Solar Breakeven Analysis Calculator

Plan your solar investment with confident cashflow projections. Model tariffs, net metering, and loan terms. Get payback, IRR, NPV, and savings in minutes online.

Inputs

Enter your estimates, then submit to calculate payback and cashflows.
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Used for context; calculations use your kWh production.
Total project cost before incentives.
Rebate applied immediately to reduce upfront cost.
Applied to net cost after upfront incentive. Modeled as year 1 inflow.
Use an installer estimate or monitoring history.
Reduces production slightly each year.
Used to cap onsite usage value and exports.
Optional: EVs or HVAC changes can raise demand.
Share of solar used onsite; the remainder is exported.
Your current energy charge. Excludes fixed charges.
Projected annual increase in electricity rates.
Shown in baseline bill; not reduced by solar here.
Value received for exported energy, as a percent of retail rate.
Cleaning, monitoring, insurance riders, minor repairs.
Optional: inflation for ongoing costs.
Commonly 10–15 years for string inverters.
Only applied in the replacement year.
Loan modeling uses a fixed-payment amortized loan.
Only used when payment method is loan.
Only used when payment method is loan.
Debt service is applied annually through the term.
Used for NPV and levelized cost estimate.
Typical residential horizon is 20–30 years.
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Example scenario data

This example helps you verify your inputs and expectations.
System size (kW) Installed cost Annual production Utility rate Self-consumption Net metering Horizon
5.0 $8,000 7,500 kWh $0.18 / kWh 60% 80% of retail 25 years
Try entering the same values above and submitting to see a full cashflow table.

How to use this calculator

  1. Start with your installed cost, incentives, and expected annual production.
  2. Enter your current utility rate and the export credit percentage.
  3. Set self-consumption to estimate onsite use versus exported energy.
  4. Add ongoing costs and any expected inverter replacement year.
  5. Choose cash or loan, then provide down payment, APR, and term.
  6. Submit to view the results above the form, then export if needed.

Formulas used

  • Net installed cost: EffectiveCost = InstalledCost − UpfrontIncentive.
  • Tax credit (modeled in year 1): TaxCredit = EffectiveCost × (TaxCredit% ÷ 100).
  • Utility rate growth: Ratey = Rate1 × (1 + Escalation%)y−1.
  • Production degradation: Prody = Prod1 × (1 − Degradation%)y−1.
  • Onsite and export split: Onsite = min(Prod × Self%, Usage). Export = max(0, Prod − Onsite).
  • Energy value: Value = Onsite × Rate + Export × (Rate × NetMetering%).
  • Loan payment (monthly): PMT = P × r(1+r)n ÷ ((1+r)n − 1).
  • Net cashflow: CFy = Value + TaxCredit − O&M − Replacement − DebtService.
  • Breakeven year: first year where cumulative ΣCF ≥ 0.
  • NPV: Σ CFt ÷ (1 + DiscountRate)t.

Breakeven timeline and yearly cashflow drivers

This calculator estimates when cumulative savings exceed your upfront outlay. Year 0 records the net installed cost, then each later year adds energy value, incentives, and cost deductions. Breakeven occurs in the first year where the running total becomes positive. For many households, breakeven commonly falls between 6 and 14 years, but it can shift quickly if system cost, export credit, or consumption patterns change.

Utility rate escalation and savings compounding

Electricity prices rarely stay flat over multi‑decade horizons. The model grows the utility rate by your escalation assumption and applies that higher rate to onsite and exported energy. A 1% increase in escalation can materially raise lifetime savings because later‑year kWh are priced higher. If your current rate is $0.18/kWh, moving escalation from 2% to 4% lifts year‑20 rates by roughly 49% versus 22%, amplifying the cashflow curve over time.

Self‑consumption and export credit effects

Onsite use is valued at the full retail rate, while exports receive a percentage of retail based on your net metering credit. If you self‑consume 70% of production instead of 50%, more kWh earn the top rate, improving breakeven and NPV. When export credit is 80% of retail, each exported kWh is worth 20% less than onsite. Batteries, load shifting, or daytime appliance use can raise self‑consumption.

Financing, discounting, and investment metrics

Cash purchases use the full net cost at year 0. Loan purchases use the down payment at year 0 and add annual debt service during the term. NPV discounts future cashflows by your discount rate to reflect time value of money. IRR estimates the rate that makes NPV equal to zero, which helps compare solar to other investments with different risk and liquidity.

O&M and replacement planning for realistic projections

Annual O&M captures cleaning, monitoring, or insurance riders and can be escalated for inflation. Replacement costs model major events such as inverter change‑out, often in years 10–15 for certain designs. Including a $1,200 replacement in year 12 reduces the cumulative curve temporarily, but it may still preserve a strong lifetime benefit. Use your system’s warranty terms to pick a replacement year that matches your equipment profile.

FAQs

1) What is the breakeven year shown in the results?
It is the first year where cumulative net cashflow becomes positive. It includes incentives, O&M, replacements, and loan payments based on your inputs.

2) How is exported energy valued?
Exported kWh are valued at your utility rate multiplied by the net metering credit percentage. Onsite kWh are valued at the full utility rate.

3) Why can IRR show as N/A?
IRR requires cashflows to change sign over time. If the model never produces a sign change within the horizon, the IRR calculation cannot be bracketed reliably.

4) How should I estimate annual production?
Use an installer proposal, a system design report, or historical monitoring. If unsure, start with 1,200–1,700 kWh per kW per year and refine later.

5) Do fixed monthly charges reduce after solar?
Many utilities keep fixed charges unchanged. This tool includes fixed charges in the baseline bill for context, but savings are calculated from energy charges and export credits.

6) What discount rate should I use?
A common range is 4%–8% for household decisions. Higher rates reduce NPV and emphasize earlier savings, while lower rates give more weight to long‑term benefits.

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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.