Residential solar adoption in Canada is accelerating in 2025, driven by falling panel costs, rising electricity rates, and an improving incentive landscape. A typical Canadian home solar installation now costs $15,000–$35,000 before incentives, with payback periods of 8–15 years depending on your province's electricity rates and net metering program.
This guide covers every financial dimension of going solar in Canada: federal incentives, provincial net metering, financing options, and how to calculate whether solar makes sense for your home.
Federal Solar Incentives (2025)
Clean Technology Investment Tax Credit
The federal government offers a 30% Clean Technology Investment Tax Credit for eligible clean energy equipment — including residential solar photovoltaic systems. This is a significant incentive: on a $20,000 solar installation, that's $6,000 back on your federal tax return.
The credit applies to equipment costs (panels, inverter, mounting hardware). Installation labour may not qualify. Consult a tax professional to maximize the credit on your specific installation.
Canada Greener Homes Loan
Solar panels are eligible for the Canada Greener Homes Loan — 0% interest financing up to $40,000. Combined with the 30% tax credit, the Greener Homes Loan makes solar financially attractive for many Canadian homeowners. Requirements: pre- and post-retrofit EnerGuide audit, ENERGY STAR eligible equipment.
Provincial Net Metering Programs (2025)
Net metering allows you to sell excess solar electricity back to the grid, dramatically improving the economics of solar. Programs vary significantly by province:
| Province | Net Metering | Credit Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Yes | Retail rate (~$0.10–0.12/kWh) | Net metering credits roll over monthly |
| British Columbia | Yes | Retail rate | BC Hydro and FortisBC both offer net metering |
| Alberta | Yes | Market rate (variable) | Micro-generation regulation |
| Quebec | Yes | Retail rate | Hydro-Québec net metering available |
| Saskatchewan | Yes | Retail rate | SaskPower net metering program |
| Nova Scotia | Yes | Retail rate | Net metering + solar rebates available |
| Manitoba | Yes | Retail rate | Manitoba Hydro net metering |
Solar Installation Costs in Canada (2025)
| System Size | Typical Home | Installed Cost | After 30% Tax Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kW | Small/average home | $15,000–$20,000 | $10,500–$14,000 |
| 8 kW | Average home | $22,000–$28,000 | $15,400–$19,600 |
| 10 kW | Large home / EV charging | $28,000–$35,000 | $19,600–$24,500 |
| + Battery storage | Any size | Add $100–$20,000 | May also qualify for credit |
Solar Payback Calculator
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Financing Options for Solar in Canada
- Canada Greener Homes Loan: 0% interest up to $40,000 — best option for most homeowners
- HELOC: Draw against home equity at prime rate; flexible and low-cost
- Solar-specific loans: Some installers offer specialized solar loans at 3–7%
- Personal renovation loan: 7–14%; higher cost but no equity required
- Cash purchase: Best economics if you have savings; no interest cost
Is Solar Worth It in Canada?
Solar makes the most financial sense when: your electricity rates are high (Ontario, BC, NS), you have good roof orientation (south-facing, unshaded), you have significant electricity consumption (EV charging, electric heating), and you can benefit from the 30% federal tax credit. Alberta's market electricity rates can make solar especially attractive when rates spike.
Solar is harder to justify when: you're in Quebec (very low hydro rates at ~$0.07/kWh), your roof needs replacement in 5–10 years, or you plan to move within 5 years.
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Do solar panels increase home value in Canada?
Evidence suggests yes — homes with solar sell for a premium in most Canadian markets, particularly in provinces with high electricity rates. However, the resale premium typically doesn't fully offset installation costs, so the financial case for solar is primarily built on energy savings rather than resale uplift.
Can I install solar panels myself in Canada?
DIY solar installation is technically possible but complicated by electrical code requirements, utility interconnection rules, and the need for inspections. Most provinces require a licensed electrician to connect the system to the grid. The Greener Homes Loan also requires registered installers. Professional installation is recommended for most homeowners.
What happens to solar panels in Canadian winters?
Solar panels continue generating electricity in winter, even through snow. Cold temperatures actually improve panel efficiency. The main winter challenge is snow coverage — panels on a steep pitch shed snow faster. Annual production in most Canadian cities is weighted toward spring, summer, and fall months.