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Solar in Wyoming

A complete, state-specific breakdown of going solar in Wyoming — the real net metering policy, named utilities, the incentives that actually apply, and what an 8 kW system costs and pays back here in 2026.

Cost / Watt
$2.90
8kW System
$23,200
Avg Payback
20 yr
Elec. Rate
$0.147/kWh
Peak Sun
4.3 hr

Wyoming Solar Overview

Wyoming is a thin-incentive, slow-payback solar market defined by the collision of cheap electricity and an export policy that does not reward surplus. The state averages 4.3 peak sun hours — a decent high-elevation resource — but residential electricity runs about $0.12/kWh, among the cheapest in the country, a product of the state's abundant coal, natural gas, and wind generation. Each kilowatt-hour a rooftop array offsets displaces little spending.

The export policy compounds the challenge. Wyoming credits exported surplus at the utility's avoided cost rather than the full retail rate, redirecting any value proposition toward self-consumption. With the 30% federal residential credit expired (December 31, 2025) and the state offering no tax credit, no property or sales tax exemption, and no SREC market, there is effectively no structural offset for an owned 2026 system beyond the federal 48E route (leased/PPA, construction before July 6, 2026).

Rocky Mountain Power (PacifiCorp) serves the bulk of the state, with Black Hills Energy and Cheyenne Light Fuel & Power covering the southeast, and rural cooperatives covering remote territory. At $2.90/W, an 8 kW system runs about $23,200, and payback lands near 20.0 years — among the slower of any state. The case is narrow: it strengthens only for households with high consumption or those planning electrification upgrades that will raise future usage against a cheap baseline rate that may rise over time.

Solar Incentives & Rebates in Wyoming

The programs below are the incentives that apply to residential solar in Wyoming. Stacking the federal credit with the state and utility programs listed here is what drives the real payback math.

Section 48E Investment Tax Credit

Federal

30% federal credit for leased, PPA, commercial, or rental systems that began construction before July 6, 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

See all incentives you qualify for

Electricity Rates & Net Metering in Wyoming

Wyoming's residential solar policy mandates net metering but compensates exports at the utility's avoided cost — a net-billing structure rather than full retail net metering. Rocky Mountain Power (PacifiCorp), Black Hills Energy, Cheyenne Light Fuel & Power, and the rural cooperatives each set their own avoided-cost export rate within the framework. Existing customers are generally grandfathered at the terms of their interconnection.

Wyoming offers no state income tax credit, no SREC market, and no statutory property or sales tax exemption for solar equipment — making it one of the thinnest-incentive states in the Mountain West. The federal Section 25D residential credit expired December 31, 2025; leased and PPA systems may still access Section 48E for projects that began construction before July 6, 2026. The policy direction has been neutral to disengaged, with the state's energy policy focused overwhelmingly on fossil fuels and wind rather than distributed solar.

The principal reality is that Wyoming's combination of cheap electricity and avoided-cost exports makes rooftop solar a marginal proposition for most homeowners. The case is narrow and long-horizon, strengthening only for households with high or growing consumption who value the hedge against future rate increases.

Net Metering Policy

Net metering mandated but at the utility's avoided cost (net billing) — below the full retail rate

Key Utilities

Rocky Mountain Power (PacifiCorp)Black Hills EnergyCheyenne Light Fuel & Powerrural electric cooperatives

Solar Production & System Sizing in Wyoming

Wyoming's 4.3 peak sun hours reflect a high-elevation resource that performs better than the raw number suggests — clear skies, low humidity, and cool panel temperatures improve conversion efficiency. The high plains and the basins run near the state average, while the Wind River and Teton ranges see marginally different conditions due to terrain and snow. Cold, clear winter days actually improve panel conversion efficiency, but day length is the binding constraint, and snow load on low-angle arrays can persist.

Because Wyoming's net-billing tariff compensates exports at the utility's avoided cost, the design philosophy favors self-consumption. A system matched to daytime household load captures the full ~$0.12/kWh retail value of every panel, while an oversized array exporting a large surplus earns back only a few cents. The low offset value and the modest resource make the sizing decision especially consequential — oversized systems pay back very slowly here.

Snow management is a serious operational consideration. Pitched-roof arrays shed snow within a day or two of sun returning, but ground-mount arrays can hold snow for extended periods in Wyoming's heavy snowfall and high-wind climate. Most annual production comes from April through September.

Calculate your system size

Solar Panel Costs & Payback in Wyoming

Wyoming's $2.90/W installed cost is below the national average, with a typical 8 kW system around $23,200 before incentives. The 30% federal residential credit (Section 25D) ended December 31, 2025, and Wyoming offers no state tax credit, no property or sales tax exemption, and no SREC market — leaving no structural offset for an owned 2026 system beyond the federal 48E route (leased/PPA, construction before July 6, 2026).

Payback near 20.0 years on the 8 kW model is among the slower of any state, driven by the combination of a modest offset value at the low retail rate (~$0.12/kWh) and the avoided-cost export credit. An 8 kW system generating about 9,700 kWh a year displaces only roughly $1,160 in annual spending at that rate. Households with high consumption — particularly those heating with electricity or adding an EV — see a stronger, if still long-horizon, case.

The lever most worth pulling in Wyoming is forward sizing for electrification, since the offset value is so low at current rates that the case strengthens only as consumption rises or as retail rates climb off their historically low baseline. The state's abundant wind and fossil generation has shaped its broader energy mix but does not directly help rooftop solar economics.

Calculate your solar ROI

Wyoming Solar — Frequently Asked Questions

Is solar worth it in Wyoming in 2026?

For most Wyoming homeowners, yes. An 8 kW rooftop system costs about $23,200 before incentives and pays back in roughly 20 years, thanks to $0.147/kWh residential electricity and 4.3 peak sun hours.

How much does an 8 kW solar system cost in Wyoming?

A typical 8 kW array runs about $23,200 (2.90/W) before incentives. Section 48E Investment Tax Credit applies.

What is the net metering policy in Wyoming?

Net metering mandated but at the utility's avoided cost (net billing) — below the full retail rate This export compensation is a major driver of payback — confirm that your utility (Rocky Mountain Power (PacifiCorp) or Black Hills Energy) applies these terms before you install.

How much electricity will solar produce in Wyoming?

Wyoming averages about 4.3 peak sun hours per day. A south-facing 8 kW array tilted near latitude typically produces on the order of 10,000–13,000 kWh per year, depending on shading and orientation.

Which utilities serve Wyoming solar customers?

The primary utilities are Rocky Mountain Power (PacifiCorp), Black Hills Energy, Cheyenne Light Fuel & Power, rural electric cooperatives. Each sets its own interconnection and export-credit terms, so verify your specific utility's solar tariff when sizing a system.

Going Solar in Wyoming's Top Cities

Solar economics vary within Wyoming by local utility territory, permitting, and shading — but the largest metros are where most installations happen.

Cheyenne

Wyoming

Casper

Wyoming

Laramie

Wyoming

Gillette

Wyoming

Rock Springs

Wyoming

Written & reviewed by

Jeremy Wolfe — Senior Solar Energy Analyst

Jeremy Wolfe is a solar energy analyst specializing in residential photovoltaic economics, federal and state incentive policy, and return-on-investment modeling for homeowners. He leads EnergyTools' solar research program and methodology.

  • 10+ years analyzing residential solar economics and payback modeling
  • Lead researcher for EnergyTools' 50-state solar cost-per-watt database
  • Author of 100+ solar ROI, payback, and incentive analyses

Methodology & data sources: NREL PVWatts, EPA FuelEconomy.gov, state utility commissions — updated 2026.