Submit your home once and get three competing quote estimates from vetted Arkansas solar installers. You compare real bids side by side and pick the lowest honest price. Free, no door knocks, no spam.
Arkansas summers are long, humid, and hot, and that means central air conditioners run hard from late spring into early fall. Add the electric heat that many homes lean on through a cold snap, and a Natural State household can end up paying for power on both ends of the year. Rooftop solar is well suited to that pattern, because the strongest production lines up with those long, sunny summer afternoons when cooling demand and your meter are both spinning fastest.
What trips homeowners up is not whether solar works here, it is the price. Two installers can look at the same Arkansas roof and quote very different numbers for nearly the same system. The only way to know whether an offer is fair is to put it next to other offers. When three vetted installers know they are competing for your business, the padding comes out of the proposal and the real price shows up.
Arkansas homes are served by a mix of providers, including investor-owned utilities, member-owned electric cooperatives, and municipal systems, and the rules for how solar feeds back to the grid are not identical across all of them. How credit is given for the power your panels send back, and what it is worth, can differ by provider and can change over time. Because of that, the honest move is to have each of your three installers state in writing which utility serves your address and exactly what net-metering or buyback assumptions they used to build their savings estimate. Then you can compare apples to apples instead of trusting a number nobody will commit to on paper.
The federal solar tax credit applies to homeowners across the country who buy their system, and it is the largest single incentive most Arkansas families will see. Beyond that, available programs and utility offers vary by provider and by year, so we will not quote a specific dollar figure here. Ask your three installers to spell out, in the written quote, exactly which credits and programs they are counting on for your address. If a savings claim is not in the estimate in writing, treat it as a guess, not a promise.
Arkansas gets real weather, from spring thunderstorms to the occasional ice event, so warranty terms, mounting quality, and how an installer handles roof penetrations matter as much as the headline price. A cheap quote that skimps on workmanship is not actually cheap. Comparing three bids lets you see who is cutting corners and who is building something that will still be sound after a decade of Arkansas summers. Read the production assumptions too, since tree shade and roof orientation common on older lots can swing the real output well below an optimistic estimate.
Submit your home address and current electric bill once. We route it to three vetted Arkansas installers who send competing quote estimates you can compare side by side. Free, no obligation.
Yes, free to homeowners. Installers pay a small fee only when they win your business, so our incentive is the lowest honest price.
No. Billing and buyback rules differ between investor-owned utilities, cooperatives, and municipal providers, and they can change. Ask each installer to put the net-metering assumptions for your specific utility in writing so you can compare them honestly.
Valid license to work in their state, years of history, no unresolved complaints, and verifiable references. Ones that do not meet the bar are not added.
One address. Three competing bids from vetted installers. You pick the lowest honest price.
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