#2 highest electricity rate in the U.S.

Maryland Solar at 35.85¢/kWh

Maryland is, as of March 2026, the second-most-expensive state in the country for residential electricity — and by a wide margin the most expensive outside Hawaii. EIA data puts the average Maryland residential rate at 35.85 cents per kilowatt-hour, a staggering 89.28% jump from the year prior and more than double the national average. For rooftop solar, that single number rewrites the economics: every kilowatt-hour a Maryland array offsets is worth roughly two and a half times what it's worth in a typical Sun Belt state, and the payback math compresses accordingly.

Residential Rate
35.85¢
YoY Increase
+89.28%
National Rank
#2
Payback
5-7 yr
Peak Sun
4.6 hr

Why Maryland Rates Surged 89.28%

The surge is not random weather or transient demand. Two structural forces drive it. First, natural gas price volatility: the PJM wholesale market that serves Maryland sets clearing prices at the most expensive generator on the margin, which is frequently a gas plant, so gas spikes flow straight through to retail bills. Second, PJM transmission constraints — the regional grid operator has warned of tightening capacity as coal and older gas plants retire faster than new transmission and generation can replace them, and the resulting capacity-market price spikes hit Maryland's Baltimore Gas & Electric territory especially hard. These are durable, multi-year problems, not a one-month anomaly.

That durability is what makes solar such a strong hedge here. Locking in self-generated power at the cost of a rooftop array insulates a household from the very volatility driving the 35.85 c/kWh bills. With Maryland retaining full retail net metering and running an active SREC market, the value of every solar kilowatt-hour — consumed or exported — is unusually high, which is why even an owned system with no federal credit pays back in roughly six years.

How Solar Offsets 35¢/kWh

System size

10 kW

Annual production

14,000 kWh

Rate per kWh

35.85¢

Annual savings

$5,019

10 kW × ~14,000 kWh/yr × 35.85¢ ≈ $5,019/yr in avoided electricity — before SREC-II income.

Maryland averages about 4.6 peak sun hours per day — modest by Sun Belt standards but more than enough to make rooftop solar highly productive when each kilowatt-hour is worth 35.85 cents. The Interstate 95 corridor from Baltimore through the D.C. suburbs sits near the state average, while the Eastern Shore and Southern Maryland run slightly higher and the western mountains around Frederick and Hagerstown a touch lower. Annual output is concentrated in the long days of May through August, with a real winter dip, but the high value of each kilowatt-hour means even shoulder-season production displaces expensive power.

The savings math at Maryland's current rate is dramatic. A 10 kW south-facing array tilted near latitude produces roughly 14,000 kilowatt-hours per year (NREL PVWatts, typical for the region). At 35.85 c/kWh, that is about $5,019 of avoided electricity spending annually — before counting any SREC income. A smaller 8 kW system still generates around 11,500 kWh, worth roughly $4,100 a year. Because Maryland maintains full 1:1 retail net metering with an annual true-up, surplus produced on long summer days is banked at the full retail rate and drawn back on short winter evenings, so overproduction is not penalized the way it is under California's NEM 3.0.

Optimal sizing in Maryland therefore leans toward maximizing annual kilowatt-hours rather than peak-shaving. A south-facing array at 20-30 degrees of tilt captures the most annual energy, and sizing 100-120% of annual consumption is sensible to hedge against the rate increases that are expected to continue. Households planning to add an electric vehicle or a heat pump should size upward, because each additional offset kilowatt-hour is worth more than almost anywhere else in the country.

Maryland Solar Incentives & Net Metering

2026 federal change: The Section 25D residential credit (30%) expired Dec 31, 2025 — owned residential systems installed in 2026 no longer qualify. Section 48E (30%) still applies to lease/PPA/commercial/rental that begin construction before July 4, 2026.

Section 48E Investment Tax Credit

Federal

30% federal credit for leased, PPA, commercial, or rental systems that begin construction before July 4, 2026 — the developer claims it and passes savings through via lower payments

Section 25D Residential Credit (expired)

Federal

The 30% federal credit for owned residential systems ended December 31, 2025 — not available for systems placed in service in 2026

Maryland SREC-II Market

State

Earn and sell Solar Renewable Energy Credits through PJM-GATS brokers — a separate per-MWh income stream on top of net metering (verify current SREC-II spot price)

Residential Solar Property Tax Exemption

State

Solar energy systems are exempt from real property tax reassessment, so the upgrade does not raise your county tax bill

Maryland's policy stack is unusually favorable and, crucially, codified in statute rather than fragile commission rule. Full retail net metering is established under Public Utilities §7-306, crediting exported solar at the full retail rate with an annual true-up for residential systems. Customers retain this treatment for the life of their interconnection, and the aggregate cap has historically been raised before binding, so the policy environment is more stable than in states where net metering is under active rollback.

The Maryland SREC market is the second pillar. The state's Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard creates a solar carve-out that obligates utilities to buy Solar Renewable Energy Credits; as the original SREC-I market filled, Maryland opened a SREC-II tier to continue the program. A residential system earns one SREC for every megawatt-hour it produces, whether that energy is consumed on-site or exported, and those credits are sold through PJM-GATS brokers or aggregators at a floating spot price. This is a genuine additional revenue stream on top of the net-metering offset, and it is unique to a handful of states.

The federal picture requires care in 2026. The Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit — the 30% personal credit that long drove residential solar economics — expired on December 31, 2025, so an owned residential system installed in 2026 does not qualify for it. Any installer quoting a 30% federal credit on a 2026 owned-residential system is mistaken or misleading. The Section 48E Investment Tax Credit remains available at 30% for leased and PPA arrangements, commercial properties, and rentals that begin construction before July 4, 2026, with possible 10% energy-community and 10% domestic-content bonuses. Maryland also exempts residential solar from real property tax reassessment, so the improvement does not raise county taxes. Sales tax (6%) still applies to equipment.

Net Metering Policy

Full 1:1 retail net metering (codified, Public Utilities §7-306) — exports credited at full retail rate with annual true-up; grandfathered for the life of the interconnection

Key Utilities

Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)PepcoDelmarva PowerPotomac Edison (FirstEnergy)SMECO

Payback Calculation: 5-7 Years

10 kW Cost

$31,300

Annual Savings

$5,019

Break-even

6.2 yr

Federal Credit

$0 (25D)

$31,300 ÷ $5,019/yr ≈ 6.2 years — without any federal credit, and before SREC-II income.

Maryland's installed cost runs about $3.30 per watt, close to the national average, with a typical 8 kW system landing near $26,400 before incentives and a 10 kW system around $31,300-$33,000 depending on equipment and installer. The federal incentive landscape shifted sharply for 2026: the Section 25D residential credit that previously returned 30% expired on December 31, 2025, so an owned residential system placed in service in 2026 no longer qualifies for the federal credit. The Section 48E Investment Tax Credit still provides 30% for leased, PPA, commercial, and rental systems that begin construction before July 4, 2026, with the developer claiming it and passing the benefit through as lower monthly payments.

Even without the federal credit, the payback math is exceptional purely because of the rate. A 10 kW system at roughly $33,000, generating about $5,019 in annual savings, recovers its cost in around 6.6 years on energy savings alone — faster than most states manage with the full 30% federal credit stacked in. Layer in Maryland SREC-II income (a separate payment per megawatt-hour produced, sold through PJM-GATS brokers) and the timeline tightens further. An 8 kW system at $26,400 saves roughly $4,100 a year and pays back in about 6.4 years.

Is Solar Worth It in Maryland?

The comparison to the national picture is stark. Most states land in the 9-15 year payback range; Maryland's combination of the country's #2 electricity rate, full retail net metering, and an active SREC market puts it among the fastest-payback solar markets in the United States — likely the fastest outside of markets with special buyback plans. The principal risk to the math is not cost or sun, it is whether retail rates stay this high; if they do, the case is close to unarguable.

Going Solar in Maryland's Top Cities

Rate relief varies modestly by utility territory (BGE vs. Pepco vs. Delmarva), but the 35.85¢/kWh crisis is statewide — the metros below are where most installations happen.

Baltimore

Maryland

Columbia

Maryland

Silver Spring

Maryland

Frederick

Maryland

Germantown

Maryland

Sources: EIA Electric Power Monthly (March 2026, residential rate); NREL PVWatts V8 (production); Maryland Public Utilities §7-306 (net metering); DSIRE / Maryland Energy Administration (incentives); IRS Notice 2025-42 and OBBBA (federal credit status).