American Solar & Roofing
12 , Phoenix, AZ 85034-7239
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Solar Energy Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Commercial Roofing ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Solar Panel Installation Repair repair in Phoenix — fast diagnosis, honest pricing, and lasting fixes. Compare 61 local repair specialists and get back to normal without overpaying.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$15,000–$40,000 / project
61 contractors in Phoenix
12 , Phoenix, AZ 85034-7239
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Solar Energy Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Commercial Roofing ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
329 W Lone Cactus Dr Ste 8 , Phoenix, AZ 85027-2939
Solar Energy Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Heating and Air Conditioning ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2730 E Jones Ave Ste 101 , Phoenix, AZ 85040
Solar Energy Equipment Dealers, Roofing Contractors, Solar Energy Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
10651 N Cave Creek Rd # C , Phoenix, AZ 85020-1439
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Solar Energy Contractors, Electrician, Low Voltage Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2015 W. Mountain View Road , Phoenix, AZ 85021-1922
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Roofing Contractors, Electrician, Metal Roofing Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
8927 W Bloomfield Rd Ste 130 , Peoria, AZ 85381-6137
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Solar Energy Design, Electrician, Heating and Air Conditioning ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
9299 W Olive Ave Ste 303 , Peoria, AZ 85345-8381
Solar Energy Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Solar Energy Design ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85018-4342
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Energy Service Company, Solar Energy Contractors, Solar Energy Design ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
102 S 28th St , Phoenix, AZ 85034-2600
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Solar Energy Design, Solar Energy Contractors, Solar Energy Product Services ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
610 , Phoenix, AZ 85023-1261
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Commercial Contractors, Solar Energy Contractors, Commercial Electrician
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2501 W Phelps Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85023
BBB Accredited A rated. Solar Energy Products, Solar Energy Contractors, Solar Energy Design ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
16807 N Cave Creek Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85032-2505
Solar Energy Contractors, Electrician, Low Voltage Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
For: 6-10 kW rooftop solar system in Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix is one of the best cities in the world for residential solar. Maricopa County receives 299+ sunny days per year and 5.5–6.5 peak sun hours per day — the highest solar irradiance of any major US metro area. The combination of industry-leading sun hours, high summer utility bills, and generous state tax exemptions makes Phoenix solar economics among the strongest in the country.
| System Size | Homes Served | Pre-ITC Cost | After 30% Federal ITC |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kW | 1,200–1,800 sf, modest AC usage | $12,500–$20,000 | $8,750–$14,000 |
| 8 kW | 1,800–2,500 sf, standard Phoenix home | $20,000–$32,000 | $14,000–$22,400 |
| 10 kW | 2,500–3,500 sf, pool, heavy AC | $25,000–$40,000 | $17,500–$28,000 |
| 12 kW | 3,500–4,500 sf, large family home | $30,000–$48,000 | $21,000–$33,600 |
| 15+ kW | Large estate, pool, EVs, high usage | $37,500–$60,000+ | $26,250–$42,000+ |
Price per watt installed (pre-ITC): $2.50–$4.00/watt — the Phoenix market is highly competitive, reducing prices toward the lower end of the national range.
The 30% federal Investment Tax Credit under the Inflation Reduction Act applies through 2032 to residential solar systems including:
The credit is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in federal income tax owed, not a deduction. A $28,000 system generates a $8,400 federal tax credit. Claim on IRS Form 5695. Note: if you owe less than the credit in the installation year, the unused portion carries forward to the next tax year.
Sales Tax Exemption (ARS §42-5061): Solar equipment (panels, inverters, batteries, racking) is exempt from Arizona's 5.6% state sales tax. This saves approximately $700–$2,200 on an average Phoenix system — a meaningful offset automatically applied by licensed Arizona solar contractors.
Property Tax Exemption (ARS §42-11054): The added value to your home from a solar installation is exempt from property tax assessment in Arizona. A solar system that increases your home's value by $20,000–$30,000 (per Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory data) adds zero additional property tax burden.
No Arizona State Solar Tax Credit: Arizona's state solar tax credit expired. The federal 30% ITC is the primary incentive in 2025.
Phoenix homeowners are served by either APS (Arizona Public Service) or SRP (Salt River Project) — and the two utilities have fundamentally different solar export compensation structures that affect your financial analysis:
| Factor | APS | SRP |
|---|---|---|
| Net metering rate | Excess solar credited at near-retail rate (varies by plan) | Distributed generation export credited at avoided-cost rate (below retail) |
| Demand charges | Rate plans without demand charges available | SRP's E-27 plan includes a demand charge component based on 30-minute peak interval — hurts solar ROI |
| Battery storage benefit | Moderate — smoothing export credits | High — battery storage can blunt the demand charge peak under SRP plans |
| Solar ROI (rough) | Generally 6–9 year payback | Generally 8–12 year payback (depending on rate plan selection) |
APS customers are generally in a better economic position for solar without battery storage. SRP customers benefit substantially from pairing solar with battery storage to eliminate demand charge spikes — a Tesla Powerwall 3 or Enphase IQ battery system that prevents the 30-minute peak interval from spiking is measurably value-positive under SRP's E-27 distributed generation plan.
| Battery System | Capacity | Installed Cost (with ITC) |
|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh; 11.5 kW continuous output | $12,000–$15,000 ($8,400–$10,500 after 30% ITC) |
| Enphase IQ Battery 5P | 5 kWh per unit; stackable to 20+ kWh | $6,000–$8,500/unit ($4,200–$5,950 after ITC) |
| Franklin Electric aP APEX | 13.6 kWh | $10,000–$14,000 ($7,000–$9,800 after ITC) |
Battery storage is particularly valuable in Phoenix for two reasons: (1) SRP demand charge management (described above) and (2) Backup power during the monsoon season (June–September) when severe dust storms (haboobs) and microbursts cause localized outages in Maricopa County.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) requires specific licensing for solar panel installation. Two licenses apply:
| License Class | Scope |
|---|---|
| ROC A-17 (Solar Photovoltaic Systems) | Installation of solar panel systems, racking, DC wiring from panels to inverter |
| ROC C-11 (Electrical) | Required for inverter wiring to the electrical panel, interconnection, and any AC-side electrical work |
Most legitimate Phoenix solar contractors hold both A-17 and C-11 licenses, or partner with a C-11 licensed electrician for the panel connection work. Verify licenses at roc.az.gov before signing any contract. An unlicensed solar installer in Arizona is violating ARS §32-1151 — and unlicensed installations typically cannot obtain required building permits or pass inspection.
Arizona law is among the strongest in the country for homeowner solar rights. Two statutes protect Phoenix solar owners:
If your Scottsdale, Chandler, or Gilbert HOA claims to prohibit solar, this is incorrect under Arizona law. Licensed solar contractors in Phoenix are familiar with these provisions and routinely handle ARC submittals for HOAs as part of the installation process.
Every residential solar installation in Phoenix requires:
Timeline: From contract to system activation: 6–14 weeks typical in the Phoenix market (permitting 2–4 weeks, installation 1–3 days, interconnection approval 2–6 weeks after passing inspection).
A licensed A-17/C-11 contractor manages all of these steps — pulling permits, scheduling inspections, submitting interconnection applications to APS or SRP, and coordinating final activation. DIY solar installation in Arizona cannot legally pull permits and cannot obtain interconnection.
Equipment quality tiers:
| Component | Budget Tier | Mid-Tier | Premium Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Panels | Generic Asian-manufactured; lower warranty | Q CELLS, Canadian Solar, Jinko | LG NeON, SunPower Maxeon, REC Alpha |
| Inverter | Off-brand string inverters | SolarEdge HD-Wave, Enphase IQ8 | Enphase IQ8A/IQ8H (microinverter) |
| Racking | Generic flat-mount | IronRidge, Unirac, SnapNrack | Same brands but full engineering review |
| Warranty | 10–15 years product; 25 year performance | 25 year product; 25 year performance | 25 year product; 25 year performance + enhanced labor |
Microinverters vs. string inverters for Phoenix: In Phoenix's extreme heat conditions, microinverter systems (Enphase IQ8 series) have a production advantage — each panel operates independently, so partial shading (from a chimney, nearby tree, or soiling from monsoon dust) doesn't drag down the entire array. Enphase IQ8 microinverters have a temperature derating threshold at high ambient temperatures; verify the derating specification for your specific roof orientation and Phoenix's summer conditions with your contractor.
The Phoenix solar market has experienced aggressive high-pressure sales practices — some companies have faced enforcement action from the Arizona Attorney General for deceptive marketing.
Warning signs:
Verify contractor license at roc.az.gov; check Arizona Attorney General complaints and [CSLB equivalent] for the company name before signing.
Solar panel installation is effectively a professional-only service in Arizona for any grid-tied system. Arizona law and utility interconnection requirements create insurmountable barriers to DIY grid-tied solar — not because of technical complexity alone, but because DIY solar cannot obtain the permits or utility approvals needed for legal operation.
| Barrier | Details |
|---|---|
| Arizona ROC A-17 license required | Any PV system installation requires ROC A-17; DIY homeowners cannot hold a contractor license for their own home |
| ROC C-11 electrical license required | Inverter panel connection requires licensed electrician — DIY 200A panel work is not legal under Arizona law without licensure |
| City of Phoenix permit required | Permits are issued to licensed contractors; no mechanism for a homeowner to pull a solar permit on their own property in Phoenix |
| APS/SRP interconnection | Utilities require a licensed contractor-signed interconnection application; without it, you cannot export power or receive net metering credits |
| Roof structural engineering | Permit applications require stamped engineering calculations — only available through licensed professionals |
| Warranty voiding | Panel and inverter manufacturers void warranties for non-professional installation |
The practical result: DIY solar for a grid-tied Phoenix home is not viable. Off-grid systems (no utility interconnection) are a narrow exception — a completely off-grid tiny home or ADU with battery storage and no utility connection can technically be DIY-installed in Arizona, though quality and safety risks remain.
While installation is professional-only, homeowners have meaningful involvement in maximizing their solar investment:
DIY system monitoring: APS, SRP, Enphase, and SolarEdge all provide homeowner-accessible monitoring apps. Monitoring your system daily energy production against the installer's estimated production baseline is something any homeowner can do — and deviations from baseline often catch performance issues (soiled panels, failed microinverter) before they cost significant energy income.
DIY panel cleaning: Phoenix's monsoon season (June–September) deposits heavy dust on panels. Professional panel cleaning runs $100–$250 per service; DIY cleaning with a soft brush and deionized water (not tap water — mineral deposits leave residue on glass) costs under $30 per cleaning. Cleaning frequency recommendation: after the first and last major monsoon event of the season, and any time visible dust accumulation is significant. Avoid high-pressure water near panel connectors.
DIY shade assessment before purchase: A $10 iPhone app (Solar Surveyor, SunSurveyor) can indicate whether your roof has significant shading from chimneys, neighboring trees, or adjacent structures that would reduce production. Running this before getting solar quotes helps you evaluate whether installer shade analyses match reality.
The more relevant comparison in Phoenix isn't DIY vs. professional — it's which professional is the right choice. The Phoenix solar market ranges from large national companies (SunPower, Sunrun, Tesla Energy) to regional installers to small local contractors.
| Installer Type | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Large national company | Established warranty backstop; volume pricing on equipment; financing options | High-pressure sales tactics documented; may subcontract installation |
| Regional Phoenix installer | Experienced with local permits, APS/SRP interconnection specifics | Equipment selection may be narrower |
| Local small contractor | Most responsive service; owner-operated accountability | Warranty backstop risk if company closes |
| Utility-affiliated program | APS/SRP sometimes offer referral contractor programs | Limited contractor selection; may not offer optimal system design |
Key differentiator: Ask whether the company performs their own installations or subcontracts. National companies frequently subcontract installation to local crews — meaning the entity with a long warranty commitment may not be the entity that performs warranty service calls. Understand who will service the system under long-term warranty before signing.
This is the most consequential decision Phoenix solar buyers make:
| Purchase Structure | 25-Year Cost | Complexity | Home Sale Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cash purchase | Lowest total cost; full ITC benefit | Simple | Solar adds $20K–$35K to home value (LBL data) |
| Solar loan (secured, 4–7% APR) | Low to moderate; ITC reduces principal | Moderate | Loan transfers or paid off at closing |
| Solar lease / PPA | Highest long-term cost; no ITC benefit (lessor keeps credit) | Complex contract | Reduces home sale speed; buyer must assume lease or buy out |
Phoenix solar leases and PPAs commonly include annual escalator clauses (2–3%/year) that significantly increase total cost over 25 years relative to cash purchase. A $120/month payment escalating at 2.9%/year becomes $243/month by year 25 — understanding the escalator is essential before signing a lease agreement.
Recommendation: If you can qualify for a solar loan, it typically produces better financial outcomes than a lease for Phoenix homeowners. Cash purchase is optimal but requires upfront capital.
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