State Guide
Solar Panel Cost in Kentucky (2026)
See how much solar panels cost in Kentucky 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
Kentucky's solar economics are among the toughest in the Southeast — not because of sun quality, but because of utility policy and a coal-heavy grid that resists distributed generation. Louisville Gas & Electric serves the state's largest metro area, Kentucky Utilities covers much of the central and western regions, and Big Rivers Electric serves rural co-ops. Residential electricity at $0.15/kWh is close to the national average, and the moderate climate means solar production is spread across both cooling and heating seasons. But the state's net metering program is capped at just 1% of each utility's peak load — an extremely restrictive limit that, once reached, cuts off new participants. With natural gas at $1.91/therm and no statewide cash incentive, Kentucky homeowners face a system where the primary value is self-consumption under an uncertain policy ceiling. Current page assumptions use a residential electricity benchmark of $0.15/kWh, installed solar cost around $2.55/W, and an estimated payback window of 8-10 years. Treat the calculator result as a planning estimate: confirm your utility tariff, export-credit value, roof production, and tax-credit eligibility before comparing bids for a Kentucky home.
Texas Solar Calculator
Estimates based on kentucky state averages. Your actual cost depends on roof, equipment, installer, and financing.
Incentives & Rebates
Federal Residential Credit Caveat
For projects where IRS project-year rules support a residential credit, a 30% credit would be roughly $6,502 on a $21,675 system. For 2026+ residential projects, RenewableCalc keeps this at 0% unless current IRS guidance supports eligibility.
State and Utility Incentive Context
Kentucky: No statewide incentive. Net metering at retail rate capped at 1% of utility peak load. Verify current program funding, utility territory, DSIRE listings, and tax eligibility before relying on this incentive in a quote.
Net Metering
Kentucky solar exports are modeled as Net metering at retail rate (capped). Confirm the current utility tariff, retail-credit or avoided-cost treatment, monthly rollover, and annual true-up before sizing a system around exported kWh.
Top Electric Utilities
- 1. Kentucky Utilities
- 2. Louisville Gas & Electric
- 3. Big Rivers Electric
Source: EIA-861, by customer count
Recommended next steps
Calculate your ROI
Use Solar Panel Cost in Kentucky (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 Solar ROI Calculator with your Kentucky utility rate, annual kWh usage, and quote assumptions.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Show my solar path →Overview
Kentucky's solar economics are among the toughest in the Southeast — not because of sun quality, but because of utility policy and a coal-heavy grid that resists distributed generation. Louisville Gas & Electric serves the state's largest metro area, Kentucky Utilities covers much of the central and western regions, and Big Rivers Electric serves rural co-ops. Residential electricity at $0.15/kWh is close to the national average, and the moderate climate means solar production is spread across both cooling and heating seasons. But the state's net metering program is capped at just 1% of each utility's peak load — an extremely restrictive limit that, once reached, cuts off new participants. With natural gas at $1.91/therm and no statewide cash incentive, Kentucky homeowners face a system where the primary value is self-consumption under an uncertain policy ceiling. Current page assumptions use a residential electricity benchmark of $0.15/kWh, installed solar cost around $2.55/W, and an estimated payback window of 8-10 years. Treat the calculator result as a planning estimate: confirm your utility tariff, export-credit value, roof production, and tax-credit eligibility before comparing bids for a Kentucky home.
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
Kentucky 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.
- Kentucky economics should be checked against moderate electricity rates, utility-specific net-metering credit rules, and heating/cooling load mix.
- 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 and utility policy
DSIRE and local utility tariff pages
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 residential credit
~$21,675
Uses Kentucky's $2.55/W installed-cost default and no statewide cash incentive default; no 2026+ federal residential credit is applied by default.
Estimated payback
8-10 years
Depends on actual utility rate, Net metering at retail rate (capped), installed cost, roof production, financing, and incentive eligibility.
Annual bill offset
$1,100-$1,500/yr
Estimate based on a 8.5 kW system, 4.5 peak sun hours/day, $0.15/kWh, and PVWatts-style production before fixed charges or export-credit adjustments.
Formula Assumptions Data Sources FAQ Related Links
Compare Solar Costs With Neighboring States
Solar economics vary by state. Compare Kentucky with nearby states to see how electricity rates, incentives, and payback periods differ in your region.