Regional installer with BBB accreditation — could offer a local, hands-on sales and service experience in parts of the Upper Midwest and New England.
Solar company review
All Energy Solar Reviews
Our review summary
Common homeowner complaints
There is limited public feedback available in the sources used for this profile. That makes it harder to spot recurring themes; still, when information is sparse the practical risk is not knowing how financing questions and post-install service are handled locally. The BBB accreditation is a positive signal, but homeowners should check complaint history for their specific office and ask the company for recent local references.
Pricing and financing notes
Expect to negotiate more than sticker price — financing structure can change the long-term cost. Before you commit: confirm whether you’d own the system or be on a lease/PPA, ask for the exact buyout formula and any early-termination rules, verify who is responsible for maintenance and inverter replacement, get estimated monthly payments and APRs for loan offers, and request written answers to transfer rules if you sell your home. If the salesperson can’t or won’t produce sample paperwork for your scenario, ask for bids from other local or national providers for comparison.
Who this company may be best for
Recent review highlights
A few quick takeaways homeowners often care about when comparing All Energy Solar with alternatives.
Financing details are the key risk area — leases, PPAs and loan paperwork can change who pays for upgrades, who owns the panels, and what happens at home sale or early payoff.
If you get a quote, treat the financing documents as the core comparison point and demand clear examples of the exact agreement you’d sign.
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