Is solar worth it in Alaska in 2026?
Solar economics in Alaska come down to three local factors: how much you pay for grid electricity, how much a rooftop system produces here, and how your utility credits the energy you send back. Residential electricity in Alaska runs around 27.4¢/kWh, which is well above the national average of about 16.5¢/kWh. With the federal residential clean energy credit no longer available for systems placed in service after December 31, 2025, the math depends more than ever on these local numbers.
Verdict
Mixed
Estimated payback around 13.4 years for a typical home
Under representative assumptions, a system in Alaska takes roughly 13.4 years to pay back. That's on the longer side, so solar here is more sensitive to rising electricity rates, falling install prices, and any local incentives. Model your own numbers before committing.
Electricity price
27.4¢/kWh
12-mo avg 26.6¢/kWh
Solar production
1,050 kWh/kW
6,300 kWh/yr for 6 kW
What changed in 2026 for Alaska
Through 2025, a 30% federal tax credit covered a large share of a home solar system's cost. That credit is gone for new post-2025 installations. In Alaska, that means the payback period is driven by your electricity rate, local production, install price, and your utility's export credit — not a federal subsidy. It does not automatically mean solar stops making sense here, but it raises the bar.
Electricity prices in Alaska
Alaska homeowners pay about 27.4¢/kWh for residential electricity (12-month average around 26.6¢/kWh). Higher-than-average rates mean every kilowatt-hour your panels offset is worth more, improving the case for solar.
Solar production estimate in Alaska
A typical fixed rooftop system in Alaska produces roughly 1,050 kWh per kilowatt of panels each year — about 6,300 kWh annually for a common 6 kW system. That is a more modest resource, so systems here need favorable rates or incentives to pencil out.
High latitude with long summer days but limited winter sun. Modeled for a fixed roof mount near Anchorage at a 40° tilt.
As a Pacific state, Alaska shares the Pacific region's cloudier winters and, in the hydro-heavy Northwest, some of the lowest electricity prices in the country. Even so, solar economics are ultimately hyper-local: two neighbors with identical roofs can land on different answers depending on their utility, their specific rate plan, and how much power they use during daylight hours. Treat the state-level figures on this page as a starting point, then refine them with your own numbers.
What a solar system costs in Alaska
To put real numbers on it: a representative Alaska home uses roughly 10,800 kWh a year, and offsetting about 90% of that would take a system near 9.3 kW. At the state's default $3,000 per kilowatt (3.00 per watt), that works out to roughly $27,771 before any state or utility incentives. Because there is no federal residential credit in 2026, that full amount is what you would finance or pay out of pocket — which is exactly why the local electricity rate and export credit now carry so much weight. Sizing the system closer to your own daytime usage, rather than maxing out the roof, can lower that upfront figure and, in Alaska, sometimes improves the return on each dollar spent.
Net metering and export credit in Alaska
Alaska's export policy is currently summarized as "Utility-specific." Net-metering terms vary widely by utility and cooperative. Because export credit is below full retail, self-consumption and battery storage have a bigger effect on savings. Verify the exact export rate with your utility before deciding.
Adding a home battery changes the picture in Alaska. Without storage, a typical household consumes only about 45% of what its panels make and exports the rest; with a battery, self-use rises to roughly 70%. Because Alaska credits exported energy below full retail, keeping more of your own solar behind the meter with a battery can meaningfully lift your savings. The trade-off is the added hardware cost, which has to earn its keep over the system's life. Model both scenarios in the calculator by toggling the battery option to see how much it moves your specific numbers.
Is solar right for your Alaska home?
So who does solar actually suit in Alaska today? The strongest candidates own their home and roof, expect to stay at least 14 years, have a sunny and largely unshaded roof with room for panels, and pay for a meaningful amount of electricity each month. Alaska's above-average rates work in your favor here. If your bill is small, your roof is shaded or complicated, or you might move within a few years, the case is weaker now that the federal credit has ended. The only reliable way to know is to run your real bill and an actual installer quote through the calculator rather than trusting a national rule of thumb.
Buying vs leasing solar in Alaska
Whether you buy with cash, finance with a loan, or sign a lease or PPA changes who owns the system, who claims incentives, and who handles maintenance. In Alaska, run your specific quotes through the comparison tool before signing anything.
Best cities to start with in Alaska
Our Alaska model uses Anchorage as a representative location. Solar output is fairly uniform within a state, so the biggest differences come from your utility and roof — not your city. Use your own address's sun exposure and your utility's export rate for the most accurate result.
Assumptions
These are the default inputs behind the estimate. Change them in the calculator to match your home.
- Representative 900 kWh/month household consumption used for the state-level estimate.
- Installed cost of $3,000 per kW (3.00/watt) before any incentives.
- Federal residential tax credit set to 0% for post-2025 installations.
- Export credit modeled from the "Utility-specific" policy status; verify your utility's actual rate.
- Electricity prices escalate 3.5%/year and panels degrade 0.5%/year by default.
Sources & last updated
Current estimateLast updated July 7, 2026.
- 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 — Alaska incentivesVerify current state and utility incentives.
Data notes
- Solar production is a fallback estimate, not live PVWatts data.