Are Solar Panels Worth It in Colorado?
Last updated July 1, 2026 · based on Colorado energy prices
In Colorado, where residential electricity averages about 15¢/kWh and rooftop solar yields roughly 1,600 kWh per kW per year, solar is a reasonable long-term investment, paying back in about 15.6 years.
Colorado solar cost & savings (typical 7 kW system)
| Metric | Estimate |
|---|---|
| Annual production | 11,200 kWh |
| Installed cost (before incentives) | $21,000 |
| Estimated annual savings | $1,344 |
| Payback period | 15.6 years |
| 25-year net savings | +$10,659 |
Figures use Colorado average prices, a 7 kW system at $3.00/watt, 50% self-consumption at retail plus a conservative 9¢/kWh net-metering credit, and ~0.5%/yr panel degradation. Sources: EIA electricity prices and NREL PVWatts production modeling.
What this means for Colorado homeowners in 2026
The 30% federal residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired December 31, 2025, so a 2026 installation in Colorado carries the full upfront cost unless a state or utility incentive applies. Because Colorado electricity costs around the national average, the payback case is more marginal — strongest for high electricity users, south-facing roofs, and homeowners who plan to stay long term.
Frequently asked questions
Are solar panels worth it in Colorado in 2026?
At Colorado's electricity price of 15¢/kWh, a typical 7 kW system saves about $1,344 per year and pays for itself in roughly 15.6 years. There is no federal solar tax credit in 2026 (Section 25D expired December 31, 2025), so these figures reflect bill savings and net metering only.
How much do solar panels cost in Colorado?
A 7 kW system costs roughly $21,000 installed at about $3.00/watt before any state or utility incentive. Costs vary by installer, equipment, and roof complexity.
How much electricity will solar produce in Colorado?
About 1,600 kWh per year per kW installed in Colorado, so a 7 kW system produces roughly 11,200 kWh/year. Your exact output depends on roof orientation, tilt, and shading.
Estimates based on Colorado average energy prices and a simplified model; your results will vary. Energy prices and incentives change frequently. Not financial advice.