Solar Payback in Massachusetts: SMART Program + Stacked Credits

Massachusetts has the second-fastest solar payback in the US after New Jersey, despite middling sun (4.3 peak hours daily). The reason: extremely high electricity rates ($0.30/kWh average — second highest in the continental US), combined with the SMART (Solar Massachusetts Renewable Target) production-based incentive and a 15% state income tax credit. Typical payback: 6-8 years.

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

Massachusetts solar incentive stack

1. Federal 30% ITC

Applies to gross system cost.

2. Massachusetts 15% State Tax Credit

15% of solar system cost, capped at $1,000. On a $20,000 system, you get the full $1,000.

3. SMART program (production-based incentive)

The Solar Massachusetts Renewable Target pays a per-kWh adder for 10 years based on system size, utility territory, and where you are in the program. As of 2026, residential rates run $0.08-$0.20/kWh — substantial, though the rates step down over time as program capacity fills.

4. Full retail net metering

MA requires utilities to net meter at full retail rate for systems under 25 kW residential. National Grid, Eversource, Unitil all participate.

5. Sales tax exemption

MA solar PV equipment is exempt from state sales tax.

6. Property tax exemption

20-year property tax exemption on added home value from solar.

What 2026 MA solar economics look like

A typical 7 kW MA residential solar system:

  • Gross system cost: $22,400 ($3.20/W)
  • Federal 30% ITC: -$6,720
  • MA 15% state credit (capped at $1,000): -$1,000
  • Net cost: $14,680
  • Annual production: ~9,000 kWh
  • Annual utility savings at $0.30/kWh: ~$2,700
  • SMART payments at $0.15/kWh average: ~$1,350
  • Combined annual return: ~$4,050
  • Simple payback: ~3.6 years (before degradation) — extremely fast

Real-world payback typically lands at 6-8 years after accounting for SMART rate degradation, panel degradation, and varying utility rates.

How to use the Massachusetts 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. Massachusetts 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