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My first upgrade for the upgrade was having solar installed.![]()
I looked into that and I had 2 reps from SunRun at the house and when I told them the numbers don't add up they both had no answer.
Bottom line, system was $36000 for 22 panels and tax incentive was off equipment cost, which is.....you're ready? $6900.
I asked the guy if the installation costs is $29000 and he didnt know what to say.
I watched somebody across the street getting installed in one day flat. $29000 for installation, I told him he is out of his mind!!!
Paying $36K to save few hundred a month in more productive months is dumb!!!
Better yet, I have friends who refuse to admit that they got conned. They swear it was a great idea to put holes in the roof yada yada yada. They tell me "oh my electric bill used to be $300 and now it's like $30. I ask how much is your lease on solar panels - $279 / month - help me stop laughing.
England here, I have a small house and the installed cost of my little system was like $4500 so a no brainer, 3.2 kw keeps my grid usage bills low.
Yeah, I watched some YT re systems installed in Europe and saw this guy in PL who had a company cover his whole roof of a large garage for like $7000. That makes sense and is a no brainer. Here, stateside, it's just straight-up theft!

I think I have you all beat...
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yes it is, here in NJ they charge you "delivery fee" which fluctuates depending on time of day, i.e. peak vs quiet. Which sometimes is more expensive than electricity itself... :mad:Fair enough, your electricity must be stupidly expensive in the US
I always assumed the US was one of the cheaper places for electricity.yes it is, here in NJ they charge you "delivery fee" which fluctuates depending on time of day, i.e. peak vs quiet. Which sometimes is more expensive than electricity itself... :mad:
It is, overall. There are some pockets on both coasts that the costs are extremely high. And I also know of one outlier city in Texas where rates are just nuts.I always assumed the US was one of the cheaper places for electricity.

It is, overall. There are some pockets on both coasts that the costs are extremely high. And I also know of one outlier city in Texas where rates are just nuts.
If you pay over $0.12/kwh you are in a higher cost area.
This concept is newer to residential areas with the advent of smart meters. Industrials and commercials have been paying this way for decades. And it does make sense, to a certain point. Utilities need to maintain enough generation, transformer, and transmission capacity to support peak load, not average load. It isn't uncommon for this charge to make up almost 50% of a industrial power bill. It's also one reason I don't want a smart meter!!!yes it is, here in NJ they charge you "delivery fee" which fluctuates depending on time of day, i.e. peak vs quiet. Which sometimes is more expensive than electricity itself... :mad:
Texas is normally very cheap. Georgetown Texas went 100% renewable somewhere around 2016 not understanding the costs. It has added around $100/month to the average citizens power bill ever since.I average $0.122 over the past 12 months. Texas also has some really cheap electricity in places also.
I dreamAnd here I thought what I paid was “normal” at 5.44 cents per kWh. I guess I’m on the way low side.
currently i pay .41 per kwh. the issue is california, not the USA
we have something called tiered pricing. my wife and i have 4 kids, so were always in tier 3![]()
3300kWh hereI think I have you all beat...
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