
Canada Greener Homes Program 2026: What’s Gone, What’s New, and What It Means for Your Solar Decision
April 24, 2026
BC Hydro’s July 1 Net Metering Deadline: Lock In Your Solar Installer Before the Cutoff
April 24, 2026Last Updated on May 16, 2026 by Vitaliy
Over 600 solar panels. Three rooftops. Nine working days. That’s what happened at Paul Sadlon Motors in Barrie, Ontario in April 2026. A local crew from SunFlow Solar & Exteriors blanketed the dealership with a $924,000 PV system while the showroom stayed open the whole time. The old $60,000-a-year hydro bill? Close to zero now. And here’s the part most Ontario homeowners miss: when commercial crews move this fast, residential quotes drop too.
Key Takeaways
- Paul Sadlon Motors went solar in nine working days with 600+ panels across three buildings — a $924K system cutting a $60K annual hydro bill close to zero.
- Most Ontario commercial solar jobs take two to six months. Nine days is a signal the market is maturing.
- Soft costs (labour, permits, engineering) are 40–45% of install pricing. Faster commercial crews drop those soft costs for residential jobs too.
- Ontario residential solar runs $2.60–$3.30 per watt in 2026. A 10% labour cut saves $500–$1,000 on a typical 5–6 kW home install.
- Ontario’s micro-embedded generation threshold is now 12 kW, which gives some larger residential projects more room before they move into a more complex connection category.
- Ontario’s current Home Renovation Savings solar and battery rebate can reduce upfront cost, but the Canada Greener Homes Loan is closed to new applicants and a rebated solar PV system cannot use net metering for that same system.
What Actually Happened at Paul Sadlon Motors
The dealership was paying roughly $60,000 per year on hydro before the switch. First-year solar savings basically covered the cost of replacing the old roofs. SunFlow reports over 50% of the project cost comes back in year one, full payback lands around year seven, and projected 20-year savings sit near $3.7 million. The crew worked nights and off-hours so service bays never shut down.
That kind of speed is rare. Most Ontario commercial solar projects between 50 and 100 kW take two to four months from contract to commissioning. Bigger systems over 500 kW run six to twelve months (Solar X). A Toronto turnkey firm flags three to six months as normal for a smooth install (Solify). Nine days on-site for a multi-building array? That’s an outlier. And a signal.
Tip for Homeowners Getting Quotes
Tip: Ask your installer how many labour-hours they’ve budgeted for your job and how many days they expect on-site. Installers who plan tight schedules usually price tighter too.
Why They Finished So Fast
A handful of moves turned what should’ve been a month-long job into nine days.
One crew, two trades. The same team replaced the old roofs and bolted down panels at the same time. No second mobilisation. No waiting for roofers to leave before the solar team showed up.
Permits lined up before day one. Engineering drawings were finalised, the Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) permits were approved, and the utility’s Offer to Connect was signed before a single panel hit the roof (Solify Ontario installation guide). Most delays in Canadian solar come from paperwork, not people.
Bigger panels, fewer parts. They used high-output modules around 400 W each. Fewer panels means fewer mounts, fewer cable runs, fewer connections. An industry analysis from Tongwei notes a jump from 100 W to 400 W modules can cut installation time by about 40% (Tongwei).
Skilled local crew. Ontario solar installers earn $22–$25 per hour. Every day shaved off the schedule saves real labour dollars. Those savings move into the final bid.
Put it together and the math is plain. A three-person crew working nine days instead of twelve gets 72 labour-hours back. At $25 an hour, that’s $1,800 in raw wages, closer to $3,000 once you add overhead, insurance, and gear rental.
How Commercial Speed Shrinks Your Residential Quote
Here’s the part that matters for your roof. Solar hardware — panels, inverters, racking — accounts for only 55–60% of a total install cost. The rest is soft costs: labour, permits, engineering, sales, insurance. When commercial crews get faster, those soft costs fall across the board, because the same installers price your home job off the same labour model.
Look at what that does to pricing:
| Project Type | Price per Watt | Example System | Installed Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large commercial | $2.00–$3.50/W | 100 kW | $200k–$350k |
| Residential, Ontario | $2.60–$3.30/W | 5 kW | $13,000–$16,500 |
| Residential, larger home | $2.50–$3.50/W | 6 kW | $15,000–$21,000 |
Sources: Solar X, Green Building Canada, Anker SOLIX.
Shave a week of labour off a typical 6 kW home install and the savings move straight into your contract. A 10% labour cut on a $15,000 system puts roughly $500 back in your pocket. Cut two weeks and you’re looking at $1,000-plus off the final quote. You also spend fewer days with ladders against your siding.
Tip for Budgeting
Tip: Ask your installer to split the labour line from the hardware line on the quote. If they can’t, get a second quote from someone who will.
What This Trend Means for Ontario Homeowners
After 12 years in home improvement I’ve watched installers learn fast when a big job like Sadlon forces them to tighten every step. One of my neighbours in Mississauga got a 7 kW system last summer. The crew finished wiring on a Thursday, passed ESA inspection the next week, and had the utility’s net-meter approval within three weeks. Total disruption? Two days of noise. That’s what a streamlined commercial process looks like once it reaches residential.
The second thing I’ve watched change: competitive installers now quote based on watts-per-crew-day. The faster that number climbs, the lower the invoice. When a company can point to a nine-day commercial build, they can’t get away with quoting ten-day schedules on your 20-panel home install.
Ontario’s Rules Help the Math Work
Speed is only half the savings story. Ontario’s rules do the rest.
Net metering. Any system up to 500 kW can push excess power to the grid for bill credits (Ontario Energy Board). That covers every normal home project in the province. For the connection process, the practical 2026 change is the micro-embedded generation threshold: Ontario increased it from 10 kW to 12 kW effective May 1, 2026. That gives some high-load homes more room to size around EV charging, heat pumps, and future electricity use. Here is the deeper breakdown of Ontario’s 12 kW micro-embedded generation threshold. One catch with net metering still matters — credits expire after 12 months, so right-sizing matters.
Fast utility approvals. EcoFlow’s 2026 Ontario guide says standard home systems get final utility connection within two to four weeks of inspection. Your installer handles the engineering plans, the ESA permit, and the microgeneration agreement. You sign a couple of forms.
Rebates. Ontario’s Home Renovation Savings Program can reduce upfront cost for qualifying solar and battery projects. But the rebate path is different from net metering: a rebated solar PV system is for load displacement and cannot participate in a net-metering agreement for that same system. The federal Canada Greener Homes Loan is also closed to new applications, so do not build a 2026 quote around that financing unless you were already approved.
FAQ
How long should a typical home solar install take in Ontario?
Two to four days on-site for panels and wiring, plus two to four weeks for ESA inspection and utility connection. If an installer quotes more than five days on-site for a standard 5–6 kW system, ask why.
Does a faster install mean lower quality?
No, if the crew is licensed and ESA-registered. Speed usually comes from planning — permits, engineering, and materials ordered ahead — not from skipping steps.
What’s the payback period on Ontario residential solar right now?
Most 5–6 kW systems pay back in 8 to 12 years with current electricity rates and rebates. The Sadlon commercial project pays back at year seven, which is where residential pricing is headed as installs get faster.
Can I combine Ontario rebates with net metering or the federal Greener Homes Loan?
Not for the same rebated solar PV system. Ontario’s Home Renovation Savings solar rebate is for load displacement, and a rebated system cannot participate in net metering for that same system. The federal Canada Greener Homes Loan is also closed to new applications, so new 2026 projects should compare the Ontario rebate path against the net-metering path instead of assuming both stack.
How much roof space do I need for a 6 kW system?
About 350–400 square feet, depending on panel wattage. High-output 400 W+ panels fit more watts into the same footprint, which is why commercial crews use them — and why residential pricing keeps dropping.
Is net metering guaranteed in Ontario?
Ontario’s net-metering framework allows eligible renewable systems up to 500 kW, and credits roll over for 12 months before they expire. For normal residential connection paperwork, the newer 12 kW micro-embedded threshold is the number to watch, but your local distribution company still has to approve the connection.



