What a Sunrun quote usually includes
A Sunrun quote will typically spell out the proposed system size, an estimate of annual production, and the expected cost or monthly payment. It should list the main equipment (panels and inverters) and explain who owns and maintains the system. The quote may also include projected timeline for permits, installation and utility interconnection. Because national companies package financing and service offerings at scale, you’ll often see predefined plan choices rather than a fully custom, line-by-line contractor estimate. Always ask for an itemized quote and the assumptions behind the production estimate — roof pitch, shading, panel orientation and local weather assumptions matter to the numbers you’re shown.
What to compare across any solar quotes
Compare the same things across every quote so you’re not comparing apples to oranges. Key items: system size in kilowatts and the estimated annual production; total price or monthly payment and what’s included; the brands of panels and inverters; equipment and workmanship warranties and who is responsible if something goes wrong; any ongoing monitoring or service fees; and contract terms like length, transferability and escalation clauses. Also ask for the production model or software output behind the estimate. Remember that quoted production and financial outcomes depend on your roof, location, utility rates, local incentives and the financing path you choose. For context, compare what Sunrun offers with other national players such as Sunnova and Vivint Solar and at least one local installer in your area.
Tradeoffs: national brands versus local installers
National brands bring scale: standardized contracts, bundled financing and a structured customer service framework. That can make the process simpler and give access to certain financing products. But national firms sometimes use subcontractors for installation, which can affect who shows up on site and who handles repairs. Local installers often offer more hands-on service, quicker on-site responses and familiarity with local permitting and utility staff; they may also give more customizable quotes. The tradeoff is that smaller installers can be less consistent company-to-company, and their long-term financial stability varies. Ask any seller — national or local — who will perform the installation and who will handle future repairs and warranty claims.
Questions to ask before requesting a Sunrun quote
Ask whether the proposal is a purchase offer, a monthly agreement or a lease-like plan and who owns the system under each choice. Request an itemized cost breakdown and the production model used to estimate generation. Confirm equipment make and model, warranty coverage and who enforces the warranty. Ask who will install the panels — Sunrun crews or a subcontractor — and whether permits and interconnection fees are included. Check contract terms for transferability if you sell the house, and any escalation in monthly payments. Finally, ask for recent local references and how post-install service calls are handled.