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Net Metering in New York (2026)

New York uses Retail net metering (1:1). New York residential solar still uses retail-rate net metering (with a small Customer Benefit Contribution charge), alongside a 25% state tax credit and NY-Sun rebates.

Policy type Retail net metering (1:1)
Export compensation Full retail-rate credit for exported kWh
Retail electricity rate ~29¢/kWh
Est. annual production per kW ~1,300 kWh/kW/yr

Policy status reflects the statewide standard as of 2026. Actual export rates and program caps vary by utility — confirm with your provider.

What this means for your payback

Because New York credits exports at the full retail rate (~29¢/kWh), the grid effectively acts as a free battery: every kWh you send out offsets a kWh you later pull back. That keeps payback short and makes a home battery optional rather than essential — you add storage mainly for backup power, not to rescue your economics.

2026 reality check: the 30% federal tax credit for purchased home solar ended Dec 31, 2025. With that gone, net metering — which New York still offers at retail rates — plus any state incentives are now the main levers on your solar ROI. Run the numbers on your actual utility bill before signing anything.

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New York net metering FAQ

Does New York have net metering?

Yes. New York offers retail-rate net metering, so exported solar is credited at roughly the same ~29¢/kWh you pay for grid power.

What is New York's solar export rate?

At the full retail rate — about 29¢/kWh in New York — so a kWh sent to the grid offsets a kWh you buy back later.

Do I need a battery to make solar worth it in New York?

Not for economics — New York's retail net metering lets the grid store your excess for you. A battery is worth adding if you want backup power during outages.

Is solar still worth it in New York now that the federal tax credit is gone?

Often, yes. The 30% federal credit for purchased systems ended Dec 31, 2025, so New York's retail net metering (1:1) plus any state incentives are now the main drivers of payback. At ~29¢/kWh and about 1,300 kWh produced per kW each year, run the numbers on your own bill before deciding.

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