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State Guide

Solar Panel Cost in Nevada (2026)

See how much solar panels cost in Nevada with local electricity rates, incentives, and payback estimates.

Last updated: 2026-06-09· Source label: EIA residential electricity rates, IRS federal clean energy credit, NREL/PVWatts solar assumptions

Nevada solar is shaped by abundant sun and a utility landscape still recovering from the 2015 net-metering crisis. The Las Vegas area gets among the best solar irradiance in the country, with 6+ peak sun hours per day—more than offsetting the state's below-average $0.14/kWh electricity rate. NV Energy is the dominant investor-owned utility, covering Las Vegas, Reno, and most urban areas. Valley Electric Association serves the Pahrump area as a rural cooperative, and the City of Boulder City operates its own municipal utility. Nevada's tiered net metering credits exports at 75-95% of retail depending on system size, and NV Energy offers residential solar rebates (verify current at dsireusa.org). The 2015 net-metering rollback was partially restored, but tiered credits mean self-consumption strategy matters more than pure export volume for payback.

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$0.14/kWhAvg. Electricity RateBelow the national average of $0.14/kWh. NV Energy's tiered rates mean high-usage customers (common with summer AC) benefit more from solar offset. Source: EIA Electric Power Monthly (2025 data).
7-9 yearsSolar PaybackAfter Section 25D expiration (residential ITC no longer available by default) and NV Energy rebate. The tiered net metering structure means maximizing self-consumption is key to faster payback
$2.45/WAvg. Install CostFor a typical 7.5 kW system, roughly ~$18,375 before incentives. The federal residential credit (Section 25D) expired Dec 31, 2025 and is not available by default for 2026 projects.
ColdClimate ZoneASHRAE/IECC heating climate zone classification
$1/thermNatural Gas PriceEIA residential price
Net cost before federal creditSee solar cost assumptionBased on the page's installed-cost assumption before any federal residential credit; local rebates or adders can change the final quote.
Estimated payback7-9 yearsDepends on utility rates and export-credit rules, installed cost, roof production, and tax-credit eligibility.
Annual savings$800–$1,200/yrBelow-average rate — solar payback is longer; strong state incentives or low install cost needed.

Estimates based on nevada state averages. Your actual cost depends on roof, equipment, installer, and financing.

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Overview

Nevada solar is shaped by abundant sun and a utility landscape still recovering from the 2015 net-metering crisis. The Las Vegas area gets among the best solar irradiance in the country, with 6+ peak sun hours per day—more than offsetting the state's below-average $0.14/kWh electricity rate. NV Energy is the dominant investor-owned utility, covering Las Vegas, Reno, and most urban areas. Valley Electric Association serves the Pahrump area as a rural cooperative, and the City of Boulder City operates its own municipal utility. Nevada's tiered net metering credits exports at 75-95% of retail depending on system size, and NV Energy offers residential solar rebates (verify current at dsireusa.org). The 2015 net-metering rollback was partially restored, but tiered credits mean self-consumption strategy matters more than pure export volume for payback.

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.Show

Calculation Method

Nevada 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.
  • Nevada economics should be checked against excellent solar resource, Nevada net-metering credit tiers, and hot-climate cooling load.
  • The federal tax credit only helps households with sufficient tax liability and qualifying project documentation.

Data Sources

Electricity rates

EIA Electric Power Monthly

Residential electricity-rate benchmark used for avoided-bill savings.

Solar production

NREL PVWatts

Solar production assumptions should be checked against local roof orientation, shading, and climate.

Federal incentive

IRS Residential Clean Energy Credit

Supports 2026 Section 25D expiration (residential ITC no longer available by default) for qualifying residential solar costs.

State policy

Nevada Public Utilities Commission (PUCN) and DSIRE

Used as a reminder to verify state incentives, net-metering, export-credit, and rebate rules before relying on an estimate.

Result Summary

Net cost before federal credit

See solar cost assumption

Based on the page's installed-cost assumption before any federal residential credit; local rebates or adders can change the final quote.

Estimated payback

7-9 years

Depends on utility rates and export-credit rules, installed cost, roof production, and tax-credit eligibility.

Annual savings

$800–$1,200/yr

Below-average rate — solar payback is longer; strong state incentives or low install cost needed.

Formula Assumptions Data Sources FAQ Related Links

page_type: State Solar Guide | state_name: Solar Panel Cost in Nevada (2026) | electricity_rate: $0.14/kWh | solar_cost_per_watt: $2.45/W | incentives: Federal Residential Credit Caveat; NV Energy Rebate + Portfolio Energy Credits | net_metering: Net metering (tiered) | estimated_payback: 7-9 years | data_sources: EIA Electric Power Monthly(electricity_rates), NREL PVWatts(solar_production), IRS Residential Clean Energy Credit(federal_incentive), Nevada Public Utilities Commission (PUCN) and DSIRE(state_policy) | last_updated: 2026-06-09