Net Metering in Oregon (2026)
Oregon uses Retail net metering (1:1). Oregon mandates retail-rate net metering and offers Energy Trust solar-plus-storage rebates, though cloudy valleys limit winter output.
| Policy type | Retail net metering (1:1) |
|---|---|
| Export compensation | Full retail-rate credit for exported kWh |
| Retail electricity rate | ~15¢/kWh |
| Est. annual production per kW | ~1,150 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 Oregon credits exports at the full retail rate (~15¢/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 Oregon 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.
See full solar costs & payback for Oregon
Solar panel cost in Oregon →Oregon net metering FAQ
Does Oregon have net metering?
Yes. Oregon offers retail-rate net metering, so exported solar is credited at roughly the same ~15¢/kWh you pay for grid power.
What is Oregon's solar export rate?
At the full retail rate — about 15¢/kWh in Oregon — 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 Oregon?
Not for economics — Oregon'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 Oregon now that the federal tax credit is gone?
Often, yes. The 30% federal credit for purchased systems ended Dec 31, 2025, so Oregon's retail net metering (1:1) plus any state incentives are now the main drivers of payback. At ~15¢/kWh and about 1,150 kWh produced per kW each year, run the numbers on your own bill before deciding.