Solar · Oregon
Oregon homes paid an average 15.8¢ per kilowatt-hour in April — below the U.S. average. Most solar companies won't open with that. We do, because solar has to beat your bill, not a national one.
Takes 30 seconds · No spam · No door-knock unless you ask.
The Pencil Promise
Every quote is the full monthly number, in writing, before you sign anything. If solar doesn't beat your bill, we say so and walk.
Every quote comes with a walk-away guarantee: if the math fails, we tell you. Prefer to talk first? Call 1-888-801-6789 or text (801) 634-0177.
Read our Google reviews →The numbers
What power costs in Oregon.
Average price an Oregon home paid per kilowatt-hour in April 2026 — below the U.S. average of 18.8¢ (EIA, preliminary).
U.S. home electricity prices since 2021 (BLS CPI). Cheap today is not a 25-year guarantee.
Rate hikes U.S. utilities requested last year — more than double the year before (PowerLines).
Sources: U.S. EIA Electric Power Monthly, Table 5.6.A (April 2026, preliminary); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI (electricity, 2021–2025); PowerLines 2025 utility rate-case review.
The honest read
Oregon rates are low. We say that first.
Most solar pitches skip the part where Oregon power is still fairly cheap. We start there. The real question is whether one fixed payment beats 25 more years of rate moves on your usage and your roof. Sometimes it does, clearly. When it doesn't, the Pencil Promise means we say so and walk.
Takes 30 seconds · No spam · No door-knock unless you ask.