Solar Incentives in Nevada (2026)
Nevada's outstanding sunshine and battery storage incentives make solar attractive even with a reduced export rate. Here are Nevada's 2026 solar incentives, electricity rates, net metering rules and typical payback — plus tools to run your own numbers.
Nevada solar at a glance
- Avg electricity rate~14¢/kWh
- Typical payback9–12 years
- SunshineExcellent
- Net meteringNet billing (~75% of retail)
- Federal tax credit30% (2026)
- 7 kW net cost*~$14,700
*National-average $3.00/W system after the 30% federal credit, before Nevada state incentives.
Is solar worth it in Nevada?
Nevada's outstanding sunshine and battery storage incentives make solar attractive even with a reduced export rate. At an average residential rate of about ~14¢/kWh, every kilowatt-hour your panels produce is a kilowatt-hour you don't buy from the utility — and that avoided cost is what drives your payback. Combined with excellent sunshine, a standard 7 kW system in Nevada generally pays for itself in 9–12 years after the 30% federal credit, then delivers a decade or more of nearly free power.
To see your own number rather than this state average, plug your actual electric bill into the Solar Payback Calculator. If you're weighing how to pay, the Financing Calculator compares cash, loan and lease side by side.
Nevada solar incentives in 2026
Beyond the federal 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit, which applies everywhere, Nevada offers:
- NV Energy net billing credits exports at around 75% of retail
- Energy storage incentives from NV Energy for adding a battery
- Property tax abatement options for renewable energy
State programs change frequently. Always confirm current details and eligibility on the DSIRE database and with a licensed local installer before you sign anything.
Net metering in Nevada
Nevada uses Net billing (~75% of retail). Net metering is the second-biggest factor in your solar economics after your electricity rate, because it determines how much credit you earn for the excess power your panels send back to the grid. Generous, full-retail net metering shortens payback; reduced export rates lengthen it and increase the value of pairing your system with a home battery.