☀️ North Carolina · 2025 data

Is solar worth it in North Carolina?

At North Carolina’s average rate of 13.5¢/kWh and about 1350 kWh per kW of panels a year, a typical home pays back its system in roughly 10.5 yrs after the 30% federal credit — then keeps saving. Run your own numbers below.

$ / mo
$ / watt
$
to pay back your system
System size
Net cost after 30%
Year-1 savings
25-yr net savings

Independent estimate for guidance only — not a quote or advice. New time-of-use net-metering tariffs pay less than the old retail rate — model conservatively.

What drives solar payback in North Carolina

North Carolina homeowners pay about 13.5¢/kWh, which is 3.3¢ below the national average. A rooftop here generates roughly 1350 kWh per kW each year — better than the typical US figure. On exports, North Carolina offers partial / below-retail export credit: New time-of-use net-metering tariffs pay less than the old retail rate — model conservatively.

A worked example

For a North Carolina home with a $160/month power bill:

10.5 kW
System size needed
$22,123
Net cost after 30% credit
$1,920
First-year savings
$39,277
25-year net savings

Assumes 3.00 $/W installed before incentives. Your actual cost, roof and usage will differ — adjust the calculator above.

North Carolina solar incentives

Every estimate here already includes the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit. On top of that, North Carolina homeowners may qualify for state, utility or SREC incentives that change often and vary by provider. For the current, authoritative list, check DSIRE’s North Carolina programs, then type any rebate into the calculator to see how it shortens your payback.

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