OKC Insider
Free solar savings estimate in Oklahoma City
The federal solar tax credit drops in 2027. Oklahoma City homeowners installing before year-end 2026 keep the full 30% offset on a system that typically zeroes out a $250+/month electric bill within 7 years. We match you with a vetted local installer who runs the math against your actual usage, not a sales script.
★ Local Oklahoma City only
⏱ 30 second form
📵 No spam, no pressure
Serving: Edmond, Norman, Yukon, Moore, Mustang, Bethany, Bricktown, Plaza District, Nichols Hills, Midtown OKC, Deer Creek, Piedmont, and all of greater Oklahoma City, OK.
Get your free solar / energy estimate
Frequently asked questions
How much do solar panels cost in Oklahoma City?
A typical residential solar system in OKC costs $14,000–$28,000 before incentives, or $9,800–$19,600 after the 30% federal tax credit. Cost depends on system size (most OKC homes need 7–11 kW), roof complexity, and whether you add battery storage. The 2026 federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) is 30%; it drops to 26% in 2027.
Is solar worth it in Oklahoma in 2026?
For most OKC homeowners with a $200+/month summer electric bill, yes. Typical payback is 6–9 years, with panels warrantied 25 years. Oklahoma has high summer sun (5.5 peak sun hours), no state income tax credit, but OG&E does offer net metering at a reduced rate. Cash purchase ROI beats leasing by 2–3x.
Does Oklahoma have net metering?
Yes — OG&E and PSO both offer net metering for residential solar under 25 kW, but at the avoided-cost rate (roughly 50–60% of the retail rate), not 1:1. This means OKC solar economics favor systems sized to your actual usage, not over-sized "export" systems.
How big a system do I need in OKC?
A typical 2,000 sqft OKC home with a $200/month electric bill needs about 8 kW (20–24 panels). The right installer will pull 12 months of your actual OG&E usage and size accordingly — anyone quoting before seeing your bills is guessing.
When is the federal solar tax credit dropping?
The 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit holds through Dec 31, 2026. It drops to 26% in 2027 and 22% in 2028 unless Congress extends. Installing in 2026 is worth roughly $1,200–$2,500 more in tax credits than waiting to 2027 for the same system.