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·
::NC_REBATE_PROGRAMS // 2026

North CarolinaSolar Rebates — Utility, State & Local Programs

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

State-Level Programs

North Carolina 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.

North Carolinaalso 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.

Utility Rebate Programs

The following utilities operate in North Carolina 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
Duke Energy NC
Active in NC · contact for current rebate status
utility
Dominion Energy NC
Active in NC · 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 North Carolina 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.