30% Federal Tax Credit Available·Avg Payback: 7.2 Years·50 States + DC Covered·$38,400 Avg 25-Year Savings·Federal ITC Locked Through 2032·Real DSIRE Incentive Data·30% Federal Tax Credit Available·Avg Payback: 7.2 Years·50 States + DC Covered·$38,400 Avg 25-Year Savings·Federal ITC Locked Through 2032·Real DSIRE Incentive Data·30% Federal Tax Credit Available·Avg Payback: 7.2 Years·50 States + DC Covered·$38,400 Avg 25-Year Savings·Federal ITC Locked Through 2032·Real DSIRE Incentive Data·30% Federal Tax Credit Available·Avg Payback: 7.2 Years·50 States + DC Covered·$38,400 Avg 25-Year Savings·Federal ITC Locked Through 2032·Real DSIRE Incentive Data·
::CO_REBATE_PROGRAMS // 2026

ColoradoSolar Rebates — Utility, State & Local Programs

Colorado solar rebates in 2026 come from three sources: the state itself, regulated utilities, and local municipal programs. Below is the active program inventory for CO, plus how each one stacks with the federal 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit.

State-Level Programs

Colorado does not offer a state-level cash rebate or income tax credit specifically for residential solar in 2026. Federal incentives and utility-level programs do all the heavy lifting here.

Coloradoalso exempts the added home value from solar from property tax assessments — a recurring benefit worth roughly $250-$400 per year for the system's lifetime.

Colorado additionally exempts solar equipment from sales tax at the point of purchase, removing another 4-7% from up-front equipment cost.

Utility Rebate Programs

The following utilities operate in Colorado and may run rebate programs at any given time. Program availability is volatile — utilities open and close incentive windows multiple times per year, often without notice. Check directly with your utility before committing to an installation timeline.

utility
Xcel Energy
Active in CO · contact for current rebate status
utility
Black Hills
Active in CO · contact for current rebate status

How Rebates Stack

Rebates and tax credits combine in a specific order. Cash rebates from utilities reduce the system cost basis before the federal 30% credit is applied. State income tax credits, in contrast, are claimed independently against state tax liability and do not reduce the federal credit basis.

The practical result: a $24,000 install in Colorado with a $1,500 utility rebate would have its federal credit calculated on $22,500 — yielding a $6,750 federal credit instead of $7,200. Worth modeling carefully before signing a contract that includes large utility rebates.