Colorado Solar Incentives & Tax Credits (2026)
Updated 2026-07-07 · MySunROI Research
Colorado homeowners can stack the 30% federal Investment Tax Credit with state and utility programs. A typical 6 kW system in Colorado costs $17,320 before incentives and about $12,120 after the federal credit.
Free quote comparison
Compare solar quotes in Colorado
Free — compare pre-screened local installers. No obligation.
MySunROI may earn a fee if you request quotes through partner links. See our disclaimer.
Federal solar tax credit in 2026
The residential ITC remains 30% through 2032 for systems you own (purchase or loan). On a $17,320 install in Colorado, that is roughly $5,196 in tax credit value.
Leases and PPAs do not qualify — the installer keeps incentives. See our full ITC guide for claiming steps.
Colorado state & local incentives
Colorado offers sales tax exemption on solar equipment. Utility rebates vary by co-op vs. Xcel territory. Federal ITC stacks.
- Denver vs. Colorado Springs quote comparison
- Snow load and tilt affect winter production
- Xcel time-of-use plans may affect savings
Property tax & sales tax exemptions
Many states exempt solar equipment from property tax increases. Colorado runs slightly above US average install cost with strong sun compensating for moderate electricity rates.
Verify current programs at dsireusa.org and your utility before signing — Colorado rules change.
Colorado quick stats
- 6 kW after ITC
- $12,120
- Payback
- 8.5 years
- Electric rate
- 14¢/kWh
- Annual savings
- $1,430
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Colorado have a state solar tax credit?
Colorado offers sales tax exemption on solar equipment. Utility rebates vary by co-op vs. Xcel territory. Federal ITC stacks.…
Can I combine federal and state incentives?
Yes — federal ITC stacks with most state rebates and utility incentives when you own the system.
Do batteries qualify?
Paired storage typically qualifies for the 30% ITC when charged by solar. See our battery cost guide.
Related pages
How We Calculate Solar Costs
MySunROI estimates combine NREL residential PV installed-price benchmarks, EIA state electricity rates, and regional labor modifiers — updated 2026-07-07.
Estimates only — not tax or financial advice. Estimates based on NREL PV cost benchmarks, EIA electricity rates, and 2026 installer pricing surveys.