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How Much Does Solar Installation Cost in Savannah?

2026 local cost data for Savannah, Georgia. Georgia Power monthly net metering, hurricane-rated mounting, 30% federal, 5.0 peak sun.

Low
$10,500
Mid Range
$13,750
High
$17,000
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Estimated Savannah Cost · 2026
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Based on 2026 Savannah labor rates · RSMeans & Angi True Cost Guide · For informational purposes only
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About Savannah Solar Installation Costs in 2026

Savannah is a growing Georgia solar market thanks to long sunny summers and the federal tax credit. Savannah has a humid subtropical coastal climate with mild winters, hot humid summers, and significant Atlantic hurricane exposure. The Spanish moss / live oak coastal aesthetic and Historic District drive much of the renovation market. Savannah averages 5.0-5.2 peak sun hours per day - excellent solar production.

A typical 6 kW Savannah solar system costs $10,500-$17,000 after the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit. Georgia Power monthly net metering, hurricane-rated mounting, 30% federal, 5.0 peak sun. Georgia has no state solar tax credit but exempts solar from property tax assessment increases.

Georgia Power monthly net metering up to 25 kW; coastal exposure requires hurricane-rated solar mounting. Savannah is in a 130-140 mph wind zone under the Georgia Building Code; impact-rated windows and hurricane straps drive cost premium versus inland Georgia The Georgia PSC sets net metering rules; Georgia Power's current residential net metering pays retail rate for exports up to 25 kW monthly.

Savannah-Chatham metro hosts roughly 5,000 Georgia Secretary of State-licensed contractors. Savannah labor runs 2% below national average. Georgia requires solar installers to hold appropriate electrical credentials (Georgia has no statewide electrical license; Atlanta and other cities have local licensing). NABCEP certification is voluntary but valued.

Battery storage is increasingly attractive in Savannah given grid reliability concerns and time-of-use rate opportunities. The 30% federal credit covers batteries. A 13.5 kWh battery provides 8-12 hours of essential-loads backup. Savannah is in a 130-140 mph wind zone under the Georgia Building Code; impact-rated windows and hurricane straps drive cost premium versus inland Georgia

Choosing a Savannah contractor: Georgia trade licensing for residential work is administered by the State Construction Industry Licensing Board and the Secretary of State - local electrical license + GA Residential Contractor for any structural work + NABCEP voluntary. Verify state credentials at sos.ga.gov and local trade licenses at city portals. Savannah-Chatham metro hosts roughly 5,000 Georgia Secretary of State-licensed contractors; competitive bidding is realistic in most Georgia markets. Three written bids, references from recent Savannah clients, and a clear written scope of work prevent the most common disputes. Humid subtropical coastal (hurricane exposure) conditions and Georgia Building Code requirements both reward contractors with deep local experience over lowest-bid generalists.

Savannah Solar Cost Factors

FactorSavannahNational Avg
Avg Cost$10,500-$17,000See national avg
Labor Index0.98 (2% below national average)1.00 baseline
ClimateHumid subtropical coastal (hurricane exposure)Varies
Permit Range$50-$3,500 (by scope)$50-$5,000
GA Property Tax ExemptYes - no state credit thoughVaries 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 Savannah MSA. Results are for informational purposes only.

Last updated: April 2026 · Savannah labor index: 0.98 (RSMeans)

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Savannah Solar FAQs

A typical 6 kW Savannah solar system costs $10,500-$17,000 after the 30% federal tax credit in 2026. Georgia Power monthly net metering, hurricane-rated mounting, 30% federal, 5.0 peak sun. Larger 8-10 kW systems run $14,000-$24,000 net. Battery storage adds $9,000-$13,000 net for a 13.5 kWh Tesla Powerwall 3.

Federal Residential Clean Energy Credit (30% with no income cap, covers batteries) is the main incentive. Georgia does NOT have a state solar tax credit - one of the few states without one. Georgia DOES exempt solar from property tax assessment increases.

Savannah solar payback typically runs 8-11 years for cash purchases with current Georgia Power net metering and the federal credit. Long sunny summers (5.0-5.2 peak sun hours) deliver strong production. Lifetime savings over 25 years average $22,000-$45,000 for a typical 6 kW system.

Georgia Power offers monthly net metering for residential systems up to 25 kW under PSC rules. Net excess generation is credited against the next bill at retail rate; any annual excess is paid out at avoided-cost rate (typically much lower than retail). Compare your retail rate carefully against any solar buyback proposal.

Properly installed Savannah solar systems handle Georgia weather well. Savannah is in a 130-140 mph wind zone under the Georgia Building Code; impact-rated windows and hurricane straps drive cost premium versus inland Georgia Hurricane-rated mounting (140-160 mph wind) is standard for coastal Savannah; standard mounting (90-110 mph) suffices for inland Georgia. Confirm racking ratings against local wind requirements.

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