Kansas solar at a glance
Solar in Kansas pays back in 5 to 8 years on a cash purchase and clears roughly $40,000 over the panels’ lifetime. The federal 30% ITC does most of the heavy lifting. Kansas-specific incentives push the math a bit further.
| Metric | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Avg cost/watt | $2.50 /watt | After federal incentives |
| Federal ITC | 30% | Through 2032 · IRA |
| Avg payback | 5-8 yrs | Cash purchase estimate |
| 25-yr savings | $40,000 | Estimated net savings |
| Home value | +3-4% | Solar premium on resale |
The installers we’d quote first in Kansas
Refreshed May 2026
| Installer | Cost per watt | Warranty | Panel type | Financing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sunrun (Editor’s pick) | $2.50/watt installed | 25 yr | Tier 1 panels | Cash, Loan, Lease |
| Momentum Solar | $2.50/watt installed | 25 yr | Tier 1 panels | Cash, Loan, Lease |
| A state-licensed local installer | Varies, get 2-3 bids | Varies | Varies | Cash, Loan |
| Palmetto | $2.50/watt installed | 25 yr | Tier 1 panels | Cash, Loan |
| Tesla Energy | $2.50/watt installed | 25 yr | Tier 1 panels | Cash, Loan |
Source: EnergySage 2026 Q1 Kansas installer index.
The national installer field thinned out between 2024 and 2026. Several big names exited entirely. Confirm any installer still serves Kansas and holds a current state contractor license before you sign anything. Get three bids.
What solar actually costs in Kansas
| System size | Wattage | Pre-incentive cost | After 30% ITC | Monthly (25yr loan) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 3-4 kW | $9,000-$12,000 | $6,300-$8,400 | $252-$336 |
| Medium | 5-6 kW | $15,000-$18,000 | $10,500-$12,600 | $420-$504 |
| Large | 8-10 kW | $24,000-$30,000 | $16,800-$21,000 | $672-$840 |
| Premium | 12+ kW | $36,000-$42,000 | $25,200-$29,400 | $1,008-$1,176 |
$2.50-$3.50/watt typical for Kansas residential solar after federal incentives.
The Kansas incentives you can actually stack
Federal Investment Tax Credit
Federal · stacks with state and local
The 30% ITC on installed cost. Translation, the IRS knocks 30% off your tax bill in the year your system is placed in service. Non-refundable, but unused credit rolls forward. Batteries qualify, with or without panels.
- Solar PV credit: 30%. Claimed on IRS Form 5695 against total installed cost.
- Battery storage credit: 30%. Standalone batteries qualify since Aug 2022.
- Sunset schedule: 2032 · full rate. Drops to 26% in 2033, 22% in 2034.
Average Kansas household savings: $5,400.
Kansas state-level incentives
State · Kansas-specific
Kansas-specific programs change year to year. Check DSIRE before signing anything.
- Kansas state solar incentive: $1,000-$3,000. Check DSIRE for current Kansas programs and eligibility.
- Net metering / buyback: ~$0.10-$0.15/kWh excess. Credit for solar you send back to the grid. Varies by utility.
- Solar Renewable Energy Credits (SRECs): $10-$25 per SREC. Translation, a tradable certificate utilities buy to meet renewable targets. Income varies by region and market.
Verify current availability before contracting.
Utility rebates and net metering
Utility · local programs
Your utility, not the state, sets the export rate you’ll live with. Call yours before you pick an installer.
- Net metering / buyback: ~$0.10-$0.15/kWh excess. Credit for solar you push back to the grid. Rates vary by utility.
- Net metering: Check utility. Credit terms for excess solar sent to the grid.
Programs change annually.
For the full federal credit rules and how to claim them, see our solar tax credits guide.
The factors that change your Kansas payback most
- Roof orientation and pitch (highest impact). A south-facing roof at 25-35 degrees produces 18 to 24% more annual kWh than the same array on a flat or north-facing roof. The biggest single variable in your math.
- Local sun hours and climate (high impact). Kansas’s sun resource sets the ceiling on annual production. More sun, faster payback, higher lifetime savings. No way around the geometry.
- Electricity rate and utility (high impact). The higher your retail rate, the more every kWh your panels make is worth. Pull last summer’s bill and find the per-kWh rate before you run any quote.
- Roof age and type (medium impact). Asphalt shingle over 12 years old usually wants replacing first, $8-15k of extra work that folds into the same ITC year. Metal and tile cost more to install on.
- Financing structure (medium impact). Cash has the fastest payback. A solar loan adds 2 to 3 years. A 20-year lease or PPA never owns the system but starts saving in month one.
- Battery storage (moderate impact). Batteries add $11-14k. Worth it for outage resilience and time-of-use arbitrage, less so as pure buyback insurance. Most owners we’d recommend skip it on day one.
To model these factors against your own roof and rates, start with our solar ROI guide.
Is solar worth it in Kansas?
What solar looks like in Kansas
The math turns on three things: your sun hours, your retail rate, and what your utility pays for export. The federal 30% ITC works the same everywhere and does the most for you. Kansas-specific programs are smaller but worth claiming.
The typical Kansas cash purchase pays back in 5 to 8 years. After that, the next 15 to 20 years of production is effectively free electricity.
Buy or lease: the ITC question
If you have federal tax liability above the ITC amount in any of the next several years, buy. Cash or loan, doesn’t matter, you keep the 30% credit. That’s $5,000 to $8,000 in direct tax savings on a typical system. Leases and PPAs hand that credit to the installer. Use them only if you can’t claim the ITC yourself.
The cost of doing nothing
Power rates go one direction. Over a 25-year warranty, an average Kansas household spends tens of thousands on grid electricity at zero inflation. Even a slightly overpriced install pays for itself inside that window. The real question isn’t whether to go solar. It’s which installer, which financing, and which utility plan.
Weighing cash, loan, lease, or PPA? Our solar financing guide compares all four paths.
Sources
- DSIRE: Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency
- EnergySage Kansas solar cost and installer benchmark, 2026 Q1
- IRS Form 5695, Residential Energy Credits
- U.S. Energy Information Administration: Kansas state energy profile
- DOE Homeowner's Guide to the Federal Tax Credit for Solar Photovoltaics