Home Improvement · Kansas

Solar Panel Cost in Kansas

2026 estimates — before and after the 30% federal tax credit

$24,360
Before ITC (avg 7 kW)
$17,052
After 30% federal ITC

7 kW system, standard monocrystalline panels. Payback: ~7–11 years. Updated June 2026.

Calculate Your Kansas Solar Cost

Kansas Solar Incentives — 2026

Incentive Value
Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) 30% of total cost
On $28,000 system (example) −$8,400 ITC
Kansas incentives Federal 30% ITC + possible state/utility incentives
Est. payback period (Kansas) ~7–11 years

Federal ITC applies through 2032. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation. State incentives subject to change.

Going Solar in Kansas — Key Insights

1. Kansas Solar Market Overview

Kansas's dry climate and significant sun hours provide good solar production. Low humidity means minimal panel degradation from moisture. The main weather risk is hail — consider hail-resistant panels if you're in a high-hail-frequency area.

2. Top Tip for Kansas Solar Buyers

Kansas's dry, sunny climate is well-suited for solar. Focus on south-facing array orientation and minimal shading for best production. If in a hail-prone area, the extra cost of hail-resistant panels is often worth it for peace of mind.

3. System Size Guide for Kansas

Average Kansas home uses ~1,000–1,200 kWh/month (higher in hot climates with AC). A 6–8 kW system typically covers most usage. Always get a system sized to 90–110% of your actual annual consumption — oversizing costs more without proportional benefit under most net metering policies.

FAQs — Solar Panels in Kansas

Solar panels in Kansas cost $24,360 on average for a 7 kW system before the 30% federal ITC. After the credit, net cost is ~$17,052. Kansas's good sun resources support a payback period of 7–11 years.

Solar is financially positive for most Kansas homeowners. The 30% federal tax credit significantly reduces upfront cost. Kansas's incentives: Federal 30% ITC + possible state/utility incentives. Estimated payback: 7–11 years. With a 25-year panel lifespan and rising electricity rates, solar provides positive lifetime ROI.

Most Kansas homes with average electricity usage need a 5–8 kW system. Calculate your system size: divide your annual kWh usage by 1,200–1,400 (average production for your climate). Your installer will perform a site assessment to optimize size.

Get Free Solar Quotes in Kansas

Compare multiple solar installers and save an average of $5,000 on your system. Free, no obligation.