Save Up to 40% Off Your Project. Ask Us How.
(800) 333-6695 | Licensed & Insured · CSLB #964965 | Serving California since 2011
California home with rooftop solar panels and a new roof installed by Green Conception
Solar Financing · Updated June 2026

Solar Lease, Loan or Cash in 2026

In Short

Paying cash for solar gives the best lifetime savings and full ownership; a loan spreads cost with little or no money down while you still own the system; a lease has no upfront cost but lower savings and no ownership. With the federal credit gone in 2026, ownership matters more.

How you pay for solar shapes your savings, your ownership and your tax situation, and the calculus changed in 2026 when the federal residential credit ended. This guide compares cash, loan and lease so you can choose the path that fits your goals.

Paying Cash

Paying cash gives you the lowest lifetime cost and full ownership, since there is no interest. The trade-off is the upfront outlay, and as of 2026 a cash purchase no longer earns the federal residential credit. For homeowners who can fund it, cash still delivers the strongest long-term return.

Financing With a Loan

A solar loan lets you own the system with little or nothing down, paying a fixed monthly amount that your energy savings help cover. You keep ownership and the home-value benefit, including the property-tax exclusion, while spreading the cost. This is the most common path for homeowners who want ownership without a large upfront check.

Leasing or a Power Purchase Agreement

With a lease or power purchase agreement, the provider owns the system and you pay for the equipment or the power it produces. The provider claims the commercial credit and passes part of the value through as a lower rate. You give up ownership and direct incentives, but you avoid upfront cost and maintenance responsibility. In 2026 this is the remaining pathway that carries federal-credit value for homeowners.

  • Cash, lowest lifetime cost and full ownership, largest upfront outlay.
  • Loan, ownership with $0 down and a fixed monthly payment.
  • Lease or PPA, no upfront cost, provider owns the system.
  • Ownership paths keep the property-tax exclusion on added home value.
Cash vs Loan vs Lease for Solar in 2026
FactorCashLoanLease / PPA
Upfront costFull system costLittle to noneNone
Who owns the systemYouYouThe provider
Lifetime savingsHighestHighLowest
Monthly paymentNoneFixed loan paymentLease or per-kWh payment
Best forMaximizing returnNo money down, still own itAvoiding ownership and maintenance
Common Questions

Questions, Answered

Is it better to lease or buy solar in 2026?
Buying, with cash or a loan, gives you ownership and the property-tax benefit and usually the best long-term value. A lease avoids upfront cost and is the remaining way to capture federal-credit value, passed through as a lower rate. The right choice depends on your goals and budget.
Can I get solar with no money down?
Yes. A solar loan with 100 percent financing lets most homeowners start for $0 down and pay a fixed monthly amount, often close to or less than their current utility bill.
Does a lease still get the tax credit?
The homeowner does not claim it directly, but the provider who owns a leased system can claim the commercial credit and pass part of the value through as a lower monthly rate.
Related Services

Put This Into Action

Keep Reading

More Guides

Lock In Up to 40% Off Your Project.

Start your complete solar and roofing project with one licensed California team handling everything from your roof to your switch. Get a full quote without an on-site visit.