Submit your home once and get three competing quote estimates from vetted Oklahoma solar installers. You compare real bids side by side and pick the lowest honest price. Free, no door knocks, no spam.
Oklahoma sits in a part of the country that gets a lot of sun, and long, hot summers across Tulsa, Oklahoma City, and the rest of the state push air conditioners hard for months at a time. That is exactly the kind of usage solar is good at offsetting. The catch is that solar pricing is not standardized. Two installers can look at the same roof and hand you very different numbers, and if you only ever see one quote, you have no way to tell whether you are getting a fair deal or paying for someone's sales overhead.
That is why comparing matters more than any single pitch. When three vetted Oklahoma installers know they are bidding against each other for the same homeowner, the padding tends to fall out of the proposal and the real price shows up. You are not haggling, you are letting them compete.
It also protects you from the high-pressure door-to-door sales that have followed solar into a lot of Oklahoma neighborhoods. A salesperson on your porch wants a signature tonight. Three written quotes you can read at your kitchen table, on your own schedule, put you back in control of the decision.
Oklahoma is in the heart of tornado alley, and hailstorms are a normal part of spring. None of that rules out solar, but it should shape the questions you ask. Quality panels are impact-tested and mounting hardware can be engineered for high wind loads, so the difference between installers often comes down to the equipment they spec and how carefully they design the racking. Ask each of the three for their panel hail rating, their wind-load engineering, and how the array interacts with your homeowners insurance. Comparing those answers side by side tells you who is building for Oklahoma conditions and who is just selling a generic package.
The federal solar tax credit applies to homeowners across the country who buy their system, and that is the same in Oklahoma as anywhere else. Beyond that, the programs and buyback rates offered by Oklahoma utilities vary by provider and change over time, so there is no single statewide number anyone can promise you up front. Your bill structure also depends on which utility serves your area, and rural electric cooperatives can treat solar differently than the larger investor-owned utilities. The honest move is to let your three installers spell out exactly which credits and utility programs apply to your specific address and put them in the written estimate. Then you compare the real figures instead of a verbal pitch.
One last thing worth saying plainly: a quote estimate is not a contract. Getting three of them costs you nothing and commits you to nothing. The worst case is you learn what solar would actually cost on your roof in Oklahoma and decide it is not for you. The best case is you find a genuinely good deal you would never have seen from a single salesperson.
Submit your home address and current electric bill once. We route it to three vetted Oklahoma 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. Quality panels are tested for hail impact and a proper install is engineered for high wind loads. Ask each installer about hail ratings, wind-load engineering, and insurance coverage, then compare the answers in writing.
Billing for exported energy varies by Oklahoma utility and can change over time. Have each installer put the specific buyback or net-metering terms for your utility in the written quote, then compare.
One address. Three competing bids from vetted installers. You pick the lowest honest price.
Get my quotes free