Up‑front cost drivers: roof, system parts, and installation
Several practical items set most quotes. The size of the system (kW) is usually the biggest driver: more panels cost more. Roof condition, pitch and how easy it is to access the roof affect labor and racking costs. Panel model and efficiency matter — higher-efficiency panels can cost more but take less roof space. Inverters (string vs microinverters) and whether you add a battery also add to the quote. Finally, permits, inspections and local labor rates vary by region and can shift the total. Tradeoff: a lower sticker price could mean cheaper components or a tighter timeline for installation.
How your energy use and site specifics change the quote
A good quote starts with how much electricity you use, and when you use it. Utilities’ net metering and rate structures influence how much value your solar production has, so your system may be sized to cover average use rather than peak demand. Shading from trees or nearby buildings reduces expected output and can require different panel placement or microinverters, raising cost. If you want backup power or future EV charging, tell installers — those goals change system size and hardware choices. Remember: two homes with identical roofs can get different quotes because the household energy profile and local grid rules differ.
How financing changes the monthly cost story
Financing often determines the monthly payment more than the base quote. Paying cash means a large up-front outlay and minimal ongoing payments, while a loan spreads the cost but adds interest — the term and rate change the monthly amount. Leases and power purchase agreements (PPA) replace ownership with a fixed monthly fee; those payments aren’t the same as loan payments because you’re not buying the system. Tax credits and incentives can lower your effective cost, but how they affect monthly payments depends on whether you own the system and qualify for them. Many national installers, such as Sunrun and SunPower, present multiple financing scenarios—ask each company for an itemized comparison showing monthly cost for cash, loan (with APR and term), and lease or PPA where available. That lets you see the real monthly burden, not just the system price.
What to compare on multiple quotes
Ask every installer for the same core items so you can compare apples to apples: system size in kW, estimated annual production, panel and inverter models, mounting hardware, performance degradation rate, and a breakdown of equipment vs labor vs permit costs. Get financing scenarios with APR, term, down payment and the monthly payment for each. Check warranty coverage descriptions (equipment, labor, production) and request an installation timeline. Finally, ask for references or recent project photos from similar roofs. Tradeoffs to weigh: lowest price versus component quality and company reputation; shorter loan terms that cost more monthly but reduce interest versus longer terms with lower monthly payments.