Net metering in Connecticut (2026)
Connecticut uses partial / net billing — exported energy is credited at less than the full retail rate, so solar still pays off but maximizing self-consumption — and often adding a battery — improves the return.
What it means for your solar payback
How your utility values exported energy is one of the biggest levers on solar economics. In Connecticut, with partial / net billing, exported energy is credited at less than the full retail rate, so solar still pays off but maximizing self-consumption — and often adding a battery — improves the return. Combined with the local rate of 29.8¢/kWh, this shapes your payback — see the exact numbers on the Connecticut solar cost page.
State incentives
Beyond net metering, Connecticut: Residential Renewable Energy Solutions tariff. Note that the 30% federal tax credit ended for purchases on December 31, 2025 — though a lease or PPA can still pass a 30% credit through. More in our incentives guide.
Compare real solar quotes in Connecticut
See actual prices from vetted local installers — including lease and PPA options that still capture the 30% credit in 2026. Free, no obligation.