Solar Panel Payback Period in Georgia

How long solar takes to pay for itself in Georgia — the full math, plus the factors that speed it up.

TL;DR

Solar panels pay for themselves in about 8 years in Georgia — in line with the U.S. average of ~8 years.

  • A typical Georgia system costs $16,800, or about $11,760 after the 30% federal tax credit.
  • It saves roughly $1,470 per year on electricity at Georgia's 0.13 $/kWh rate.
  • That works out to a payback period of about 8 years.
  • Over 25 years, solar returns roughly $32,000 in Georgia.
8 yrs
Payback Period
$11,760
Net Cost (after ITC)
$1,470
Annual Savings
$32,000
25-Year Savings

How long until solar pays for itself in Georgia?

In Georgia, solar panels pay for themselves in about 8 years. That is in line with the U.S. average payback of roughly 8 years. After the payback point, the electricity your panels produce is essentially free for the remaining 15+ years of their warranty.

The payback period is the net system cost divided by your annual electricity savings. A higher local electricity rate and more sun hours both shorten it.

The Georgia solar payback math

System cost (6 kW, before incentives)$16,800
30% federal tax credit (ITC)$5,040
Net cost after ITC$11,760
Estimated annual savings$1,470/year
Payback period8 years

What affects solar payback in Georgia?

  • Electricity rate: Georgia's rate of $0.13/kWh sets how much each solar kWh saves you — higher rates mean faster payback.
  • Sun hours: Georgia averages 4.9 peak sun hours per day, which determines how much energy your system produces.
  • Net metering: Georgia has limited net metering, which can lengthen payback — battery storage helps capture more value.
  • Incentives: The 30% federal tax credit reduces your net cost and speeds the return.
  • Installation cost: At $2.80/watt, lower install prices in Georgia pay back sooner.
Suburban home with solar panels on roof
Free • No obligation

Ready to go solar?

Compare instant quotes from top local installers

Frequently asked

Solar Payback FAQ — Georgia

Solar panels pay for themselves in about 8 years in Georgia. A typical system costs $16,800 ($11,760 after the 30% federal tax credit) and saves roughly $1,470 per year.

Yes — with a payback of about 8 years and solar panels lasting 25+ years, Georgia homeowners typically save around $32,000 over the system's life after recouping the upfront cost.

Claim the 30% federal tax credit, get multiple installer quotes to lower your cost per watt (currently about $2.80/watt in Georgia), size the system to your usage, and consider battery storage since net metering is limited.

Free quote

Get your free solar quote

Real prices from vetted local installers — in 2 minutes.

No obligation • Compare top installers

Solar powered neighborhood homes
30% federal tax credit ends soon

Start saving with solar today.

Join thousands of homeowners who've switched to clean energy and locked in decades of lower bills.

Get your free quote2 minutes • No obligation
30%
Federal tax credit
$20K+
25-year savings
$0
Down payment options