Booking new installs across Fresno County
LICENSED & INSURED · CA SERVING THE VALLEY SINCE 2018
Fresno, California · Headquarters

Solar panels in Fresno,
built for Valley heat.

Our home base sits in central Fresno, but we install across PG&E territory from Madera down to Selma. The Valley sees over 270 sunny days a year, and Fresno's summer load is brutal on the wallet. That's exactly why this market is built for solar, and why we built the company here.

Valley Solar Pros Fresno 159 N Effie St
Fresno, CA 93701
(559) 785-2772
Mon–Fri 9am – 5pm
Free assessment (559) 785-2772
FRESNO · FREE
Get your Fresno solar estimate
60 seconds. Real numbers for your address.
★★★★★ BBB ACCREDITED · CA LICENSED
PG&E utility territory · Fresno County
270+ daysOf sun per year
PG&ENet billing tariff
$0 downPropel financing
25-yrPanel warranty
Why this market

The Valley is
built for solar.

High summer cooling loads, year-round sun, and some of the most expensive PG&E rates in the state. The combination is exactly what makes residential solar pencil out so well in this part of California.

Sun hours, summer heat, and why it all matters

The central San Joaquin Valley gets more usable solar irradiance than most of the country. Roughly 5.5 peak sun hours per day on an annual average, climbing past 8 hours daily during summer. That's the engineering reason a 7 kW system in this region produces meaningfully more energy than the same 7 kW system installed in Seattle or Cleveland.

But sun hours alone aren't the story. The story is what they line up against: a typical Fresno home with central air pulls 30 to 45 kWh per day during July and August. That cooling load is what creates a $400 to $700 summer PG&E bill. Solar pencils out so well here because production peaks right when consumption peaks. The system is generating power exactly when you need it most.

For agricultural operations across Fresno County, the math is even more extreme. Year-round irrigation pumping, cold storage, and processing facilities create base loads that solar can offset cleanly, and at commercial scale, the tax structure (depreciation plus credits) makes the payback period unusually short.

PG&E rates, time-of-use, and what NEM 3.0 changed

If you're served by PG&E in this region, you're almost certainly on a time-of-use rate plan. Power is cheap during the day (when solar produces) and expensive during the 4pm–9pm peak window (when most families come home and crank the AC). Under the previous NEM 2.0 program, excess midday solar exported to the grid earned roughly retail rate credit. Under NEM 3.0, that export credit dropped by about 75%.

What that means for the system design: panels alone still work, but they don't work as well as they did three years ago. Adding battery storage to shift midday production into the evening peak window now creates significantly better economics for most homes in this area. We model both scenarios for every quote so you can see the difference in your specific situation.

What about the federal tax credit?

The 30% residential federal solar credit (the ITC) ended in late 2025. But the commercial clean energy tax credit and accelerated depreciation are still active, and that's the engine behind Propel Financing. Concert Finance owns the system commercially for the first five years, captures those incentives, and passes most of that benefit to you as a 30 to 40% upfront discount on your system cost.

Sizing systems for 105° summers

System sizing in the Valley isn't about matching annual usage in a vacuum. It's about understanding your peak summer load, your roof's solar window, and how NEM 3.0 changes the economics of overproduction. We pull 12 months of your PG&E usage, run satellite shade analysis, and design a system that matches your actual consumption pattern, not a generic average.

For most homes around here, that lands somewhere between 6 kW and 12 kW. Bigger homes with pools or workshops can push higher. We use Qcells 410W panels (Tier 1, 25-year warranty) paired with Enphase IQ8HC microinverters because the heat tolerance and per-panel monitoring matter when summer rooftop temperatures push past 150°F. Cheaper string inverter setups underperform here, we've seen it on systems we've replaced.

Local financing: Propel, cash, and traditional loans

Three real ways to pay for solar in this region: pay cash, take a traditional solar loan, or use Propel Financing through Concert Finance. We're an authorized partner for Propel Financing, which is the most competitive structure available right now for homeowners who don't want to pay cash.

The short version: Propel captures commercial-side incentives that residential buyers can't access on their own, so the upfront price drops 30 to 40%. There are no dealer fees baked into the financing, no escalators on the monthly payment, no prepayment penalty, and you can re-amortize the loan up to three times if you decide to apply your tax credit later. Full comparison on our California solar financing page and our PPA versus ownership breakdown.

Permitting and install timeline

The on-roof installation is typically 1 to 2 days. The full timeline from signed contract to switched-on system is usually 6 to 10 weeks, mostly driven by city permits and PG&E interconnection approval. The Fresno building department processes solar permits reasonably quickly compared to other CA jurisdictions, but PG&E's interconnection queue can sometimes push things out 4 to 6 weeks on its own.

We handle every permit application, every inspection scheduling, and all PG&E paperwork. You sign documents, we do the rest. Once your system passes final inspection and PG&E activates net billing, you'll see usage shift on your next bill cycle, and you'll have monitoring access via the Enphase app to see daily production from your phone.

Common Fresno solar questions

How much does solar cost in Fresno?

Most homes here land between $14,000 and $26,000 net cost after incentives, depending on system size and whether battery storage is included. A typical 8 kW system pencils out around $20,000 with Propel Financing. We run the exact numbers for your address during the free assessment.

Does my Fresno County home qualify for Propel Financing?

If you own your home, have a credit score around 660 or higher, your monthly bill is at least $100, and you're served by PG&E or SCE, you most likely qualify. We confirm eligibility during the assessment before designing your system.

How long is the install?

The physical installation usually takes 1 to 2 days. From signed proposal to powered-on system, expect 6 to 10 weeks total, mostly waiting on permits and PG&E interconnection paperwork.

What panels and inverters do you install?

Standard configuration is Qcells 410W panels with Enphase IQ8HC microinverters. For battery storage we use Enphase IQ Batteries. All Tier 1, 25-year manufacturer warranties on panels.

Do I really need a battery in this market?

It depends on your evening usage. Under NEM 3.0, exporting solar to the grid at midday is worth significantly less than it used to be. If your evenings include AC running until 10pm, EV charging, or pool pumps, a battery shifts your midday production into the high-rate evening window and improves payback meaningfully. We model both scenarios.

Can you do commercial and agricultural installs?

Yes. Larger ag and commercial systems unlock the full commercial tax credit stack plus accelerated depreciation, which usually means even faster payback than residential. See our commercial solar page for details.

Also serving

Neighboring
Valley markets.

We install across all major Central Valley markets in PG&E and SCE territory. Same crew quality, same warranty, same transparent pricing structure no matter the city.

Local resources

Helpful local links

For permits, utility account info, and regional energy programs:

Ready to see your numbers?

Free assessment, real production forecast, exact monthly payment. No high-pressure sales, just the math for your address.