There's strings attached to utility incentives, most utilities will issue a 1099 with any incentive payment on a purchased system, even if the incentive is assigned to the installer. Many solar installers are either ignorant of this or conveniently ignore it when generating their proposals.
Some utility companies are now sending the 1099 early in the process(meaning the incentive will be taxed as regular income) requiring for it to be filled out completely before solar system approval is given, many others are still doing it on the back-end, so your system is installed and then 2-3 months after that you get a letter from the utility, requiring you to fill out the 1099 and only then do you realize that your ROI just got knocked back 2-3 years.
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