occur. Ask whether the workmanship warranty transfers to a new homeowner if you sell, and whether the manufacturer warranties remain in force if the installer goes out of business.

How do I prepare my home for solar installation?

Confirm your roof has at least 10 years of useful life remaining — if it does not, replace the roof first or use a single integrated contractor for both. Clear attic access along the planned wiring path. Document the existing roof condition with high-resolution photos so any post-install dispute has a baseline. Check your main electrical service panel: panels older than 30 years, with capacity under 200 amps, or with deferred-maintenance issues often require an upgrade for $1,500–$3,500. Notify your HOA if you have one and confirm any architectural review requirements. Trim trees that will shade the array within the next 5 years. Finally, gather 12 months of utility bills so the installer can model your real usage rather than estimate it.

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