Solar Incentives in Kansas (2026)

Kansas residents installing rooftop solar can combine the 30% federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) with no additional state-level income-tax credit. Net-metering rules and property/sales tax exemptions are the other big levers.

Gross install cost (6 kW)$17,100
After federal ITC (30%)$11,970

Kansas avg installed cost: $2.85/watt (state avg, 2026). Federal ITC value: $5,130. Additional state incentives (below) may reduce net cost further.

1. Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC)

Every U.S. state gets the 30% federal ITC. It applies to the gross install cost, including panels, inverters, labor, and permit fees. For a 6.0 kW system in Kansas at $2.85/watt, that’s a credit of $5,130 against your federal income tax. The credit is refundable-carryforward — unused portions roll to future tax years. Valid through 2032.

2. State income-tax credit

None

3. Net metering rules in Kansas

Yes, 1:1 for systems <25 kW

Net metering determines how much you’re credited for excess solar energy exported to the grid. "1:1" or "full retail" is the best — you get the same rate you pay. "Avoided cost" or "net billing" pays substantially less (often 25-50% of retail).

4. Property & sales tax exemptions

  • Property tax: ✅ Yes — the added home value from solar is excluded from property tax reassessment in Kansas.
  • Sales tax: ❌ No — sales tax applies at the standard state rate.

5. Utility rebates & notes

Property tax exemption is 10 years then reassessment. Federal ITC + NEM only significant incentives.

Utility rebates change frequently. Verify current terms with your specific utility (not just "the state") before signing an installer contract.

Bottom line for Kansas

A typical 6.0 kW rooftop system in Kansas costs about $17,100 gross → $11,970 after the federal ITC. With Kansas’s electricity rate of 15.78¢/kWh, this system saves about $1,321/year — paying back in 9.1 years on the federal credit alone. Add the state-level items above and the net cost drops further.

See the full Kansas solar savings calculator →

Before you sign an installer contract

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FAQ

Can I combine federal ITC and Kansas’s state incentives?

Kansas does not have a state solar income-tax credit, so there is nothing to combine at the state level. The federal ITC stands alone.

When do I get the federal ITC money?

The ITC reduces your federal income-tax liability for the year the system is placed in service (i.e., commissioned and producing power). If your tax owed is less than the credit, unused portions roll forward. You do not receive a check.

Do rebates and credits get taxed?

Rebates from utilities are generally not taxable (they reduce your cost basis). Federal tax credits are not income. Some state credits may be treated differently — check your state Department of Revenue.