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How Much Does Solar Installation Cost in Cleveland?

2026 local cost data for Cleveland, Ohio. CEI net metering, Ohio SREC market, lowest CLE peak sun (3.9 hours/day), 30% federal.

Low
$11,500
Mid Range
$15,500
High
$19,500
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Enter your details for a Cleveland-specific 2026 estimate based on local labor rates.

Estimated Cleveland Cost · 2026
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Based on 2026 Cleveland labor rates · RSMeans & Angi True Cost Guide · For informational purposes only
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About Cleveland Solar Installation Costs in 2026

Cleveland is a growing Ohio solar market thanks to the state SREC market and Federal Investment Tax Credit. Cleveland has a humid continental climate dominated by lake-effect snow off Lake Erie; the city sits in the heart of the Ohio "snow belt" along the southern lake shore. Summers are warm humid; winters frequently dip below 0 °F. Ohio is home to significant solar manufacturing including First Solar in Perrysburg/Toledo..

A typical 6 kW Cleveland solar system costs $11,500-$19,500 after the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit. CEI net metering, Ohio SREC market, lowest CLE peak sun (3.9 hours/day), 30% federal. Ohio peak sun hours run 3.9-4.1/day - moderate but workable given competitive electricity rates and SREC value.

CEI offers net metering for residential systems under PUCO rules; Ohio SREC market provides additional value despite Cleveland's lower peak sun (3.9 hours/day). The Ohio SREC market is separate from net metering and provides ongoing per-kWh payments to system owners; current prices run $5-$15 per SREC depending on demand.

Greater Cleveland hosts roughly 10,000 OCILB-licensed contractors. Cleveland labor runs 8% below national average. Cleveland residential work has notable union presence (IBEW Local 38 electrical, UA Local 55 plumbing); union labor drives 15-25% premium for major projects Ohio requires solar installers to hold an OCILB Electrical Contractor license for the electrical work. NABCEP certification is voluntary but valued.

Battery storage is increasingly attractive in Cleveland for grid reliability and time-of-use rate optimization. The 30% federal credit covers batteries (Tesla Powerwall 3, LG RESU, Franklin WH). A 13.5 kWh battery provides 8-12 hours of essential-loads backup.

Choosing a Cleveland contractor: Ohio specialty trade licensing is administered by the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB) - OCILB Electrical Contractor license + NABCEP voluntary. Verify state credentials at com.ohio.gov/dico and check local city registrations separately. Greater Cleveland hosts roughly 10,000 OCILB-licensed contractors. Cleveland residential work has notable union presence (IBEW Local 38 electrical, UA Local 55 plumbing); union labor drives 15-25% premium for major projects Three written bids, references from recent Cleveland clients, and a clear written scope of work prevent the most common disputes. Humid continental, lake-effect snow belt conditions and the Ohio Residential Code (based on IRC 2015) both reward contractors with deep local experience.

Cleveland Solar Cost Factors

FactorClevelandNational Avg
Avg Cost$11,500-$19,500See national avg
Labor Index0.92 (8% below national average)1.00 baseline
ClimateHumid continental, lake-effect snow beltVaries
Permit Range$50-$3,500 (by scope)$50-$5,000
Ohio SREC Market$5-$15/SREC ongoing paymentVaries by state

Data Sources

Estimates based on RSMeans 2026 construction cost data, Angi True Cost Guide 2026, and US Bureau of Labor Statistics regional wage data for the Cleveland MSA. Results are for informational purposes only.

Last updated: April 2026 · Cleveland labor index: 0.92 (RSMeans)

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Cleveland Solar FAQs

A typical 6 kW Cleveland solar system costs $11,500-$19,500 after the 30% federal tax credit in 2026. CEI net metering, Ohio SREC market, lowest CLE peak sun (3.9 hours/day), 30% federal. Larger 8-10 kW systems run $14,500-$25,000 net. Battery storage adds $9,000-$13,000 net for a 13.5 kWh Tesla Powerwall 3.

Ohio Solar Renewable Energy Credits (SRECs) are tradeable certificates representing solar generation - one SREC per MWh produced. Ohio's SREC market pays $5-$15 per SREC currently, generating $200-$600/year for a typical 6 kW residential system. SRECs are separate from net metering and stack with federal tax credits.

Cleveland solar payback typically runs 7-10 years for cash purchases thanks to federal 30% credit, SREC revenue, and FirstEnergy / Cleveland Electric Illuminating (CEI) net metering. Lifetime savings over 25 years average $22,000-$45,000 for a typical 6 kW system, assuming current rate trajectories.

CEI offers net metering for residential systems under PUCO rules; Ohio SREC market provides additional value despite Cleveland's lower peak sun (3.9 hours/day) Ohio Public Utilities Commission (PUCO) requires net metering for residential systems up to 25 kW. Compare your retail rate against any solar buyback proposal carefully - net metering plus SREC revenue are the two main Ohio solar revenue streams.

Properly installed Cleveland solar systems handle Ohio winters well. Snow tends to slide off the smooth glass surface; snow-rated racking handles Cleveland roofs designed for 30-40 psf snow load; lake-effect events can dump 2-3 feet in 24 hours. Reduced winter production (typically 35-50% of summer peak) is included in annual yield calculations. Cold weather actually improves panel electrical efficiency slightly.

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