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Solar cost & payback in Oklahoma

Short answer

In Oklahoma, a home with a $150/month electric bill needs about a 9.9 kW solar system — roughly $20,757 after the 30% federal tax credit, saving about $1,801/year and paying back in ~11.5 years.

System size

9.9 kW

Cost after 30% credit

$20,757

Payback

11.5 yrs

20-yr net savings

$25,249

Solar in Oklahoma

Oklahoma averages about 5.2 peak sun hours a day and pays roughly 12¢/kWh. The figures above assume a $150/month bill and ~$3/watt installed, with the 30% federal tax credit. A bigger bill needs a bigger system; shading, roof orientation, and net-metering rules change the payback.

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Frequently asked questions

How much do solar panels cost in Oklahoma?

For a $150/month bill, about a 9.9 kW system — roughly $29,653 before incentives, or $20,757 after the 30% federal tax credit. Larger bills need bigger, pricier systems.

Is solar worth it in Oklahoma?

Oklahoma gets about 5.2 peak sun hours a day and pays ~12¢/kWh. A typical system pays back in ~11.5 years and saves about $25,249 net over 20 years — a longer payback, so run your own numbers.

What is the solar tax credit in Oklahoma?

The 30% federal Residential Clean Energy Credit applies everywhere, including Oklahoma — about $8,896 on the example system. Oklahoma may add its own state incentives on top; check current programs.