A 2,000 square foot home in Hawaii typically uses about 899 kWh per month at the state average rate of 40.8¢/kWh (EIA). With 6.0 peak sun hours per day, most homeowners need a 6.0 kW solar system — roughly 16 panels at 400W. After the 30% federal ITC, net cost is about $12,600, with 3.3-year payback and $147,900+ in estimated 25-year savings.
Content roles: This page is your Hawaii-specific sizing decision for 2,000 sq ft. For national methodology and roof/orientation depth, see the 2,000 sq ft national guide. For bill-based sizing, see $150/month (~$367/mo equivalent in Hawaii). Policy depth: Hawaii solar data.
⚡ System Size
How Many Solar Panels for a 2,000 sq ft House in Hawaii?
Hawaii electricity rates and sun hours change panel count versus the US average:
System size (kW) = Annual kWh ÷ (Peak sun hours × 365 × 0.82)
For 2,000 sq ft in Hawaii:
Estimated monthly usage: ~899 kWh
Peak sun hours: 6.0 h/day
System size:6.0 kW (~16 × 400W panels)
Metric
Hawaii
US average
Rate
40.8¢/kWh
16.3¢/kWh
Sun hours
6.0 h/day
4.5 h/day
System size
6.0 kW
8.0 kW
Panels (400W)
16
21
Hawaii requires a smaller system than the national average for the same square footage. Use our solar system size calculator with your actual utility bills for a precise ZIP-level result.
Find your exact solar savings
Enter your ZIP code for a personalized estimate using your state's electricity rate and sun hours.
💰 System Cost
What Does Solar Cost for a 2,000 sq ft Home in Hawaii After the ITC?
At $3.00/W installed (SEIA 2026), a 6.0 kW system in Hawaii costs about $18,000 before incentives. The 30% ITC saves ~$5,400, for $12,600 net cost.
📈 Payback Period
How Long Is Solar Payback on a 2,000 sq ft Home in Hawaii?
A 6.0 kW system saving ~$3,829/year pays back in about 3.3 years after the ITC. At 3% rate escalation, 25-year utility spend totals ~$160,500 vs $12,600 net solar — $147,900+ lifetime advantage.
Solar vs utility company · 25-year comparison
Total cost of staying on the grid vs owning solar for a $300/month bill (national average assumptions).
Hawaii offers a 35% state income tax credit on solar thermal and photovoltaic systems (capped at $5,000 per system for PV). With electricity rates among the highest in the nation at $0.39/kWh, Hawaii homeowners see some of the fastest solar payback periods in the US despite having no net metering under the current Smart Export Tariff structure.
At Hawaii's average rate of 40.8¢/kWh and 6.0 peak sun hours, a 2,000 sq ft home (~899 kWh/month) typically needs a 6.0 kW system — about 16 panels at 400W. See the [national 2,000 sq ft guide](/guides/how-much-do-solar-panels-cost-2000-sq-ft-home/) for methodology.
A 6.0 kW system in Hawaii costs roughly $18,000 installed before incentives. The 30% federal ITC reduces net cost to about $12,600. Hawaii offers a 35% state income tax credit on solar thermal and photovoltaic systems (capped at $5,000 per system for PV). With electricity rates among the highest in the nation at $0.39/kWh, Hawaii homeowners see so...
At $12,600 net cost and ~$3,829/year in bill savings, simple payback in Hawaii is about 3.3 years.
Most Hawaii homeowners in this size range see **$147,900+** estimated 25-year savings vs utility power. Equivalent monthly bill: **~$367** — compare the [$150/month bill guide](/guides/solar-panels-150-month-bill/) for bill-based sizing.
The US average needs a 8.0 kW system at 11.0-year payback. Hawaii needs 6.0 kW with 3.3-year payback at 40.8¢/kWh and 6.0 sun hours.
$150/month electric bill by state
System size and payback vary by electricity rate and sun hours — see your state.