Solar Payback in Georgia: No State Credit Means Federal Carries It

Georgia has solid solar conditions (5.0 daily peak sun hours) but no state-level solar tax credit. Solar economics rely on the federal 30% ITC + Georgia Power’s net metering program. Typical Georgia payback: 10-12 years. Georgia Power’s tariff replaced traditional net metering with a ‘net buyback’ that pays roughly 50% retail rate for exports.

Use the calculator below — your state is already selected. Adjust your monthly electric bill and system cost for a Georgia-specific payback estimate.

Solar Payback Calculator (by State)

Estimate your system size, total cost after incentives, and break-even year for residential solar.

Average across the year. Used to size the system.
Auto-filled from state average. Override with your real rate from your utility bill.
2024 national avg ~$2.85/W gross, before incentives. Quotes range $2.50-3.50.
US average ~2.8% over last 25 years. EIA forecasts ~3% through 2050.

Estimated payback period

Select your state to get a precise estimate.

System size

25-year savings

Net cost after credits

Year-1 savings

Cost breakdown

Net out-of-pocket$0
Get free solar quotes from local installers

Estimates only. Real solar quotes depend on your roof, shading, local installer pricing, utility net-metering policy, and your specific tax situation for the federal credit. Not financial advice.

Cumulative savings vs. system cost

When the green line crosses the dashed cost line, you’ve broken even.

GA solar policy

1. Federal 30% ITC

Standard.

2. No state income tax credit

GA has no state-level solar income tax credit. Federal credit carries the math.

3. Georgia Power net metering

Georgia Power's residential solar customers fall under tariff PR-FF (Renewable & Nonrenewable Resources). Excess solar is credited at roughly 50% of retail rate — significantly less favorable than full retail NEM.

4. No sales tax exemption

Georgia solar PV is subject to standard state + local sales tax (~7% combined).

5. Limited utility rebates

Most GA utilities offer no direct rebate. EMCs (rural electric cooperatives) have varying programs.

2026 GA solar economics

  • Gross system cost (7 kW): $19,600 ($2.80/W)
  • Federal 30% ITC: -$5,880
  • Net cost: $13,720
  • Annual production: ~12,800 kWh
  • Annual savings at $0.14/kWh × 50% NEM: ~$896
  • Simple payback: ~15.3 years

Georgia solar pays back, but slower than neighboring states like SC (25% state credit). Self-consumption maximization (battery, EV charging, smart loads) materially improves economics.

How to use the Georgia solar calculator above

  1. The state is pre-selected. Adjust if needed.
  2. Enter your typical monthly electric bill (averaged across the year).
  3. The calculator auto-fills your state's average electricity rate and peak sun hours — override the electricity rate with your real $/kWh from your bill if you know it.
  4. Adjust the system cost per watt based on quotes from local installers. Georgia averages are typically within the $2.50–$3.50/W range for cash installs.
  5. The output shows estimated system size, net cost after federal and state credits, year-1 savings, and 25-year cumulative savings.

Related

Reviewed by the CalcCottage editorial team. Updated May 14, 2026. Estimates only — not financial advice. Verify current incentives at DSIRE.org before installing.

Solar payback in other states