Solar Panel Financing in Lone Tree, CO
How you finance a residential solar installation matters as much as which contractor installs it. Solar financing options range from straightforward cash purchases through solar-specific loans, traditional home equity options, and lease or Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) arrangements that let third parties own the system on your roof. Each approach has specific economics, specific tax implications, and specific consequences for what happens when you eventually sell the home. The financing decision affects your total cost of ownership over 25+ years more than most homeowners realize when they’re focused on the upfront sticker price. We help homeowners understand the trade-offs honestly, because some financing approaches that look attractive in the sales pitch produce substantially worse total economics than alternatives that take a few more minutes to understand.
Baseline Roofing and Solar coordinates solar financing for homeowners as part of our broader solar service. We’re not a lender. We don’t underwrite loans, hold leases, or take ownership of arrays, but we work with homeowners on the financing approach that fits their situation, coordinate with appropriate solar lenders or financial partners, and explain what the different financing structures actually mean over the long term. We deliberately don’t push lease or PPA structures the way some pure-play solar contractors do, because those structures often produce worse economics for homeowners who could realistically pursue ownership-based financing instead.
This page covers the major financing options in plain terms, the tax credit and incentive landscape that affects financing decisions, the lease and PPA trade-offs that homeowners often don’t fully understand at signing time, the impact of financing structure on home resale, and how to think through which approach fits your specific situation.
The Major Solar Financing Options
Most residential solar in the US is financed through one of four approaches. Each has specific characteristics that affect cost, ownership, and outcomes.
Cash Purchase
Pay the full system cost upfront. Strongest economics over the system’s life because you pay no interest, capture all tax credits and incentives, and own the system outright from day one. The downside is the upfront capital requirement, typical residential solar systems cost $20,000 to $50,000+ before incentives, which not every homeowner has available in cash.
Best for:
- Homeowners with sufficient liquid capital to cover the upfront cost
- Long-term ownership where the strongest cost-per-year economics matter
- Tax situations where the federal tax credit can be fully utilized
Solar-Specific Loans
Loans specifically designed for residential solar, offered by solar-focused lenders (GoodLeap, Sunlight Financial, Mosaic, Service Finance, and others). These loans typically offer terms tailored to solar, extended duration matching system service life, structures that account for tax credit timing, and competitive rates compared to standard unsecured borrowing.
Common solar loan structures:
- Tax credit recapture loans. Loan structured assuming you’ll apply your federal tax credit toward principal in the first 12-18 months. Lower monthly payments after the recapture; balloon payment if the recapture doesn’t happen.
- Standard amortization loans. Conventional amortizing loans without tax credit recapture assumptions. Predictable payments throughout the term.
- Fixed-rate longer-term loans. 20 to 25 year terms with rates competitive to long-term fixed-rate financing. Match payment duration to system service life.
Best for:
- Homeowners who want ownership economics but don’t have full upfront capital
- Situations where the federal tax credit can be applied effectively
- Homeowners comfortable with debt obligations matched to a long-term asset
Home Equity-Based Financing
Solar financed through traditional home equity loans (HELOCs) or home equity lines of credit. Uses your home’s equity as collateral; rates are typically lower than solar-specific loans because the loan is secured. Interest may be deductible if used for home improvements (consult your tax advisor on specifics).
Best for:
- Homeowners with available home equity
- Situations where lower rates outweigh the inconvenience of using home equity
- Homeowners comfortable using their home as collateral for the solar investment
Considerations:
Home equity financing puts your home at greater risk if circumstances change, defaulting on a HELOC can affect home ownership in ways defaulting on an unsecured solar loan typically doesn’t. Comfort with that trade-off is part of the decision.
Solar Lease
A leasing company owns the system on your roof; you pay them a monthly lease payment in exchange for the right to use the system and benefit from its generation. The leasing company captures the federal tax credit and other incentives, not you. Typical lease terms run 20 to 25 years with options at lease end.
Lease typical features:
- No or low upfront cost
- Fixed or escalating monthly payment over lease term
- Lease company owns the system, captures the tax credit
- Maintenance often included in the lease
- Typically a transfer or buyout option at lease end
Power Purchase Agreement (PPA)
Similar to a lease but structured around the energy generated. The PPA company owns the system and you agree to buy the power it generates at a specified rate (often slightly below your local utility rate) for the term of the agreement. Like leases, the PPA company captures the tax credit.
PPA typical features:
- No or low upfront cost
- Pay-per-kWh structure rather than fixed monthly payment
- Often escalates over the agreement term
- PPA company owns the system, captures incentives
- End-of-agreement options vary
The Lease and PPA Honest Assessment
Lease and PPA structures are heavily marketed by pure-play solar contractors because they make sales easier, “no money down,” “start saving immediately,” “we handle everything.” The marketing isn’t wrong about the upfront convenience. It typically isn’t honest about the long-term trade-offs.
Why lease/PPA economics are typically worse for homeowners.
Three structural reasons leases and PPAs typically produce worse economics for homeowners than ownership-based financing:
- The lease/PPA company captures the federal tax credit. The federal solar tax credit is a substantial portion of the system’s economics. When you don’t own the system, you don’t get the credit. The lease company does, and they keep most of that value rather than fully passing it to you.
- The lease/PPA company captures other incentives. State programs, utility rebates, SRECs in some markets, when the lease company owns the system, they capture those benefits.
- The lease/PPA company has to make a profit. After capturing all the incentives and other system value, the lease company still needs to make their margin on the deal. Their profit comes out of what would otherwise be the homeowner’s savings.
The home sale problem.
This is the trade-off lease and PPA marketing typically doesn’t emphasize. When you sell your home, the existing lease or PPA has to be addressed:
- Buyer assumption. The buyer takes over the lease/PPA. Sounds straightforward, but many buyers refuse to assume solar leases, particularly if the lease has unfavorable terms, escalating payments, or a long remaining duration. This can complicate or kill the home sale.
- Seller buyout. You buy out the lease at sale time. The buyout amount is typically the present value of remaining lease payments, substantial money out of the home sale proceeds.
- System removal. In some lease structures, the lease company removes the system at lease end. The home loses the solar without the homeowner ever fully realizing its value.
Industry data and anecdotal real estate experience suggests that homes with solar leases often face challenges in the resale market, sometimes selling for less than they would have without solar at all because of the lease complications.
When lease/PPA is genuinely the right call.
There are situations where lease or PPA makes sense:
- Homeowners with no available capital and no access to favorable loan terms
- Tax situations where the federal credit can’t be fully utilized (low income, alternative minimum tax issues)
- Strong personal preference for someone else handling system maintenance
- Specific financial situations where the marginal monthly savings are valuable even if the long-term economics are worse
Outside these specific situations, ownership-based financing typically produces better outcomes. We’ll discuss your specific situation honestly during the consultation.
Choosing the Right Financing Approach for Your Situation
Different homeowners benefit from different financing approaches. Some considerations to help you think through the decision.
Cash purchase makes sense when:
- You have liquid capital available for the upfront investment
- Long-term ownership horizon (15+ years) lets you realize cumulative savings
- Tax situation lets you fully use the federal tax credit
- Investment opportunity cost is reasonable (the capital isn’t earning more elsewhere with similar risk)
Solar loan makes sense when:
- You want ownership economics but don’t have full upfront capital
- You’re comfortable with long-term debt obligations matching a long-term asset
- Loan rates are reasonable relative to alternative borrowing options
- Tax situation lets you use the federal tax credit
Home equity financing makes sense when:
- You have available home equity and the rates beat solar-specific loans
- You’re comfortable using your home as collateral for the solar investment
- Tax situation supports interest deductibility (consult your tax advisor)
Lease or PPA makes sense when:
- You don’t have capital and don’t have access to favorable loan terms
- Tax situation makes the federal tax credit unusable for you
- You strongly prefer someone else handling maintenance
- Specific financial situation makes marginal monthly savings valuable
- You don’t expect to sell the home during the lease term
When to wait or not pursue solar.
If financing options don’t fit your situation, too little capital and no access to favorable loans, tax situation that doesn’t capture the credit, ownership horizon too short to justify even lease economics, sometimes the honest conclusion is that solar doesn’t fit right now. Waiting for a better timing window (different financial situation, different incentive landscape, combined timing with a roof replacement) often produces better outcomes than pushing through with marginal financing.
How We Help With Solar Financing
Specifically what we do, and don’t do, on financing.
What we do:
- Discuss the financing options that fit your situation honestly
- Coordinate with solar-specific lenders we have working relationships with
- Help you compare quotes across financing options on consistent terms
- Explain what the financing structure means for your long-term economics
- Provide documentation needed for tax credit and incentive applications
- Coordinate with your tax advisor on credit timing and application
What we don’t do:
- Provide personalized financial advice (not our scope)
- Underwrite loans or hold leases (we’re not a lender)
- Push lease/PPA structures we don’t think fit your situation
- Make tax recommendations (your tax advisor does that)
- Promise specific incentive amounts or tax outcomes
Our role is helping you understand the options, coordinate with appropriate financial partners, and make an informed decision based on your specific situation. The decision is yours; the work we do is making the decision easier to make well.
Frequently Asked Questions: Solar Financing
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What’s the federal solar tax credit and how much is it worth?
The federal Investment Tax Credit (Residential Clean Energy Credit) covers a percentage of qualifying residential solar costs for ownership-based purchases. The specific percentage varies by tax year, confirm current rates with your tax advisor. The credit is non-refundable but typically can be carried forward if you can’t fully use it in the year of installation.
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Should I get solar with a loan or a lease?
In most situations, ownership-based financing (cash or solar loan) produces better long-term economics than lease or PPA. The reasons: you capture the federal tax credit, you don’t pay the lease company’s profit margin, and you avoid potential complications when selling the home. Lease/PPA makes sense in specific situations where ownership financing isn’t accessible or the tax credit can’t be used. We discuss your specific situation during the consultation.
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Will solar increase or decrease my home’s value?
Owned solar (cash or loan paid off) generally adds to home value, particularly in markets that value efficiency. Solar with active loans is generally manageable but requires planning. Solar leases and PPAs sometimes complicate home sales, some buyers refuse to assume them, and homes with leases sometimes face longer time on market. The financing structure affects this substantially.
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How does the federal tax credit actually work?
After your solar system is placed in service, you file IRS Form 5695 with your tax return for that year. The credit reduces your federal tax liability for that year, with carryforward to future years if not fully used. You need to have federal tax liability to capture the credit, homeowners who don’t pay much federal tax may not be able to use it fully. Talk to your tax advisor on your specific situation.
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What’s the typical solar loan rate in Lone Tree, CO?
Rates vary substantially by lender, credit profile, loan term, and broader interest rate environment. Solar-specific lenders (GoodLeap, Sunlight Financial, Mosaic, Service Finance, others) typically offer competitive rates designed for solar applications. We can help you compare options. Home equity financing typically offers lower rates because the loan is secured by your home.
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If I lease solar and then want to sell, what happens?
Several options exist but each has trade-offs. Buyer assumption: the buyer takes over the lease (depends on buyer willingness, which varies). Seller buyout: you pay off the lease at sale time, often substantial money out of sale proceeds. System removal: in some structures, the lease company removes the system at lease end. Plan for these scenarios before signing a lease, particularly if you might sell during the lease term.
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Can I refinance my solar loan later?
In some cases yes, in some cases no. Solar loans are loan products like any other, refinancing depends on rate environment, your credit profile, and lender willingness. Some homeowners with high-rate solar loans refinance through lower-rate home equity products later. Discuss specific refinance options with your loan provider or financial advisor.
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