
Solar Panel Rebates BC For Rooftops And Battery Storage Updated 2025
October 22, 2025For most people, the real question is, “Can I get solar for $0 down, and will my new monthly payment be less than my BC Hydro bill?”
Let’s break down this new way to go solar in British Columbia, look at the financing that makes it possible, and explain why the old government grants aren’t the focus anymore.
The Big Question: How Much Do Solar Panels Cost in BC?
First, let’s talk about the cash price if you were to pay for it all upfront. Installers use a “per watt” price to make quotes easy to compare.
Average Upfront Cost (The “Per Watt” Price)
In British Columbia, the average cash cost of installing solar panels typically lands between $2.50 and $3.50 per watt. This price includes the panels, inverter, mounting, and all labour.
Here’s what that looks like in a table.
| System Size (kW) | Average Upfront Cost (BC) | Approx. Annual Production (kWh) | Good For… |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kW | $12,500 – $17,500 | 5,000 – 6,000 kWh | A smaller home, lower energy usage. |
| 8 kW | $20,000 – $28,000 | 8,000 – 9,600 kWh | An average family home in BC. |
| 10 kW | $25,000 – $35,000 | 10,000 – 12,000 kWh | A larger home, high electricity bill, or an electric vehicle. |
Looking at those numbers, you can see the problem: most people just don’t have $20,000 or $30,000 to spend out of pocket on the complete solar system price. This is the single biggest reason homeowners hesitate, often due to common myths about solar.
Use Our Solar Calculator for the $0 Down Payment Plan
Those cash prices are why we focus on a different approach. We built our solar panel calculator for one specific purpose: to show you what your numbers look like on a 15-year, 0% financing plan with $0 down.
This isn’t a generic calculator. It’s based on a direct financing program from Polaron, a leading installer with over 250 installations in BC. I work with them because they solve the upfront cash problem.
How This Solar Calculator Works
When you use our calculator, it’s not just finding a “cost.” It’s doing this:
- Sizing Your System: It looks at your address (for sunlight) and your average BC Hydro bill to see how much power you use (in kWh).
- Calculating Your Payment: It then figures out the cost for that system and divides it into a 15-year, 0% interest monthly payment.
- Comparing Bills: The goal is to get you a new, fixed monthly payment for your solar system that is less than what you’re already paying BC Hydro.
Sometimes the new payment is $5 or $10 higher in the first year. But your solar payment is fixed for 15 years, while your BC Hydro electricity bill will keep rising, year after year.
BC Solar Incentives: What’s Left?
The financial landscape for solar has changed. It’s critical to know what’s gone and what’s still available.
Federal: Greener Homes Grant & Loan are GONE
Let’s be clear: The Canada Greener Homes Grant and the Greener Homes Loan are closed. They are no longer accepting new applications.
This is why the 0% financing offer is so important, it’s the answer to ‘now what?‘ It has replaced the old government programs as the main way to make solar affordable for regular homeowners.
Provincial: What You Still Get in BC
British Columbia still has a very valuable incentive:
- PST Exemption: Solar panel systems are exempt from the 7% Provincial Sales Tax (PST). On a $25,000 system, that’s an instant $1,750 you don’t have to pay.
- BC Hydro Rebates: Always check the BC Hydro rebates page. They sometimes offer smaller, specific rebates, but the main driver is the PST exemption and the net metering program.
How Solar Power Really Works in BC (Hello, BC Hydro)
Many people think going solar means cutting ties with BC Hydro. For 99% of residential solar, this isn’t true. You stay connected to the grid, and BC Hydro’s net metering program is what makes the investment work.
The BC Hydro Net Metering Program Explained
Net metering is a billing arrangement. It’s simple: you only pay for the “net” amount of electricity you use.
What Happens to Your Excess Energy?
Here is the process on a typical day:
- Daytime: Your solar panels generate electricity. Your home uses this clean energy first.
- Excess Power: On a sunny afternoon, you’ll likely make more power than you use. This excess energy flows back to the grid.
- Credits: BC Hydro gives you a credit for every kWh of excess energy you send them.
- Night/Cloudy Days: When your panels aren’t producing, you pull power from the grid, just like you do now.
- The Bill: At the end of your billing cycle (BC Hydro settles this annually), they “net” the bill. They subtract the value of the credits you earned from the power you used.
Calculating Your Long-Term Savings (The $0 Down Way)
The old way was calculating a “payback period” on a big cash purchase. The new way is calculating your total long-term savings when you pay nothing upfront.
From Hydro Bill to Solar Payment
Think of it this way: You are just swapping your BC Hydro bill (which goes up all the time) for a fixed solar payment that never goes up.
After your 15-year financing is done, that payment disappears completely. But your panels keep producing free electricity for another 10-15 years (or more).
This is where the real savings are. By the end of your system’s 25-year life, you are projected to have saved between $30,000 and $40,000 on electricity.
A Personal Take: Why This Model Works
I’ve seen people hesitate for years over the upfront cost. When I first looked at solar for my own home, the payback was maybe 16 years, and I had to find the cash. The 0% financing model solves this. When I also bought an electric vehicle, my hydro bill shot up. Locking in a payment that was lower than my new, higher bill was a clear financial win.
Finding a Good Solar Installer in British Columbia
Your choice of installer is critical. A bad solar installation will cause leaks and production problems.
Tip for Vetting Installers
Here’s my tip: Ask about the financing and the service. This is why I partner with Polaron for the Canada Goes Solar project. They offer the 15-year, 0% financing that makes it possible, and they also guarantee to take care of any issues within 48 hours. That’s a solid guarantee.
Ask other installers if they can match that. Get at least three quotes, but compare the financing terms and service guarantees, not just the per-watt cash price.
So, that’s the breakdown for installing solar panels in BC. The game has changed. It’s not about the old grants; it’s about $0 down financing.
Use our solar panel calculator to see if your home qualifies and what your new, fixed monthly payment would be. It’s the only way to see if the long-term savings make sense for you.




