MontanaSolar Incentives 2026: Tax Credits, Rebates & Net Metering
Montana homeowners can reduce solar installation costs by up to 30% through state and federal incentives. With average monthly bills of $110 and 4.8 peak sun hours per day, the average MT homeowner saves $25,600 over 25 years.
State Solar Tax Credit
Montana does not offer a state income tax credit specifically for residential solar. Most homeowners rely on the 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit as the primary up-front incentive.
Even without a state income credit, Montana's property tax exemption on solar equipment significantly reduce effective lifetime cost.
Net Metering in Montana
Montana requires investor-owned utilities to offer net metering on residential solar systems. The credit rate is the full retail electricity rate.
In practice, this means a properly sized Montana system can drive net annual electricity costs to within tens of dollars of zero. Top utilities operating under MT net metering rules include NorthWestern Energy, MDU.
Montana credits exported solar at roughly ~100% of retail of the retail rate. See full Montananet metering rates & rollover rules →
Cost of Solar Panels in Montana (2026)
Solar installs in Montana average $2.95 per watt in 2026. A typical 8 kW system runs about $23,600 before incentives. After the 30% federal credit, the net cost drops to roughly $16,520 — the real number most MT homeowners pay.
Your price moves with system size, roof complexity, and equipment tier. Run the Montana savings calculator for a number matched to your actual electricity bill.
Are Free Solar Panels Real in Montana?
No — there is no government program handing out free solar in Montana. “Free solar” and “no-cost solar program” ads are leases or power purchase agreements (PPAs): a company owns the panels, claims the 30% federal credit for itself, and bills you for the power.
Buying your system — with the incentives in your name — almost always wins on lifetime savings. Read the full breakdown of “free solar” offers →
Utility Rebate Programs
2 major utilities operate in Montana: NorthWestern Energy, MDU. Specific rebate availability varies year to year and is typically distributed first-come, first-served until annual budget caps are reached.
Before scheduling any installation, verify current rebate status directly with your utility — programs open and close throughout the year. Most Montana installers will pull up-to-date rebate data during a site assessment.
Property & Sales Tax Exemptions
Montana excludes the added value of a residential solar system from property tax assessments. A homeowner whose property gains $15,000 in assessed value from a solar install pays no additional property tax on that increase, saving roughly $250 to $400 annually depending on local mill rates.
Montana does not exempt solar equipment from sales tax, so installation invoices include standard sales tax on hardware components.
How Montana Compares to Neighboring States
Compare Montana's solar incentive package side-by-side with adjacent states to see whether you live in a relatively high- or low-incentive market.
How MT Incentives Work in Detail
Frequently Asked Questions
See your exact Montana solar savings
Plug in your monthly bill and we'll apply every Montana and federal incentive on this page to your real numbers — system size, net cost, payback, and 25-year savings.