Solar Simple Payback Calculator

Turn solar numbers into confident construction decisions. Enter costs, incentives, and savings for instant clarity. Download reports, compare scenarios, and justify your proposal today.

Project Inputs
Enter site costs and energy assumptions. Use the advanced options to model real-world changes over time.
Used for display and exports.
Engineering, materials, labor, and commissioning.
Subtracts from the eligible tax basis.
Applied to (Installed Cost − Rebates).
Helpful for quick reasonableness checks.
Use modeled PV yield or utility bill offsets.
Portion offsetting retail purchases.
Used for self‑consumed energy value.
Used for exported energy value.
Cleaning, inspections, monitoring, minor repairs.
Applied to both retail and export rates.
Models increased service costs over time.
Reduces annual production each year.
Set to 0 to disable.
Year 0 disables replacement.
Used for cumulative cashflow modeling.
Reset
Example Data
Use these values to test the calculator quickly.
Input Example
Installed Cost$18,000
Rebates$2,000
Tax Credit30%
Annual Production9,000 kWh
Self‑Consumption85%
Retail Rate$0.18/kWh
Export Rate$0.10/kWh
Annual O&M$200/yr
Escalation3%/yr
Degradation0.5%/yr
Inverter$1,500 in year 12
Analysis Period25 years
What you’ll get
The calculator reports net upfront cost, first-year net savings, simple payback, and a cumulative payback estimate using escalation, degradation, O&M escalation, and replacement events.
Formula Used
  • Eligible basis = Installed Cost − Upfront Rebates
  • Tax credit = Eligible basis × (Tax Credit %)
  • Net upfront cost = Installed Cost − Rebates − Tax credit
  • First-year gross savings = Annual kWh × [Self%×Retail Rate + Export%×Export Rate]
  • First-year net savings = First-year gross savings − Annual O&M
  • Simple payback (years) = Net upfront cost ÷ First-year net savings
  • Cumulative payback finds the first year cumulative net cashflow ≥ net upfront cost, using escalation, degradation, O&M escalation, and replacement costs.
Note: This tool estimates payback only. It does not replace a full financial model, permitting review, or utility interconnection study.
How to Use This Calculator
  1. Enter installed cost and any upfront rebates or grants.
  2. Set the tax credit percent you expect to claim.
  3. Provide annual production from PV modeling or past energy data.
  4. Choose self-consumption percent and export credit rate.
  5. Add annual O&M and optional escalation and degradation rates.
  6. Include inverter replacement cost and year when applicable.
  7. Press Calculate Payback to view results above the form.
  8. Use Download CSV or Download PDF for reporting.
Example Outputs Table
The table below illustrates typical outputs for the example inputs shown above.
Output Typical Value Why it matters
Net upfront cost $11,200 Cash required after rebates and tax credit.
First-year net savings $1,140 / year Early indicator for quick screening decisions.
Simple payback 9.8 years Shows time to recover cost using first-year savings.
Cumulative payback 8–10 years Accounts for escalation, degradation, and replacements.
ROI over analysis period 80–180% Helps compare against other capital upgrades.
Values vary by tariff structure, export policy, shading, and load profile. Adjust inputs to reflect your project conditions.

Capital Cost Inputs and Incentives

Use installed cost to capture engineering, procurement, and construction scope, including structural upgrades, switchgear, and commissioning. Many commercial projects land between 1.0 and 2.5 currency units per watt, depending on rooftop access and interconnection complexity. Include permitting and design fees too. Rebates reduce the eligible basis, while tax credits apply as a percentage of that basis. The calculator converts these items into a net upfront cost for screening.

Energy Yield and Site Assumptions

Annual production drives savings and should come from PV modeling, measured irradiance, or comparable operational assets. For a quick check, multiply system size by 1,200 to 1,700 kWh per kW, then refine for shading, tilt, and downtime. Capture curtailment and soiling losses explicitly. Because production declines, the degradation input reduces each year’s kWh. This improves realism when comparing bids, layouts, or module options.

Rate Structure and Export Credits

Self-consumption determines how much generation offsets retail purchases versus being exported. Construction sites with steady daytime loads often exceed 70% self-consumption, while lightly loaded facilities may export more. Retail rate and export credit should reflect the tariff, demand rules, and netting period. Confirm export terms in interconnection agreements. The calculator escalates both rates by the electricity escalation setting, allowing you to test conservative and aggressive price paths.

Operations, Degradation, and Replacement Planning

O&M covers cleaning, inspections, monitoring subscriptions, and minor corrective work. Typical annual allowances range from 10 to 25 currency units per kW, but higher values may be justified for dusty climates or tight access. O&M escalation models inflation in service contracts. Inverter replacement is a common midlife event; entering a replacement year and cost prevents overstating long-term cashflow and payback.

Interpreting Payback for Construction Decisions

Simple payback divides net upfront cost by first-year net savings, useful for fast comparisons. The cumulative payback estimate is more decision-ready because it includes changing rates, aging production, O&M growth, and replacements. Use results to prioritize projects that repay within your target window, support capital committee narratives, and document assumptions for permitting and utility review. Export CSV or PDF to attach to bids and approvals.

FAQs

What does simple payback mean here?

Simple payback equals net upfront cost divided by first‑year net savings. It is a fast screening metric and does not fully reflect changing tariffs, inflation, or replacement events.

How should I estimate annual production?

Use a PV model, measured irradiance, or a comparable operating system. As a rough check, multiply system size by 1,200–1,700 kWh per kW per year, then adjust for shading and downtime.

What if my export credit is very low?

Enter the actual export credit rate, even if it is zero. Lower export value increases payback time, especially when self‑consumption is low. Improving on‑site load matching can materially change results.

Which escalation and degradation values are reasonable?

Escalation should reflect your planning case for electricity prices, often 0–5% per year. Degradation commonly ranges around 0.3–0.8% per year for modules. Use conservative values for budget approval.

Why include inverter replacement cost and year?

Inverters often require replacement during the analysis period. Adding this cost prevents overstating cumulative cashflow and keeps payback estimates aligned with lifecycle budgeting and warranty expectations.

Can I compare multiple scenarios for a project?

Yes. Run the calculator with a baseline, then adjust one factor at a time, such as export rate or self‑consumption. Download CSV or PDF for each scenario to document assumptions and compare outcomes.

Related Calculators

Solar ROI CalculatorSolar Payback CalculatorSolar Payback Period CalculatorSolar Break Even CalculatorSolar Savings CalculatorSolar Bill Offset CalculatorSolar Net Savings CalculatorSolar Lifetime Value CalculatorSolar NPV CalculatorSolar IRR Calculator

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.