Utah solar data EIA rates · NREL sun hours Updated 2026

Solar Panels in Utah: Cost, Savings & Incentives (2026)

How much do solar panels cost in Utah in 2026? Typical 9.0 kW system: $18,900 after 30% ITC, 17.4-year payback, 5.8 sun hrs/day, 11.2¢/kWh. Free calculators.

· Reviewed by Green Energy Calculators Editorial Team

$18,900 After 30% ITC
17.4 yrs Payback
9.0 kW Typical system
$26,600+ 25-yr savings

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Utah solar decision guides

Data hub — jump to in-depth sizing, bill-based, or policy guides. This page stays focused on rates & incentives.

Utah solar snapshot (2026)

A 9 kW system in Utah produces roughly 15,242 kWh/year at 5.8 peak sun hours and 11.2¢/kWh — saving about $1,707/year with ~11-year payback after the 30% ITC.

Cost itemAmount
System cost (9 kW)$27,000
Federal 30% ITC−$8,100
Net cost after ITC$18,900
Est. annual savings$1,707/yr
25-year net profit (est.)$23,775

Get at least 3 installer quotes — pricing varies up to 30% within the same state.

Utah solar incentives

Federal ITC — 30%

All US homeowners qualify for the 30% federal Investment Tax Credit through 2032. On a $27,000 system, that's a $8,100 dollar-for-dollar tax credit.

Utah state programs

Utah's Residential Energy Tax Credit provides 25% of the purchase price and installation costs of a solar system (capped at $1,600 for systems under 2 kW, $2,400 for larger systems). Utah also has a Solar Property Tax Exemption and net metering policies governed by the Utah Public Service Commission.

Is solar worth it in Utah?

Utah combines strong sun hours (5.8/day) with moderate rates (11.2¢/kWh) — a solid case for residential solar in 2026. Use the calculators above for a bill-specific estimate, or open a decision guide below for sizing by monthly bill or home sq ft.

Frequently asked questions

Direct answers for US homeowners in Utah.

A typical **9.0 kW** system costs **$27,000** gross, or **$18,900** after the 30% federal ITC.

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Data sources EIA state rates · NREL sun hours
Reviewed by Green Energy Calculators Editorial Team
Last updated
Sizing formula kW = Annual kWh ÷ (Peak Sun Hours × 365 × 0.82)