How much do solar panels cost in Oregon in 2026?
Installing solar panels in Oregon usually runs $19,440 to $30,780 up front — the exact figure depends on how big a system your roof and usage call for. With Oregon's roughly average electricity prices, install price and system sizing are the biggest levers on your return. Note that the 30% federal tax credit is no longer available for systems placed in service after December 31, 2025, so these are the amounts most homeowners will actually finance or pay.
Typical system price
$24,300
8.1 kW · before incentives
Installed price per watt
$2.40–$3.80
Mid-point $3.00/W
Price range (typical size)
$19,440–$30,780
Low to high installer pricing
What a solar system costs in Oregon
The spread comes mostly from system size and price per watt. In Oregon, a typical home needs roughly a 8.1 kW system to offset most of its usage, which lands around $24,300 at a mid-range installed price. Smaller systems cost less outright; larger systems cost more but can cover more of a high electricity bill.
Solar panel cost by system size in Oregon
| System size | Low | Typical | High | Est. annual kWh |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kW | $12,000 | $15,000 | $19,000 | 6,000 kWh |
| 6 kW | $14,400 | $18,000 | $22,800 | 7,200 kWh |
| 8 kW | $19,200 | $24,000 | $30,400 | 9,600 kWh |
| 10 kW | $24,000 | $30,000 | $38,000 | 12,000 kWh |
| 12 kW | $28,800 | $36,000 | $45,600 | 14,400 kWh |
Estimated pre-incentive install prices for Oregon at $2.40–$3.80 per watt. Annual production assumes local yield; your roof and shading will differ.
Solar price per watt in Oregon
Expect roughly $2.40 to $3.80 per watt installed in Oregon. That figure includes the panels and inverter but also the "soft costs" — permits, inspection, sales, and labor — which is why shopping multiple installers pays off.
What drives solar cost in Oregon
What moves the price in Oregon: system size (bigger arrays cost more but offset more), panel and inverter tier, roof complexity (steep, shaded, or multi-plane roofs cost more to install), whether you add a battery, and your installer's pricing. Because the local solar resource is on the weaker side, you may need a slightly larger system to reach the same offset, which nudges cost up.
Right-sizing matters more without the federal credit. Oversizing the roof to "go big" now means financing the full cost yourself. In Oregon, sizing the system to your own daytime usage often gives a better return per dollar than maxing out the array.
Cost after incentives in Oregon
Because there is no federal residential tax credit in 2026, the numbers above are close to your net cost. Any remaining savings come from Oregon state programs, utility rebates, or local incentives, which vary and change often. Check the current programs for Oregon before you sign, and treat any installer's incentive claims as something to verify independently.
Will it pay off? Cost vs savings in Oregon
Cost is only half the question — what matters is the payback. Whether that cost pays off in Oregon depends on your rate, production, and export credit — run your own bill through the calculator to see.
Getting solar quotes in Oregon
Line up at least three Oregon quotes and normalize them to price per watt. Watch for oversized systems, vague production promises, and lease/PPA escalators that raise your payment every year.
Sources & last updated
Current estimateLast updated July 7, 2026. Cost ranges are modeled estimates, not installer quotes.
- IRS — Residential Clean Energy CreditFederal residential credit not available for property placed in service after Dec 31, 2025.
- EIA — Residential electricity price (retail-sales, RES)Fetched July 7, 2026
- Fallback estimate (representative, not live)
- DSIRE — Oregon incentivesVerify current state and utility incentives.