It is the homeowner that is doing the miss-represinting if they fill out their tax forms as suggested. It is illegal.
You can only count what you paid for the system less any upfront incentives. Cash back would clearly count as up front incentive.
so you pay $20k and get $2k in cash back then the federal incentive is (20k-2k) X 0.3 .
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New Costco System, is it worth it to go solar?
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They are attempting to, BUT it does not make a difference. If you get any rebate or value back then it either reduces the cost of the system or counts as income (either way works the same on the federal tax forms)Leave a comment:
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Dollars-per-watt should really be stated on the up-front-cash price.
If there is a taxpayer-subsidized solar loan, or for the purposes of the 30% credit, it should be illegal, as they are misrepresenting what you are paying for the system. Take it to the extreme - what if they got you the loan for $20,000 more than the system costs, and then gave you back $20,000? You would be getting a solar loan or tax credit and not using it for solar.
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To clear it up a little more, they're not offering straight cash back. They offer rebate gift cards, if that makes any differenceLeave a comment:
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I looked at the rebate form, and I can't find any specific information regarding cash backs. Is it possible that they're using a loophole?
Here is what I looked up
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Thanks for clearing that up guys. That would definitely make more sense than what the installers are pushing aroundLeave a comment:
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What I included was the price to use for comparison. Cash backs actually decrease the price. You get a federal rebate on the pre Cashback price. Basically, you end up getting a 30% extra decrease in cost after the cash back. If you don't understand, let me know and I'll try to explain better.
Thanks for the useful advice solarixLeave a comment:
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What I included was the price to use for comparison. Cash backs actually decrease the price. You get a federal rebate on the pre Cashback price. Basically, you end up getting a 30% extra decrease in cost after the cash back. If you don't understand, let me know and I'll try to explain better.
Thanks for the useful advice solarixLeave a comment:
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What I included was the price to use for comparison. Cash backs actually decrease the price. You get a federal rebate on the pre Cashback price. Basically, you end up getting a 30% extra decrease in cost after the cash back. If you don't understand, let me know and I'll try to explain better.
Thanks for the useful advice solarixLeave a comment:
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What I included was the price to use for comparison. Cash backs actually decrease the price. You get a federal rebate on the pre Cashback price. Basically, you end up getting a 30% extra decrease in cost after the cash back. If you don't understand, let me know and I'll try to explain better.
Thanks for the useful advice solarixLeave a comment:
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FWIW, +1. Rebates, cash cards, etc. are all B.S. clutter that gets in the way of comparison, wastes time, and only increase the price in the end - or at the very best, does not decrease it.Leave a comment:
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What do you mean "After cash backs?"
Price quotes should be listed as what you pay the installer. That is the only meaningful way it can be compared to other quotes.Leave a comment:
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Not a bad price assuming you are in CA. Sunrun quality is not so great but ok. Prices probably won't come down much in the next year. If you are financing it, you really won't save much on your energy costs until the financing is paid off.... I like SunnyBoy inverters better - does Costco offer those? The new models just released have built in monitoring and have reduced pricing.Leave a comment:
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New Costco System, is it worth it to go solar?
Hi. I'm fairly new to this so I need a lot of help. I got a quote from Costco/Sunrun for 6.89 kW system for basically $25000 after cash backs, which comes out to $3.62/Watt, which includes Canadian panels and solaredge inverter. The equipment comes out to less than $8,000. Is it worth the extra money to pay the premium for Costco /Sunrun name backing, or should I find an installer to do it for cheaper? I would have to finance the amount and I'm not sure if the money saved over time would be worth the risks. Also, would it be better to wait until next yer so that prices go down further for better equipment? This is a long term investment that can have a 20 year impact so I want to make sure I make the right decision.
Thanks for any advice, This is a great resource
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