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Solar Tax Credit Explained 2026

Updated March 2026 ยท Expert analysis from SolarPro's research team

๐Ÿ’ก Quick Answer: How the Federal Solar Tax Credit Works

The federal solar tax credit (ITC) gives you a 30% tax credit on your total solar installation cost โ€” not a deduction, but a dollar-for-dollar reduction in what you owe the IRS. On a $20,000 solar system, you save $6,000 in taxes. The credit applies to panels, inverters, mounting hardware, labor, and batteries. You claim it on IRS Form 5695 when you file your taxes.

The Solar Tax Credit Is the Best Home Improvement Tax Break Available

How does the 30% solar tax credit work? The federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) for solar is, quite simply, one of the most generous tax incentives for homeowners in the US tax code. A 30% credit โ€” not a deduction, an actual dollar-for-dollar reduction in what you owe the IRS โ€” applied to the full cost of purchasing and installing a solar system. On a $22,000 system, that's $6,600 directly off your tax bill. Understanding exactly how to claim it, what qualifies, and how to handle edge cases can be worth thousands of dollars.

Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction: Why the Distinction Matters

Many homeowners confuse tax credits with tax deductions. The difference is enormous:

TypeHow It WorksValue on $22,000 System
Tax deductionReduces your taxable income$1,320โ€“$5,280 (depends on your tax bracket)
Tax credit (ITC)Reduces your tax bill dollar-for-dollar$6,600 โ€” regardless of your income

The ITC is a credit, making it dramatically more valuable than a deduction. A homeowner in the 22% tax bracket who receives a $6,600 deduction saves $1,452. The same homeowner receiving a $6,600 credit saves $6,600. There's no ambiguity โ€” the ITC is categorically better.

How the Solar Tax Credit Reduces Your Total Cost

Here's what the 30% tax credit actually means for your wallet. A typical residential solar system costs between $15,000 and $30,000 after the federal tax credit is applied. The credit directly reduces your system cost by 30%.

System Cost30% Tax CreditYour Net Cost
$15,000$4,500$10,500
$20,000$6,000$14,000
$25,000$7,500$17,500
$30,000$9,000$21,000

The savings from the tax credit can be significant enough to make solar financially viable for many homeowners who might otherwise struggle with the upfront cost.

Example: Solar Cost After Tax Credit

Let's look at a real example. A homeowner in California installs a 6 kW solar system with battery backup. The total installed cost is $20,000. After applying the 30% federal tax credit:

That's a $6,000 reduction in your actual cost โ€” money that stays in your pocket instead of going to the IRS. Combined with California's state solar incentives, the net cost drops even further for eligible homeowners.

Calculate Your Solar Cost After Tax Credit

Ready to see exactly how much you could save? Use our solar cost calculator to estimate your total system cost and see your savings after the federal tax credit.

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For more context on typical solar costs in your area, check out our guides on solar cost for a 3 bedroom house and solar panel cost in California.

The ITC Timeline: When to Act

YearITC RateNotes
2022โ€“203230%Inflation Reduction Act locked in 30% through 2032
203326%Step-down begins
203422%Further reduction
2035+0%Residential credit expires (commercial at 10%)

The 30% rate through 2032 gives homeowners significant runway โ€” but waiting isn't free. Every year you delay is a year of electricity savings you don't collect. A homeowner who waits 3 years to install solar in a $0.15/kWh market loses roughly $4,500โ€“$6,000 in savings (at $125โ€“$165/month) while the ITC rate stays the same. The urgency isn't the credit rate; it's the compounding opportunity cost of delayed savings.

What Costs Qualify for the 30% Credit

The IRS is specific about what qualifies. Per IRS Notice 2023-29 and the Inflation Reduction Act:

Qualifying costs (included in your credit calculation):

Non-qualifying costs (not included):

Step-by-Step: How to Claim the ITC on Your Tax Return

Claiming the solar ITC requires completing IRS Form 5695. Here's the process:

StepActionForm Location
1Add up all qualifying costs from your solar contract and receiptsYour records
2Enter total qualified costs on Form 5695, Line 1Form 5695, Part I
3Multiply by 30% โ€” this is your tentative creditForm 5695, Line 6a
4Calculate your tax liability from Form 1040Form 1040, Line 18
5Enter the lesser of your tentative credit or tax liability on Line 14Form 5695, Line 14
6Transfer the credit to Schedule 3 of Form 1040Schedule 3, Line 5
7Calculate carryforward if credit exceeds liabilityForm 5695, Line 16

If you use tax software (TurboTax, H&R Block, FreeTaxUSA), entering "solar installation" in the deductions/credits section will walk you through Form 5695 automatically. The software handles the math โ€” you just need your total system cost from your installer's contract.

The Carryforward Provision: What Happens If You Can't Use It All

Not everyone can use a $6,000+ credit in a single year. If your total federal income tax liability is less than your ITC, you don't lose the difference โ€” you carry it forward to future tax years. Here's an example:

ScenarioYear 1Year 2Year 3
Total ITC earned$7,200โ€”โ€”
Federal tax liability$4,800$5,100$5,200
Credit applied this year$4,800$2,400$0
Credit carried forward$2,400$0$0

Retirees with low taxable income, homeowners with significant deductions, or those in lower income years should plan their solar installation timing strategically. If possible, installing solar in a year when you expect higher income (a bonus year, property sale, Roth conversion) maximizes the ITC's immediate value.

State Solar Tax Credits: What's Available in Addition to the Federal ITC

Several states offer additional credits on top of the federal ITC. These stack โ€” you can claim both. Notable state credits in 2026:

StateState CreditMax BenefitNotes
Hawaii35%$5,000Oldest and most generous state credit
South Carolina25%$3,500Spread over 10 years ($350/yr)
New York25%$5,000NY-Sun program; varies by utility territory
Iowa15%UncappedClaimed same year as installation
New Mexico10%$9,000Refundable โ€” you can receive it even with no tax liability
Massachusetts15%$1,000Modest but available on top of federal ITC

Hawaii stands out: a homeowner there can claim 30% federal + 35% state = 65% of their system cost back through tax credits. On a $26,000 system, that's $16,900 in combined credits โ€” bringing net cost below $10,000 for excellent solar production.

Battery Storage and the ITC: The 2022 Change That Matters

Before the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, battery storage only qualified for the ITC if it was charged exclusively by solar. That restriction is gone. As of 2022, standalone battery storage systems qualify for the full 30% credit regardless of whether they're paired with solar or charged from the grid. This change has significantly accelerated battery adoption and makes hybrid solar-plus-storage systems even more financially attractive.

Is the Federal Solar Tax Credit Worth It?

Short answer: Yes โ€” for most homeowners who plan to stay in their home for 5+ years, the federal solar tax credit is absolutely worth it.

The 30% credit is one of the most valuable incentives in the US tax code. Here's why it makes sense for most homeowners:

The credit is especially valuable if you have enough tax liability to use it in the year of installation. Homeowners who are employed and pay federal income taxes will benefit most from the ITC.

Talk to a Solar Expert

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Filing Tips: Avoiding Common ITC Mistakes

The ITC is claimed on IRS Form 5695, filed with your regular Form 1040. Several common mistakes reduce the credit amount or delay carryforwards. First: include all qualifying costs โ€” not just panel costs. Labor, permits, wiring, conduit, and battery storage are all includable. Many homeowners leave $500โ€“$1,500 in qualifying costs off their calculation. Second: keep documentation. Your installer should provide an itemized contract and invoice. Third: if your credit exceeds your liability, complete Form 5695 Line 16 to carry the difference forward โ€” don't leave it behind.

For tax year 2026, the credit goes on Schedule 3 of Form 1040, Line 5. If you use TurboTax, H&R Block, or similar software, entering the solar installation in the Energy Credits section automatically generates Form 5695. The software will ask for your total qualified cost โ€” use the all-in system cost from your contract, not just the panel cost.

Business Use and the Commercial ITC

Homeowners who operate a business from home may qualify for the commercial ITC (Section 48) for the business-use portion of their solar system, in addition to the residential Section 25D credit for the personal-use portion. The commercial ITC allows MACRS depreciation over 5 years on top of the credit โ€” a significant additional benefit for business owners. This is a nuanced area requiring a qualified CPA familiar with both residential and commercial energy credits, but the combined benefit can reduce effective system cost by 50โ€“60% in the first year for eligible business owners.

Key Questions to Ask Your Solar Installer Before Signing

Armed with the information in this guide, you're in a much stronger position to evaluate installer quotes and ask the right questions. Here are the most important things to clarify before signing any solar contract:

Comparing Solar to Other Major Home Investments

Solar isn't the only major home investment competing for your dollars. Comparing its financial profile to alternatives puts the decision in context. A $20,000 kitchen remodel recoupes 54% at resale and generates no ongoing savings. The same $20,000 invested in solar delivers 60โ€“80% at resale plus $150โ€“$300/month in electricity savings โ€” a superior financial outcome for most homeowners who plan to remain in their home 7+ years.

Compared to financial investments: solar's IRR of 8โ€“15% in most US markets is competitive with long-run stock market returns (~10% nominal, 7% real). Solar's return is inflation-hedged, non-correlated with financial markets, and comes with the tangible benefit of energy independence. It's not a replacement for a diversified investment portfolio, but as a component of a household financial strategy, it compares favorably to many common alternatives.

Moving Forward: Your Solar Decision Checklist

Before you sign with any installer, work through this checklist to confirm you've done your due diligence:

  1. Calculate your average monthly kWh usage and effective electricity rate from the last 12 months of bills
  2. Run your address through NREL PVWatts to get an independent production estimate
  3. Check your state's incentive programs on dsireusa.org โ€” note any that require pre-installation applications
  4. Contact your utility to confirm current net metering policy and any available rebate programs
  5. Get at least 3 quotes from NABCEP-certified, locally established installers with 5+ years of local track record
  6. Compare all quotes on equivalent terms: same system size, panel brand tier, inverter type, production guarantee
  7. If financing, compare total cost of ownership including interest โ€” not just monthly payments
  8. Ask each installer for 3 local customer references from the past 2 years that you actually call
  9. Review warranty terms for panels, inverters, and workmanship in writing before signing
  10. Confirm your homeowner's insurance covers the added system value and notify them after installation

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the solar tax credit percentage in 2026?
The federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) is 30% in 2026. This rate applies to solar panel systems installed through 2032. It steps down to 26% in 2033 and 22% in 2034 before expiring for residential systems.
How do I claim the solar tax credit?
Claim the solar ITC by completing IRS Form 5695 (Residential Energy Credits) and attaching it to your Form 1040. Enter your qualified solar costs on Line 1, calculate 30% on Line 6, and transfer the credit amount to Schedule 3, Line 5 of your 1040.
Can I carry forward the solar tax credit?
Yes. If your solar tax credit exceeds your federal tax liability for the year, you can carry the unused portion forward to future tax years until 2032. There is no limit on how many years you can carry it forward within that window.
Does battery storage qualify for the solar tax credit?
Yes. Battery storage systems installed alongside a solar system qualify for the full 30% ITC. As of the Inflation Reduction Act (2022), standalone battery storage (without solar) also qualifies for the 30% credit.
Do solar leases qualify for the tax credit?
No. Only homeowners who purchase their system (cash or loan) can claim the ITC. When you lease solar panels, the leasing company owns the equipment and claims the credit. This is why buying typically delivers better long-term returns than leasing.
How much is the federal solar tax credit in 2026?
The federal solar tax credit is 30% of your total solar installation cost in 2026. This applies to systems installed through 2032. The credit rate steps down to 26% in 2033 and 22% in 2034 before expiring for residential properties.
Who qualifies for the federal solar tax credit?
Homeowners who purchase a solar system (with cash or a loan) and have sufficient federal tax liability can qualify. You must own the system โ€” not lease it. You must have a federal income tax liability to claim the credit, but you can carry forward any unused credit to future years.
When does the federal solar tax credit expire?
The 30% ITC rate applies through 2032. It drops to 26% in 2033, 22% in 2034, and the residential credit expires entirely in 2035. Commercial solar continues at 10% after 2035.
What costs are included in the solar tax credit calculation?
Qualifying costs include: solar panels, inverter(s), mounting hardware, electrical wiring and conduit, installation labor, permit fees, inspection fees, and battery storage. Roof repair or replacement costs are not included, even if done at the same time as solar installation.

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๐Ÿ… Why Trust SolarProGuide
โœ… Expert ReviewedAll content reviewed by James Whitfield, Solar Energy Analyst with 12+ years in solar.
๐Ÿ“Š Real Data OnlyFigures sourced from SEIA, NREL, EIA โ€” not estimates or marketing materials.
๐Ÿ”„ Updated 2026Reviewed March 2026 to reflect current costs, ITC rules, and utility rates.
๐Ÿšซ IndependentNot affiliated with any installer or manufacturer. Unbiased recommendations only.
๐Ÿ“Š Data Sources & Methodology

Cost and market data from SEIA (Solar Energy Industries Association) quarterly reports. Solar resource data from NREL PVWatts. Electricity rates from U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). Home value research from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Tax credit rules reflect the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) as of 2026. All data updated March 2026. Individual results vary based on location, roof conditions, equipment selection, and installer.

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