State Guide
Solar Panel Cost in Massachusetts (2026)
Estimate Massachusetts solar ROI with high utility rates, SMART payments, state tax credits, and winter production assumptions.
Last updated: 2026-06-09· Source label: EIA residential electricity rates, IRS federal clean energy credit, NREL/PVWatts solar assumptions
Massachusetts is the highest-ROI solar state in the Northeast, driven by electricity rates averaging $0.30/kWh—nearly double the national average—and a policy stack that includes the unique SMART performance-based incentive, a 15% state tax credit capped at a dollar amount listed at dsireusa.org, and full retail net metering. Eversource Energy serves eastern Massachusetts including Boston and the South Shore. National Grid covers central Massachusetts, the North Shore, and the Merrimack Valley. Unitil serves smaller territories in the north-central region around Fitchburg. The SMART program pays a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour based on utility territory and program block, providing predictable long-term income separate from bill savings. Winter production dips are real, but high year-round rates and strong state policy make Massachusetts solar a compelling investment for homes with good roof exposure.
Texas Solar Calculator
Estimates based on massachusetts state averages. Your actual cost depends on roof, equipment, installer, and financing.
Incentives & Rebates
Federal Residential Credit Caveat
The Section 25D expiration (residential solar ITC ended Dec 31, 2025) can reduce a $25,000 project by about $7,500 for eligible taxpayers.
Massachusetts State Tax Credit and SMART
Massachusetts offers a 15% residential renewable energy income tax credit capped at a dollar amount listed at dsireusa.org. SMART provides tariff-based production incentives that vary by utility, block, and system characteristics.
Net Metering
Massachusetts net metering can provide strong bill credits, but caps, customer class, utility territory, and system size matter. SMART compensation is separate from bill-credit value and should not be double counted.
Top Electric Utilities
- 1. Eversource Energy
- 2. National Grid
- 3. Unitil
Source: EIA-861, by customer count
Recommended next steps
Calculate your ROI
Use Solar Panel Cost in Massachusetts (2026) defaults with pre-filled state data.
Review an installer quote
Validate price per watt, system size, and financing terms.
Compare ownership models
Buy vs Lease vs PPA — see which fits your situation.
Refine your estimate
Use the Massachusetts solar ROI calculator with your utility, SMART eligibility, and roof shade assumptions.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Show my solar path →Overview
Massachusetts is the highest-ROI solar state in the Northeast, driven by electricity rates averaging $0.30/kWh—nearly double the national average—and a policy stack that includes the unique SMART performance-based incentive, a 15% state tax credit capped at a dollar amount listed at dsireusa.org, and full retail net metering. Eversource Energy serves eastern Massachusetts including Boston and the South Shore. National Grid covers central Massachusetts, the North Shore, and the Merrimack Valley. Unitil serves smaller territories in the north-central region around Fitchburg. The SMART program pays a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour based on utility territory and program block, providing predictable long-term income separate from bill savings. Winter production dips are real, but high year-round rates and strong state policy make Massachusetts solar a compelling investment for homes with good roof exposure.
Use this result
Use the calculator inputs first, then compare the result against local rates, incentives, roof conditions, and utility export rules.
Method, assumptions, and sourcesOpen this section when you want to audit the calculation behind the estimate.ShowHide
Calculation Method
Massachusetts solar payback = net installed cost after incentives / annual avoided electricity cost plus export credits
Key Assumptions
- Policy last reviewed: 2026-06-09. Federal residential credit assumptions are project-year dependent and not applied by default for 2026+ projects.
- Residential rate and installed-cost figures are planning benchmarks, not a final utility bill audit or installer quote.
- The model assumes a roof with usable sun exposure; shading, roof age, electrical upgrades, permitting, and financing can materially change cost.
- Massachusetts economics should be checked against high rates, SMART/storage incentive context, and winter production and heating-load caveats.
- The federal tax credit only helps households with sufficient tax liability and qualifying project documentation.
Data Sources
Electricity rates
EIA Electric Power Monthly
Massachusetts residential rate benchmark used to calculate avoided utility cost.
Solar production
NREL PVWatts
Supports production assumptions for New England irradiance, roof pitch, and snow-season variation.
Federal incentive
IRS Residential Clean Energy Credit
Supports 2026 Section 25D expiration (residential ITC no longer available by default).
State policy
Massachusetts DOER SMART, MassCEC, DSIRE, Massachusetts DPU
Supports SMART, state tax credit, property tax, and net-metering policy caveats.
Result Summary
Net cost before federal credit
$22,500-$27,750
Estimated for a 7.5 kW system before any federal residential credit, before state tax credit and SMART value.
Additional state value
$1,000 plus SMART where eligible
State tax credit is capped; SMART value depends on tariff block and utility program details.
Annual bill offset
$2,000-$4,000
Driven by high retail rates and household usage rather than extreme solar irradiance.
Formula Assumptions Data Sources FAQ Related Links
Compare Solar Costs With Neighboring States
Solar economics vary by state. Compare Massachusetts with nearby states to see how electricity rates, incentives, and payback periods differ in your region.