Texas · updated for 2026

Texas Home Energy Rebates & Incentives (2026)

Last updated July 2, 2026

Short answer: As of 2026, Texas does not appear to have launched a HEEHRA home-electrification rebate program, and the federal heat pump (25C) and solar/battery (25D) tax credits expired December 31, 2025. Your best remaining options are usually local utility rebates and, for geothermal, the surviving federal 25D credit.

Federal incentives in 2026 (mostly gone)

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act ended several federal home-energy credits after December 31, 2025. In 2026 there is no federal heat pump tax credit (Section 25C), no 30% residential solar/battery credit (Section 25D for solar), and no federal EV purchase credit. The main survivor is the federal credit for geothermal (ground-source) heat pumps, which continues under Section 25D through 2032.

Texas state rebates (HEEHRA)

Texas does not appear to have a live HEEHRA program as of early 2026. HEEHRA is federally funded but administered state by state, and not every state has launched it. Check your state energy office for the latest — programs can open (or close) at any time.

Always confirm funding. HEEHRA money is limited and some states have paused new applications after demand. Verify current availability before you count on a rebate.

Utility rebates in Texas

Independent of state and federal programs, many electric utilities offer their own rebates — commonly $300–$1,500 for a qualifying heat pump, and sometimes smaller amounts for smart thermostats, heat-pump water heaters, or EV chargers. With Texas electricity at about 15¢/kWh, these utility programs are often the most reliable savings still on the table in 2026. Check your utility's "rebates" or "energy efficiency" page.

Solar & EV in Texas

Without the federal solar credit, rooftop solar in Texas now pays back through bill savings and net metering rather than an upfront discount — run the numbers with our Solar Calculator. For electric vehicles, the federal purchase credit ended after 2025, though some states and utilities still offer EV or home-charger rebates; compare running costs with our EV vs Gas calculator.

See what actually pays off in Texas. Rebates are only half the story — the running-cost math matters more. Run the Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace Calculator → (it pre-loads Texas energy prices).

Frequently asked questions

Are there still heat pump rebates in Texas in 2026?

The federal heat pump tax credit (25C) expired December 31, 2025, and Texas does not appear to have a live HEEHRA program yet. Check your local electric utility, which may offer a heat pump rebate of a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars.

Is there a solar tax credit in Texas in 2026?

No federal solar tax credit — the 30% residential credit (Section 25D) expired December 31, 2025. Solar in Texas now pays back through bill savings and net metering. Some states and utilities offer their own solar incentives; check yours.

How do I find rebates in Texas?

Start with your state energy office (search "Texas home energy rebates") and your electric utility's rebate page. Confirm current funding before assuming a rebate — programs change month to month and can run out.

Related: Is a heat pump worth it in Texas? · Are solar panels worth it in Texas? · All states

Incentive programs and funding change frequently. This page reflects the situation in 2026; confirm current eligibility and funding with your state energy office and utility before purchasing. Not tax advice.