
On January 1, 2026, the federal residential solar tax credit ended for homeowners who buy with cash or a loan. If you purchase a system this year, you no longer claim 30 percent back on your tax return. Any company still telling you that you will is working from last year's rules, and that should make you question what else they are getting wrong.
Here is the part that still makes solar work. Ask Solar Mike applies an instant 30 percent rebate at signing. The quoted price already reflects it, so you get the value on day one with no filing and no waiting. The deadline is the catch: after July 4, 2026, the instant rebate ends and projects move to full price.
Two forces are pushing Utah power bills up, and both make solar more valuable, not less.
First, rate increases. Utah electricity rates have historically risen around 4 percent a year, but the utility is now projecting closer to 10 percent. The drivers are real: surging electricity demand from AI data centers, and the expensive job of modernizing an aging grid. Every increase shortens the time it takes solar to pay for itself.
Second, the way you are billed. Most of Utah is served by Rocky Mountain Power, which uses net billing, crediting the power you export at a reduced rate. That sounds like a negative, but it simply means the smartest setup is to use more of your own power on site with a Tesla Powerwall 3, rather than selling it back cheaply.
For most Utah homeowners with a monthly bill over $150, yes. The higher your bill and the more your rates climb, the stronger the case. The fastest way to see your own answer is the savings calculator on this page. Enter your real bill and it estimates your system size, your instant rebate, your net cost, and your payback.
If your roof also needs replacing soon, the Tesla Solar Roof is worth a look as a premium option that handles both the roof and the solar in one project, though panels remain the better pure savings play.
Do I get any tax credit for solar in Utah in 2026? Not the federal residential credit if you buy with cash or a loan. It ended January 1, 2026. Mike's instant 30 percent rebate replaces that value, applied up front.
Are Utah electricity rates really going up? Yes. Historically around 4 percent a year, with the utility now projecting closer to 10 percent, driven by AI data-center demand and grid upgrades.
Do I need a battery for solar to be worth it? Not always, but on Rocky Mountain Power's net billing, a Tesla Powerwall 3 adds real value by letting you use your own power instead of exporting it cheaply.
What happens after July 4, 2026? The instant 30 percent rebate ends and solar moves to full price, which lengthens payback. The weeks before the deadline are the window.
Solar in Utah still pays for most homes, just for clearer reasons now: rising rates, an instant rebate, and using your own power. Run the calculator above, then call or text Mike at 385-312-0904 or get a free quote at asksolarmike.com/google.
This article is general information, not tax or financial advice. Confirm details for your home and utility with Mike.

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