Solar & energy in Pennsylvania

SREC market adds $500-1500/year beyond NM savings.

Avg electricity rate
$0.17/kWh
USA average
Peak sun hours
4.0
Annual average
Net metering
excellent
Full retail NM + AEPS SRECs
Solar friendliness
★★★★☆
Out of 5

Key facts

  • RegionPennsylvania
  • CountryUSA
  • Average rate$0.17/kWh
  • Peak rate (TOU)$0.24/kWh
  • Off-peak rate (TOU)$0.1/kWh
  • Peak sun hours4.0 hrs/day
  • Net metering policyFull retail NM + AEPS SRECs
  • NM qualityExcellent
  • Solar friendliness rating★★★★/5

Available incentives

  • AEPS SREC market
  • Property tax exemption

Net metering quality

Quality of net metering policy (higher = better for solar economics):

Excellent — Full retail NM + AEPS SRECs

What this means

Excellent net metering means every kWh you export is credited at full retail rate, making solar very profitable.

Example: 900 kWh/month household in Pennsylvania

At 4.0 peak sun hours and a 400W panel, you'd need approximately 21 panels (8.4 kW system) to cover your usage. That produces ~10,547 kWh/year, saving about $1,793/year at the 0.17/kWh local rate.

Run the full calculator

Going solar in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania, in Pennsylvania, USA, has 4.0 average peak sun hours per day — good for solar. The local electricity rate is $0.17/kWh, which is above the USA average.

Net metering in Pennsylvania is rated excellent. Full retail NM + AEPS SRECs. This significantly affects solar payback: with excellent net metering, every excess kWh you produce is credited at full retail value; with poor net metering, exports may be worth only 10-30% of retail, making battery storage much more attractive.

Available incentives include: AEPS SREC market, Property tax exemption. These can substantially reduce the upfront cost of solar and battery installations. Note: the US federal solar tax credit expired December 31, 2025. State and local incentives still vary by region. South African taxpayers can claim accelerated depreciation under SARS section 12B.

Next steps

Use the Solar Panel Sizing Calculator with 4.0 peak sun hours to find out exactly how many panels you need. Then check the Solar Savings Calculator for a 25-year projection using the local $0.17/kWh rate. If net metering is poor in Pennsylvania, also run the Battery ROI Calculator — batteries may be essential rather than optional.