Solar in Oklahoma City comes down to three numbers: your system cost after the 30% federal credit, your OG&E bill, and your payback period. Here is the honest version — no sales script.
A typical residential solar system in Oklahoma City runs $14,000–$28,000 before incentives, or about $9,800–$19,600 after the 30% federal tax credit. Most OKC homes need a 7–11 kW system; the final price depends on roof complexity and whether you add battery storage.
The 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit holds through December 31, 2026, then drops to 26% in 2027 and 22% in 2028. On a typical system that timing is worth roughly $1,200–$2,500 — real money for doing the same install a few months sooner.
OG&E and PSO 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. That means OKC solar economics favor a system sized to your actual usage, not an oversized "export" system. Anyone quoting before pulling 12 months of your real OG&E usage is guessing.
Want the real numbers for your home? A vetted local installer will run the math against your actual OG&E usage, not a sales script. Get a free Oklahoma City solar savings estimate →
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