Submit your home once and get three competing quote estimates from vetted Delaware solar installers. You compare real bids side by side and pick the lowest honest price. Free, no door knocks, no spam.
Delaware is small, but its electric bills are not. Homes here lean on heating through cold coastal winters and air conditioning through humid summers along the Delaware Bay and Atlantic shore, and that swing keeps usage high in both seasons. The state sits in a mid-Atlantic climate with four distinct seasons and a fair amount of cloud cover, yet panels run on daylight rather than heat, so a properly sized system still produces meaningfully across the year. The harder problem for most homeowners is not whether solar works here, it is knowing whether the price they were quoted is actually fair.
Solar pricing varies widely between installers for the exact same Delaware roof, and the first proposal a homeowner sees is rarely the best one available. Without competing bids, you have no reference point. When three vetted installers know they are bidding against each other for your business, the price comes down and the gimmicks come out of the proposal.
Delaware also has a real door-to-door solar sales culture, especially in the suburbs around Wilmington, Dover, and the beach communities in Sussex County. A friendly rep with a tablet and a one-night-only discount is not the same thing as a fair, written estimate you can hold next to two others. Comparing three quotes side by side turns a high-pressure pitch into a calm decision you make on your own timeline.
The federal solar tax credit applies to homeowners across the country who buy their system, and Delaware has its own state-level grant and utility programs that change over time and differ between providers such as Delmarva Power and the municipal and cooperative utilities. Net metering rules and any renewable energy credit programs also vary by utility. Because all of this shifts year to year, the honest move is to let your three installers spell out exactly which incentives and metering terms apply to your address, in writing, then compare. Do not take a verbal promise of savings, get it in the written estimate.
Delaware's coastal and low-lying areas see nor'easters and tropical systems that can take the grid down, and a standard grid-tied solar system shuts off during an outage for safety. Adding a battery changes that, letting your panels keep powering essentials when the lights go out. A battery raises the upfront price, so ask each of your three installers to quote your system both with and without storage. Seeing those numbers side by side is the only way to judge whether the backup is worth it for your home.
Submit your home address and current electric bill once. We route it to three vetted Delaware 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.
Yes. Panels run on daylight, not heat, and produce year-round even on overcast days. Delaware gets enough usable sun for a well-sized system to offset a large share of a typical home's bill. Your installers size production to your actual roof and usage.
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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