Are Solar Panels Worth It in Oklahoma? (2026)

Conditional — solar works in Oklahoma, but shop hard. — a 6.0 kW rooftop system in Oklahoma pays back in about 10.1 years and delivers $11,431 in net 20-year savings after install cost and the federal tax credit. Payback is in the 10-14 year window. Getting a below-average installer price is important.

Payback10.1 yrs
Annual savings$1,160
Net install (after ITC)$11,760
20-yr net$11,431

Assumes 6 kW system at $2.80/watt (state avg), 5.1 peak sun hours/day in Oklahoma, and 13.31¢/kWh electricity rate (April 2026).

The short answer

Solar in Oklahoma pays back within panel warranty life but requires disciplined shopping. Prioritize installers quoting below the state average.

The 4 things that actually determine "worth it"

  1. Electricity rate. Oklahoma: 13.31¢/kWh. National avg: 18.83¢. You’re 29% below average — cheap grid electricity makes payback slower.
  2. Sunshine. Oklahoma: 5.1 peak sun hours/day. National avg: 4.5. Above average sun — production per kW is high.
  3. Install cost in Oklahoma. $2.80/watt (state avg). Cheaper than national $3.00/W — competitive installer market here.
  4. Incentive stack. Federal ITC 30% applies universally. No state income-tax credit in Oklahoma. Net metering: Ended for new systems 2022; now net billing Full incentive breakdown →

Where Oklahoma ranks nationally

Across all 51 states, Oklahoma ranks #35 of 51 by 20-year net solar savings (1 = best). The top states are dominated by combinations of high electricity rates and high sunshine (CA, HI, MA, NY, CT). The bottom are cheap-power / cloudy-sky states (WA, OR, ID, ND).

See the full national ranking.

Break-even analysis

Your solar system in Oklahoma needs to save $11,760 in electricity to pay for itself. At $1,160/year savings, that’s 10.1 years. Panels are warrantied for 25 years and typically last 30+ — meaning 19.9+ years of free electricity after breakeven.

Common objections addressed

“What if I move before payback?”

Homes with paid-off solar typically sell for ~$15,000-$25,000 more than comparable homes without. If you owe money on the panels (loan), the sale is more complex. Cash or fully-paid-off systems recover most or all of the remaining "unused" value at sale.

“Won’t rates drop?”

U.S. residential electricity rates have risen ~4%/year over the past decade. Even if rates flatline, the payback above holds. If rates rise, your solar looks better in retrospect.

“What about hail / storms?”

Solar panels are rated for 1-inch hail at 50 mph. Damage claims are covered by homeowner’s insurance in almost all cases (verify with your carrier). Oklahoma is in a hail-prone region — check panel warranty terms explicitly.

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