Omar Jackson — NJ Solar Incentives Expert
Omar Jackson — Founder, Solar by Omar Former solar sales rep who’s sat across the table from thousands of NJ homeowners. This guide covers what the incentive programs actually pay — not what companies use to close deals.

NJ Solar Incentives & Rebates 2026: The Homeowner’s Complete Guide to Maximum Savings

New Jersey is one of the most lucrative solar states in the country — but only if you know how to stack the incentives correctly. This guide breaks down every program available in 2026, what each one actually pays, and how to make sure you don’t leave money on the table.

$85.90Per MWh SuSI Rate
15 yrsTREC Payment Term
0%NJ Sales Tax on Solar
$0Property Tax Increase

1. The NJ SuSI Program & TREC Payments — The Big One

New Jersey replaced the old SREC model with the Successor Solar Incentive (SuSI) program, administered by the NJ Board of Public Utilities. It’s the most valuable state-level solar incentive in the northeast — and most homeowners don’t fully understand how it works.

Under SuSI, your solar system earns Transition Renewable Energy Certificates (TRECs) for every megawatt-hour of clean energy it produces. The state pays a fixed rate per TREC — currently $85.90/MWh — for a guaranteed 15-year term.

☀️ What the SuSI Program Actually Pays You

$85.90 per MWh — Guaranteed for 15 Years

For an average 8kW NJ residential system producing roughly 9,500 kWh per year, that works out to approximately $815 per year in TREC income — completely separate from your utility bill savings.

Over the full 15-year term, that’s $12,000+ in TREC payments on top of everything else. This is money the state pays directly into your account, not a discount or a credit — actual income.

Critical for lease customers: On a $0-down solar lease, the installer typically retains the TREC payments, not you. Always ask your installer directly: “Who keeps the SuSI TREC payments?” before signing anything. See our lease vs loan comparison here.

SuSI Program Capacity Blocks

The SuSI program operates in “capacity blocks” — each block has a fixed amount of solar capacity it will fund at the current TREC rate. When a block fills up, the next block opens at a potentially different rate. The current $85.90/MWh rate is not guaranteed forever. Homeowners who lock in now secure the current rate for their full 15-year term, regardless of what future blocks pay.

💡 Key fact: TREC payments are made quarterly by your TREC registration holder. Your installer registers your system with PJM-GATS on your behalf. If your installer never completed the registration, you may be missing payments you’re already owed — this is more common than you’d think. Learn about solar system audits here.

2. The Federal Solar Tax Credit in 2026 — What Actually Changed

This is the section most solar websites are getting wrong right now. Here’s the accurate picture for NJ homeowners in 2026.

⚠️ The 30% Residential Federal Tax Credit Is Gone for 2026

On July 4, 2025, President Trump signed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” into law. The residential Section 25D solar tax credit — which allowed homeowners to deduct 30% of their solar system cost from federal taxes — was terminated for any system installed on or after January 1, 2026. If you purchased solar in 2025, you can still claim it on your 2025 tax return. But in 2026, buying solar outright with cash or a loan comes with zero federal tax benefit.

The One Exception: Leases and PPAs Still Qualify

Here’s where it gets important for NJ homeowners. Solar leases and PPAs are the only remaining federal pathway to tax benefits in 2026. Because a lease is structured as a commercial transaction — the solar company owns the equipment, not you — it qualifies under the Section 48E commercial Investment Tax Credit, which remains in effect through 2027.

The installer claims the 48E credit and should reflect it in the form of lower monthly lease rates. This is one of the main reasons a $0-down solar lease from a reputable NJ company can still offer strong financial value in 2026 even without a direct federal credit to the homeowner.

🔑 What This Means for NJ Homeowners in 2026

If you buy solar outright or with a loan in 2026, you receive no federal tax credit. Your incentive stack relies entirely on the NJ SuSI TREC payments, net metering, and NJ state tax exemptions.

If you go solar on a $0-down lease through a qualified installer, the installer claims the 48E credit and passes the value to you through lower monthly rates. The lease model is now the only way NJ homeowners access any federal solar tax benefit at all.

See our full NJ lease vs loan comparison here — the math has changed significantly since the ITC ended for residential ownership.

3. NJ State Tax Exemptions — The “Hidden” Savings

These two state-level exemptions are often overlooked but add real value to the total incentive stack:

🏷️ 0% Sales Tax

NJ Sales Tax Exemption

All solar energy equipment is 100% exempt from New Jersey’s 6.625% sales tax. On a $25,000 system, that’s an automatic $1,656 saved at the point of purchase — no application required, no forms to file.

🏠 $0 Increase

Property Tax Exemption

Solar panels add significant market value to your home — studies show 3–4% on average in NJ. But state law prohibits your township from raising your property tax assessment because of solar. You get the equity gain without the tax hit.

📋 Automatic

No Application Required

Both the sales tax exemption and property tax exemption apply automatically — your installer handles the sales tax at point of sale, and property tax protection is mandated statewide. Nothing to file, nothing to track.

4. 1:1 Retail Net Metering — NJ’s Grid Credit System

Net metering is how your utility credits you for the surplus electricity your solar panels send back to the grid. New Jersey maintains full retail rate net metering — meaning you receive credits at the same per-kWh price you’d pay for electricity, not the lower “wholesale” rate many other states use.

In practical terms: if your panels overproduce in May when the weather is perfect, those surplus credits bank against your July bill when your air conditioning is running full blast. At the end of the year, any remaining credits are paid out at the wholesale rate.

💡 Net metering and your utility: ACE, PSE&G, and JCP&L all offer net metering under NJ state mandate — but each utility has slightly different billing cycles and credit structures. A local NJ solar installer who works in your specific utility territory daily will design your system to maximize your net metering benefit based on your actual usage patterns.

5. How to Stack All NJ Solar Incentives in 2026

The real power of NJ solar incentives is in combining them. Here’s what the full stack looks like for a typical 8kW system purchased in 2026:

Incentive Type Estimated Value (8kW system) When You Get It
Federal 48E Credit (via Lease/PPA only) Tax Credit (installer claims) Reflected in lower lease rate Ongoing — baked into monthly payment
Federal ITC — Cash/Loan Purchase Tax Credit ❌ Eliminated Jan 1, 2026 No longer available
NJ SuSI TREC Payments State Income $12,000+ over 15 years Quarterly for 15 years
Net Metering Credits Utility Bill Credit $400–$800/year Monthly on utility bill
NJ Sales Tax Exemption Tax Savings $1,650+ At time of purchase
Property Tax Exemption Tax Protection $500–$1,200/year avoided Ongoing, every year
Electric Bill Elimination Monthly Savings $150–$250/month Monthly, immediately

💰 Total 25-Year Value of NJ Solar Incentives

Combining all incentives, an average NJ homeowner installing an 8kW system in 2026 can expect to capture $45,000–$65,000 in total value over 25 years — through tax credits, TREC income, net metering, and bill elimination combined.

This is why NJ consistently ranks as one of the top 5 states for solar ROI in the country. The incentive stack is genuinely exceptional compared to most states.

6. Lease vs Buy: Who Gets Which Incentives

This is the section most solar companies hope you skip. The way NJ incentives are distributed depends entirely on your financing structure — and on a lease, you give up more than most people realize.

Incentive Cash / Loan Purchase $0-Down Lease / PPA
Federal Tax Credit ❌ Eliminated for 2026 purchases ✓ Installer claims 48E — passed through as lower rate
NJ SuSI TREC Payments ✓ You keep them Installer typically keeps them — always ask
Net Metering Credits ✓ You keep them ✓ You keep them
Sales Tax Exemption ✓ Applied at purchase ✓ Applied at purchase
Property Tax Exemption ✓ Automatic ✓ Automatic
Own the system ✓ Yes No — installer owns it

A lease isn’t automatically a bad deal — the $0 upfront and immediate bill savings are real benefits. But you should go in knowing exactly which incentives you’re giving up. Read the full NJ lease vs loan comparison here.

Frequently Asked Questions — NJ Solar Incentives 2026

A typical NJ homeowner with an 8kW system can capture $45,000–$65,000 in total value over 25 years through the federal ITC, SuSI TREC payments, net metering credits, sales tax savings, and bill elimination. The exact number depends on your system size, financing structure, utility rate, and how much electricity you use.
The NJ SuSI (Successor Solar Incentive) program pays homeowners $85.90 per megawatt-hour of solar energy their system produces, for 15 years. This income is paid quarterly and is completely separate from your utility bill savings. Your installer registers your system with PJM-GATS to begin receiving payments. On a lease deal, the installer typically retains these payments — so always ask before signing.
No — not for homeowners who purchase solar outright. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025, eliminated the residential Section 25D solar tax credit for systems installed on or after January 1, 2026. Homeowners who bought solar in 2025 can still claim it on their 2025 tax return. In 2026, the only remaining federal pathway is through a solar lease or PPA — the installer claims the commercial Section 48E credit and should reflect it as a lower monthly rate. This makes $0-down leases more financially compelling than ever in NJ compared to cash or loan purchases.
No. New Jersey state law prohibits municipalities from increasing your property tax assessment because of solar panels, even though panels add measurable market value to your home. The property tax exemption applies automatically — you don’t need to file anything.
Partially. On a lease or PPA, the installer claims the federal ITC and typically retains the SuSI TREC payments. You still benefit from net metering credits, the sales tax exemption, and the property tax exemption. The lease rate should reflect the installer’s ITC benefit — if it doesn’t, you’re not getting full value. Always compare lease vs loan total cost before signing.
The $85.90/MWh rate applies to systems registered in the current SuSI capacity block. Once that block fills, the next block may open at a different rate — higher or lower depending on market conditions and NJBPU decisions. Homeowners who lock in the current rate are guaranteed $85.90/MWh for their full 15-year term regardless of what future blocks pay.
Net metering credits your utility account at the full retail rate for every kilowatt-hour your panels send back to the grid. Credits bank monthly and offset future usage. At your annual “true-up,” any remaining credit balance is paid out at the lower wholesale rate. NJ’s 1:1 retail net metering is one of the most favorable in the country — and applies to ACE, PSE&G, and JCP&L customers under state mandate.

Don’t Leave NJ Solar Incentives on the Table

SuSI capacity blocks are filling up and the current $85.90/MWh rate isn’t guaranteed forever. Get a free savings estimate that shows exactly what your specific home qualifies for — before rates change.

⚡ Calculate My Total NJ Incentives — Free
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