Cut your power bill with rooftop solar
Tier-1 panels, professional design, and full permit handling. Most homeowners see their bill drop in the first month after activation.
What you get
Lower bills from day one
California's net metering credits offset most of your daytime usage. Customers typically cut their utility bill by 70–90%.
Tier-1 equipment, 25-year warranty
We only install panels and inverters from manufacturers with strong financial backing — so your warranty actually means something in 2040.
Permits, HOA, and PTO handled
We pull permits, manage HOA approvals, and shepherd your PG&E or SCE Permission to Operate. You don't chase paperwork.
Battery-ready design
Every system is designed so you can add storage later without rewiring. Add a battery this year or in five years — it just works.
Our process
Free site survey
We measure your roof, check your panel, and pull 12 months of utility data.
Custom design + quote
You see exactly what gets installed, how much it offsets, and what you pay.
Permits & install
We handle every permit. Most installs take one day on the roof.
Activation
We coordinate inspection and PTO so you're producing power as fast as possible.
Solar Panel Installation FAQs
Most residential installs take 1–2 days on the roof. The full timeline from contract to producing power is typically 4–8 weeks, with the bulk of that being permits and utility approval (PTO from PG&E or SCE).
A typical 6–8 kW residential system in Kern County runs $14,000–$22,000 before the 30% federal tax credit. Net cost after the credit is usually $10,000–$15,400. Pricing depends on roof complexity, panel choice, and whether you add battery storage.
Yes — but the math has shifted. Export credits are lower than NEM 2.0, so the strongest returns now come from pairing solar with a battery so you use your own production at night instead of selling it back at low rates. Payback is typically 6–9 years for a battery-paired system.
Yes. Permits, HOA submittals, structural letters, and the utility’s Permission to Operate (PTO) are all included. You don’t fill out a single form.
It depends on your monthly usage. A $200/month PG&E bill typically needs a 6–8 kW system (15–20 panels). We pull 12 months of utility data during the site survey and size the system to your actual consumption — not generic averages.
We use a quick-disconnect mounting system. If your roof needs replacement, panels can be removed and reinstalled — we coordinate directly with most local roofers and offer a discounted reinstall rate for our customers.
25-year manufacturer equipment warranty plus our workmanship warranty on the install itself (covers leaks, mounting, and labor). Inverter warranties vary by model — typically 12–25 years. We walk through every warranty in writing before you sign.
Yes. South-facing roofs produce the most, but east- and west-facing arrays still produce 80–90% as much over the year. We model your specific roof orientation and shading during the design phase so the numbers reflect your home — not a textbook example.
Very little. In Kern County, a once-a-year rinse to clear Central Valley dust is usually enough. Panels have no moving parts, and we provide a monitoring app so you’ll see immediately if production drops.
Yes. Studies (including from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) show owned solar systems add measurable resale value, and California’s property-tax exclusion means that added value isn’t reassessed as a property-tax increase.
Solar Panel Installation — guides & resources
Hand-picked articles for homeowners researching solar panel installation in California.
California Solar Tax Credits & Incentives in 2026: What Homeowners Need to Know
Is Solar Battery Storage Worth It in 2026? Costs, Benefits & ROI Explained
How to Choose the Right Solar Installer in Bakersfield: 7 Questions to Ask
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