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Top Solar Companies in Ajo, Arizona

Ajo

There’s no shortage of solar companies in Ajo. So we figured, why not save you some time? We researched the local residential solar installers and read through hundreds of reviews.
These residential solar companies made the cut because they do good work consistently. They understand Ajo’s solar scene, they’re responsive when issues pop up, and their customers tend to be happy. Worth a conversation if you’re serious about solar energy for residential homes.

Find the Best Solar Installers in Ajo, Arizona

Showing 1 - 20 of 72 locations
80.2 mi

High Desert Energy review
26028 s Washington St, Chandler AZ, 85249

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, High Desert read more…
80.3 mi

Argent Solar review
671 N 137th Ave, Suite #105 Goodyear, AZ 85338

Argent Solar is rewarded with our Expert Choice badge, serving an exclusive area of fewer than 2 states. With a read more…

80.9 mi

Power 22 review
3377 S Price Rd, Chandler, AZ 85248

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Power 22 read more…

81.5 mi

Fusion Power review
6150 W Chandler Blvd #17 Chandler, AZ 85226

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Fusion Power read more…

81.9 mi

Burro Solar review
2990 N Litchfield Rd # 9, Goodyear AZ, 85395

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Burro Solar read more…

83.4 mi

Static Sun Electric and Solar review
19033 S Arizona Ave U1, Chandler, AZ 85286

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Static Sun read more…

83.9 mi

Southwest Electric review
5750 W Roosevelt St STE 4, Phoenix, AZ 85043, United States

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Southwest Electric read more…

84.5 mi

Gurr Brothers Construction LLC review
1710 E Germann Rd Suite 10, Chandler, AZ, 85286

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Gurr Brothers read more…

85.1 mi

Powered By Elevation review
2425 S Stearman Dr, Suite 220 Chandler, AZ 85286

Recognized as a Trusted Provider, Elevation has a widespread influence in 3 states, with its inception in 2015. This installer read more…

85.1 mi

Redline Electric & Solar, LLC review
124 W. Gemini Dr #19 Tempe, AZ 85283

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Redline Electric read more…

85.7 mi

Bright Home Energy review
4675 E Cotton Center Blvd #173, Phoenix, AZ 85040,

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Bright Home read more…

86 mi

SunPower by PGT Solar review
2 N Central Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85004

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, SunPower by read more…

86 mi

Rooftop Solar review
West Washington Street, Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona, 85004, United States

Our Expert Choice badge goes to Rooftop Solar, which concentrates on serving fewer than 1 state. With a foundation dating read more…

86.2 mi

Icon Power review
3006 S. Priest Dr. Tempe, AZ 85282

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Icon Power read more…

86.2 mi

SanTan Solar review
596 Germann Rd #101 Gilbert, AZ 85297

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, SanTan Solar read more…

86.3 mi

American Solar & Roofing review
2850 S. 36th Street, Suite A-12 Phoenix, AZ 85034

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, American Solar read more…

86.5 mi

FOR Energy review
4630 E Elwood St #9, Phoenix, AZ 85040,

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, FOR Energy read more…

86.7 mi

Sunny Energy review
2414 W 14th Street, Suite B, Tempe, AZ 85281 AZ

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Sunny Energy read more…

86.9 mi

High Desert Energy review
1834 E Baseline Rd #203, Tempe AZ, 85283

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, High Desert read more…

87 mi

Inty Power review
819 W 22nd St Ste 105 Tempe, AZ 85282

With an overall third-party rating of 4+ and positive feedback across more than 10 reviews from different platforms, Inty Power read more…


How Much Can Residential Solar Panels Save You in Ajo, Arizona?

There’s no simple answer to how much you’ll save with solar power for residential homes in Arizona – it really depends on your situation. Your utility company’s billing structure matters, as does the size of the residential solar power system your roof can handle and how much electricity your household uses. Most installers will try to cover all your energy needs, but your actual savings depend on your home’s unique setup.

Before incentives, expect to pay somewhere between $15,000 and $30,000 for a typical residential solar installation in Ajo. The exact cost depends on your residential solar energy system size and energy requirements.

Want an estimate just for you? Fill out the form on our website, try a solar calculator, or consult with a couple of local residential solar installers for a personalized savings calculation.

Learn more about solar incentives and what makes Arizona unique for residential solar.

Solar Financing Explained for Residential Solar Systems

You’ve got several ways to pay for solar panels:

  • Cash
  • Solar loans from installers
  • Personal loans
  • Cash-out refinance or HELOC
  • Solar leases or PPAs

Paying Cash: Cash gives you the best long-term savings and the lowest overall cost for your residential solar power system. But let’s be real – not everyone has $15,000 to $20,000 sitting in the bank. If you want to own your system but can’t pay up front, financing is your next option.

Getting a Loan: Personal loans, home equity lines, or installer-offered solar loans all work. Just watch out for the fine print – loans come with interest and fees. Many solar loans include dealer fees that can bump up your total residential solar installation cost by 20% or more (they offset this with lower interest rates). Smart move? Compare dealer fees and rates between different residential solar companies before signing anything.

Don’t skip this: ask for their cost per watt. That’s your real comparison tool when residential solar energy system sizes vary between installers.

Leasing or PPAs: Some businesses let you rent or buy power with no money down. It sounds great, doesn’t it? The catch is that you don’t own the panels, so you can’t get rebates or federal incentives. Also, the monthly payments to the solar company take money out of your savings.

Get detailed savings projections from installers before deciding. Even with financing costs, you’ll typically still pay less for electricity than you do now. Understanding all your options – including available federal and state programs – helps you make the smartest financial choice for your residential solar energy system.


Discover Your Solar Savings in 60 Seconds

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$1,800
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8.5 kW
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Arizona Solar Rebates and Incentives

Arizona has a number of solar benefits that make installing solar panels on a home cheaper overall. There is a $1,000 cap on the state's solar tax credit, which is worth 25% of the cost of your system. This credit goes straight to your Arizona state income taxes and can lower your initial payment by a large amount.

Arizona homeowners who buy solar equipment don't have to pay property taxes or sales taxes on it. The property tax exemption means that adding solar cells to your home won't make your property taxes go up. The sales tax exemption gets rid of the state's 5.6% sales tax on solar equipment. This means that most home solar systems will cost hundreds less.

Some utility companies offer additional rebates and incentives. Salt River Project (SRP) and Arizona Public Service (APS) have periodically offered solar incentive programs, though availability varies by year and program funding. Check with your local utility to see what solar rebates might be available when you're ready to install.

Over the last ten years, the cost of solar panel installation has fallen roughly 53%, and when combined with available solar incentives, residential solar panels are now within reach for more homeowners.


Frequently Asked Questions

How Do We Rank Residential Solar Installers?

Picking a solar installer shouldn’t be a guessing game. We built our rating system to help homeowners make informed solar decisions and avoid common pitfalls in the industry.
Here’s how it works: 5-star system, plain and simple. Five stars means a company is legitimately excellent – the kind you’d recommend to your own family. One star? Run away. We wouldn’t touch them with a ten-foot pole, and neither should you. Our ratings pull from everywhere – EnergySage, SolarReviews, BBB, Google Reviews, Yelp, ConsumerAffairs, Trustpilot, the works. But we’re not just averaging star ratings like some algorithm. We read the actual reviews. Are they consistently delivering what they promise, or just occasionally getting lucky?

What Actually Matters When We Evaluate Residential Solar Companies?

  • Years in business. Five minimum. Non-negotiable. If a company’s been around less than that, they haven’t weathered any real challenges yet. And think about it – solar panels last 25-30 years. You need an installer who’s built their business model around supporting customers long-term, not just showing up for installation day and disappearing.
  • Local vs. national – and it’s not even close. Check the numbers yourself. Local residential solar installers consistently get better reviews than the big chains. Their reputation actually matters because word spreads fast in local communities. They know the permit process in Ajo specifically. They understand your local utility company’s quirks and requirements.
  • Hands-on experience. Residential solar energy companies that have hundreds of installations behind them move differently. They’ve seen every bizarre roof situation. They know exactly how to handle older homes with outdated electrical systems. First-time installers? They’re figuring it out as they go – on your roof, with your money.
  • Who’s actually doing the work? Some companies use their own crews. Others outsource everything to whoever’s available. Guess which ones deliver better quality? When residential solar energy companies employ their own installation teams, those workers know they’re accountable. Something breaks later? You call the company, and they send the same team that did the original work. With subcontractors, you’re lucky if you can track down who actually touched your system.
  • What people actually say. We check SolarReviews, BBB, Google, Yelp – anywhere real customers leave feedback. But star ratings alone don’t tell the whole story. How does a company handle a one-star review? Do they fix the problem or argue with the customer? Customer reviews show what really happens after you sign the contract.
  • Licenses and certifications. Should be obvious, but apparently it’s not. Licensed, insured, NABCEP certified if possible (that’s the actual gold standard for residential solar panel installers, not marketing fluff). Companies cutting corners on basic credentials – what else are they skimping on?
  • Equipment quality swings wildly. Good residential solar energy companies stock equipment from solid manufacturers – SunPower, LG, Panasonic, Canadian Solar, brands like that. Lower-tier installers? They push whatever vendor gave them the best wholesale price this quarter, regardless of quality. Ask them straight up: “What brands do you install and why those specifically?” Watch how they answer. That’ll tell you if they prioritize system performance or profit margins.
  • Payment options. The best residential solar companies give you real choices – loans, leases, PPAs – and actually walk you through what makes sense for your situation. Huge red flag: companies that only offer one financing option. Usually, it means it’s structured to maximize their profit, not your savings.
  • Warranties separate the pros from the amateurs. Look for 10-12 years on workmanship, minimum. Strong performance guarantees. Your residential solar power system costs serious money. It better have protection beyond the basic manufacturer’s warranty on the panels themselves.

Our Classification System: What the Tags Mean?

We label companies to save you research time:

  • Expert Choice: Long-established companies with extensive workmanship warranties and in-house installation crews exclusively. The veterans with the strongest track records.
  • Trusted Provider: Multi-state operations that still manage to deliver quality work. Good local reputation, positive customer feedback. They handle installations directly instead of outsourcing.
  • Market Leader: Tons of verified reviews, customers are consistently happy. Proven track record of consistent, reliable service.

Stick with “Expert Choice,” “Trusted Provider,” or “Market Leader” tags. They earned those classifications through actual performance, not by paying for better placement. The difference matters more than you’d think.

What to Look for in a Residential Solar Company?

Shopping for solar energy for residential use? Here’s what separates good residential solar companies from ones you’ll regret hiring:

  • Check credentials first. NABCEP certification is what you want to see – it’s the real deal in solar. Beyond that, make sure they’re licensed, bonded, and insured for your area. Using subcontractors? Those crews better have proper credentials, too, not just some guys with ladders.
  • Experience isn’t optional. Five years minimum in the business. Don’t be someone’s practice run. Ask straight up: “How many residential solar energy systems have you installed?” A confident residential solar panel installer will tell you the number and walk you through their equipment choices without hesitation. They should explain how they’ll help you tap into available incentives – and if they can’t clearly explain their warranties, that’s a red flag.
  • Communication tells you everything. Here’s a test: Ask specific questions. “Why do I need this many panels?” “Break down the costs based on my actual usage.” “What brands are you proposing and why?” “What’s your per-watt price?” Good residential solar installers answer directly. Sketchy ones dance around numbers or pressure you to sign fast. Trust your gut – if they’re dodgy with answers now, imagine dealing with them when something breaks.
  • One more thing on communication: Ask about their subcontractors. Who’s actually doing the work? How are they supervised? You deserve real answers.
  • Your roof comes first. Any residential solar panel installer worth their salt will thoroughly inspect your roof before talking panels. They should tell you if repairs are needed upfront – not after they’ve torn into your shingles. Who pays if there’s damage during installation? Get that in writing. And yeah, talk about how it’ll look. Panel placement, where vents end up, all that matters when you’re staring at it every day.
  • Do your homework on their reputation. Reviews matter, but dig deeper. Ask for references from recent customers. Even better – if you know anyone who’s gone solar, ask them who they used. Personal recommendations beat online reviews every time because people are brutally honest with friends.
  • Always get multiple quotes. Always. Prices swing wildly between residential solar companies – sometimes by thousands. Here’s the key: calculate the cost per watt for each proposal. That’s your apples-to-apples comparison, even if residential solar energy system sizes differ slightly. Get three quotes minimum. You’ll quickly learn what’s fair pricing and what’s someone trying to fleece you.

Should You Choose a Local Solar Installer or a Big National Company?

Go local. It makes a difference.
Small local residential solar companies consistently get better reviews than big national operations. The reason is simple: solar energy for residential use is inherently a local business. Providing good customer service across multiple states from a central office? Nearly impossible.
Local residential solar energy companies have skin in the game. They know your area’s incentives and regulations inside and out. They care about their reputation because word spreads fast in local communities. And they’re not trying to hit some corporate sales quota – they want you to be happy so you’ll refer your neighbors.
National companies will pitch their “financial stability” and “consistent quality across locations.” Don’t buy it. When something goes wrong (and eventually, something always does), you want a local company that answers their phone and can send someone over – not a call center that routes you to whoever’s available.
Find a local residential solar panel installer that checks all your boxes and specializes in your area. You’ll be happier for it.

What Does a Residential Solar Installation in Ajo, Arizona Look Like?

So you’ve approved your residential solar power system design. What happens next?

  • They’ll dig into your energy use. Pull out your utility bills from the last year – installers need to see your actual consumption in kWh. This isn’t busywork. These numbers determine everything: how much you’ll save, when you’ll break even, and what size system makes sense for your home.
  • Expect a home energy audit. Good residential solar energy companies don’t skip this. They’re looking at your consumption patterns, when you use the most power, all that. It’s how they properly size your system instead of just slapping panels up there and hoping for the best.
  • Your roof gets scrutinized. Is it in decent shape? Facing the right direction? They’ll inspect everything – structural integrity, orientation, shading issues. This determines where panels go and how they’ll run the wiring without making your house look like a science experiment.
  • Design gets finalized. They’ll show you renderings of what your residential solar energy system will actually look like on your roof, plus production estimates and costs specific to your situation.
  • Paperwork time. Ajo requires permits for residential solar installation. The good news? Your installer handles this headache. If they’re telling you to pull permits yourself, find a different company.
  • The waiting game. Here’s the reality: start to finish, you’re looking at about 3 months. Permits take time. Inspections take time. Getting utility approval takes time. The actual installation on your roof? That’s usually done in 3 days, maybe longer if your roof is complicated or the system is big. Most of those 3 months are just waiting on bureaucracy.
  • Installation day arrives. The crew shows up, gets everything installed, and cleans up after themselves. Professional crews leave your property cleaner than they found it – you shouldn’t see a single zip tie or scrap of wire left behind. Just new panels on your roof.
  • Inspection happens. The city sends someone out to verify everything meets code and safety regulations. This is required – no way around it. Once you pass, you’re almost there.
  • Grid connection is the final step. Your residential solar power system gets wired to the utility company, you apply for interconnection, and they’ll inspect it, too. Some residential solar panel installers handle this entire process for you; others make you deal with the utility. Ask upfront who’s doing what. Once all the approvals are in? Flip the switch. You’re making your own power.

Find the Best Solar Panel Installation Companies for Homes Nearby

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Andy Worford
Andy Worford

Founder and Chief Content Officer at Resident Solar Power. Andy's been following solar policy and technology long enough to know which trends matter and which ones are just noise. He writes about photovoltaic systems, policy changes, and green tech innovations - basically, anything that helps homeowners make smarter solar decisions.

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