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Solar Panel Incentives in New Jersey (2026)

A typical home solar system in New Jersey costs about $26,840 before incentives. After the 30% federal tax credit (around $8,052), your net cost drops to roughly $18,788.

MR
By Marcus Reyes, Construction & Remodeling Editor
·Published June 3, 2026·Fact-checked

Solar resource: Moderate | Net metering: Full retail net metering | Region: northeast

New Jersey has moderate sun but a long-standing pro-solar framework, typically combining full-retail net metering with property and sales tax exemptions and a successor incentive program that may add value, so confirm current terms on DSIRE. The estimates on this page combine the national cost of a typical residential system with New Jersey's local price level, so they reflect roughly what homeowners here pay in 2026 — but a real quote is the only way to know your number.

The single biggest incentive is the same everywhere: the federal Clean Energy Credit, worth 30% of your installed cost through 2032. On a $26,840 system in New Jersey, that is about $8,052 back at tax time. State and utility programs stack on top — and those are exactly the ones that change often, so we link you to the official, always-current database below rather than quoting figures that may be outdated.

New Jersey System Cost & the Federal Credit

Before Incentives

$26,840

$19,520$36,600 range

30% Federal Credit

$8,052

Clean Energy Credit

Net Cost

$18,788

After federal credit

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Solar Incentives Available in New Jersey

IncentiveStatus in New JerseyTypically Available
Federal Solar Tax Credit (ITC)30% of system cost — about $8,052 hereYes
Net MeteringFull retail net meteringYes
State Tax Credit / DeductionNo broad statewide creditNo / Varies
Property Tax ExemptionAdded home value typically exemptYes
Sales Tax ExemptionEquipment typically exemptYes

Incentive availability is summarized at a high level and changes frequently. Confirm the current programs for your address and utility on DSIRE, the official database of state incentives, before you sign a contract.

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How the 30% Federal Tax Credit Works

The federal Residential Clean Energy Credit gives you back 30% of your total installed solar cost as a credit against your federal income taxes — not a deduction, but a dollar-for-dollar reduction in what you owe. It covers panels, inverters, wiring, mounting hardware, labor, permitting, and even battery storage. For a $26,840 system in New Jersey, that is roughly $8,052.

The credit is non-refundable, but any unused portion can usually be carried forward to future tax years. You claim it with IRS Form 5695 for the year your system is placed in service. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm the details with a tax professional. Our solar tax credit guide walks through it step by step.

Net Metering in New Jersey

Net metering decides what your utility pays for the excess power your panels send back to the grid, and it has a huge effect on payback. New Jersey's posture in recent years is best summarized as full retail net metering. These policies are among the most frequently revised in all of solar, and they often differ from one utility to the next, so treat this as a starting point and verify the exact buyback terms with your electric company.

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Compare Solar in Neighboring States

StateTypical SystemAfter 30% CreditSolar Resource
New Jersey$26,840$18,788Moderate
New York$28,600$20,020Moderate
Pennsylvania$23,100$16,170Moderate
Delaware$23,100$16,170Moderate

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do solar panels cost in New Jersey in 2026?

A typical residential solar system in New Jersey runs about $19,520 to $36,600 before incentives, with most homeowners landing near $26,840. After the 30% federal tax credit, the net cost on a typical system drops to roughly $18,788. These are 2026 estimates — your actual quote depends on system size, equipment, and your roof.

What solar incentives are available in New Jersey?

Every New Jersey homeowner can claim the 30% federal Clean Energy Credit (the ITC). On top of that, New Jersey does not have a broad statewide solar income-tax credit, and added home value from solar is typically exempt from property tax. Net metering here is best described as full retail net metering. Always confirm current programs on DSIRE and with your utility.

Does New Jersey have net metering?

New Jersey's net metering posture in recent years is full retail net metering. Net metering rules change frequently and often vary by utility, so check the latest terms with your specific electric provider before you size a system.

Is the federal solar tax credit still 30% in 2026?

Yes. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, the residential Clean Energy Credit is 30% of the installed cost for systems placed in service through 2032. On a typical New Jersey system around $26,840, that is roughly $8,052 back as a credit on your federal taxes.

Are solar panels worth it in New Jersey?

New Jersey has a moderate solar resource, which is one of the biggest factors in payback. Combined with the 30% federal credit and your local electricity rates and net metering terms, that determines how quickly a system pays for itself. Run your own numbers with current quotes rather than relying on a national average.

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