Average Solar Panel Cost in Texas (2025)
What a fair solar quote looks like in Texas — by price per watt and by system size — and how to tell if yours measures up.
The single most useful number on any solar quote is the price per watt — the total price divided by the system size in watts. It lets you compare quotes for different-sized systems on equal footing. In Texas, our benchmark for a cash-price residential install is about $2.45–$3.40 per watt before incentives, with roughly $2.90 as a typical midpoint. That puts Texas below the national typical of about $3.10/watt — solar tends to be more affordable here than in much of the country.
These are the same benchmark ranges we use to score a real uploaded quote — not a scraped average. They're a starting point for a conversation, not a verdict: a higher price can be justified by premium equipment or a complex roof, and a low price can hide thin warranties or missing scope.
Typical solar cost in Texas by system size
Cash price before incentives, from our Texas price-per-watt range. Most homes land somewhere in this spread depending on usage and roof.
| System size | Lower end | Typical | Higher end |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 kW | $14,700 | $17,400 | $20,400 |
| 8 kW | $19,600 | $23,200 | $27,200 |
| 10 kW | $24,500 | $29,000 | $34,000 |
Before the federal tax credit and any Texas incentives. Illustrative — your quote should be based on your actual roof and electricity usage.
Is your Texas solar quote fair?
Find your quote's price per watt first: divide the total price by the system size in watts. For example, an 8 kW (8000 watt) system quoted at $23,200 is about $2.90 per watt — right in the Texas range.
If your number lands well above $3.40 per watt, that's not proof of a bad deal, but it's a signal to ask what's driving the price: premium panels, a battery, a hard roof, or dealer and financing fees that may not be spelled out. Price is only one of several things worth checking before you sign.
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Solar cost in Texas: FAQ
- How much do solar panels cost in Texas?
- Our benchmark for Texas is about $2.45–$3.40 per watt (cash price, before incentives). For a typical 8 kW home system that works out to roughly $19,600–$27,200 before the federal tax credit. Your real number depends on your roof, equipment, and installer — always confirm with a written quote.
- What is a fair price per watt for solar in Texas?
- We consider roughly $2.45–$3.40 per watt a normal cash-price range in Texas, with about $2.90 as a typical midpoint. A quote well above that isn't automatically bad, but it's worth asking what you're paying extra for.
- How do I calculate my own price per watt?
- Divide the total system price by the system size in watts. A 8 kW system is 8000 watts, so a $23,200 quote is about $2.90 per watt. Compare that to the range above.
- Do incentives lower the cost in Texas?
- Usually, yes. Under current federal rules there's a Residential Clean Energy Credit worth 30% of the system cost, and Texas may have its own incentives or net-metering rules on top. Incentives change often — verify current details at energy.gov and dsireusa.org before counting on them.