

The "20% rule" for solar panels is a practical industry guideline that recommends oversizing your solar system to produce 20% more energy than your household consumes on average
Absolutely one of Florida's best choices for solar. No money down is an option for most. Experience the luxury of saving up to $200 per month on your electricity bill. This can equate to an average savings of 75k over the course of 25 years. As solar continues to evolve we utilize the most efficient solar panels in the industry. Don't miss the opportunity to both save money and increase the value of your home. Whether you have cash on hand to purchase your panels outright. (you'll save a little more) or alternatively a lease is a very viable option.
IS SOLAR A GOOD INVESTMENT
Yes — for many homeowners and businesses, solar can be a very good investment, but it depends on a few key factors:
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Your electricity costs
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How much sunlight your property gets
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Local incentives/tax credits
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Your roof condition and orientation
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How long you’ll stay in the property
In general, solar tends to work best if you:
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own your home,
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have medium-to-high utility bills,
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have a relatively unshaded roof,
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and plan to stay put for at least 5–10 years.
Most modern systems last 25–30 years, and many homeowners recover their installation costs in roughly 4–12 years depending on region and incentives.
A simple way to think about the return is:
ROI depends on Electricity Savings+IncentivesSystem Cost\text{ROI depends on } \frac{\text{Electricity Savings} + \text{Incentives}}{\text{System Cost}}ROI depends on System CostElectricity Savings+Incentives
Why solar is attractive
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Lower electric bills for decades
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Protection against rising utility rates
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Possible increase in home value
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Low maintenance
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Cleaner energy source
When solar may not be worth it
Solar is less compelling if:
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your roof needs replacement soon,
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you have very low power bills,
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your roof is heavily shaded,
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you may move soon,
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or financing terms are expensive.
Batteries change the math
Adding battery storage can improve resilience and increase self-use of solar energy, but batteries are still relatively expensive. They make the most sense in places with:
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frequent outages,
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expensive peak electricity rates,
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or weak net-metering policies.
Current market reality (2026)
Even in regions where subsidies are shrinking, solar is still often financially attractive because electricity prices continue rising. Some analyses estimate lifetime savings in the tens of thousands of dollars for typical households.
If you want, I can also help you evaluate:
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whether solar makes sense for your specific home,
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estimate your payback period,
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compare buy vs lease,
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or estimate savings from a specific system size (e.g. 5 kW, 10 kW).
