Solar panels in Vallejo, California
Vallejo is a bayside Solano County city with a varied, value-priced housing stock. With electricity prices climbing and the export rules tighter than they used to be, the smart question isn’t just “how much is solar?” — it’s how to size a system for Vallejo’s sun, your utility’s credit rules, and backup power. Here’s an honest, local rundown.
Vallejo sits on the north shore of San Pablo Bay in Solano County, where a marine influence tempers the heat but inland afternoons still push cooling demand. Its housing is famously varied — grand Victorians and Craftsman homes in the Heritage District and Old Town, plus postwar tracts on the hills toward American Canyon — so roof age and shade shift block to block and a site visit matters. High electricity costs and lower home prices than pricier bay cities have made solar an attractive value play for many Vallejo owners.
PG&E is your electric utility, so new rooftop solar goes on NEM 3.0 (the Net Billing Tariff that took effect in April 2023). The energy you send to the grid earns export credits tied to hourly avoided-cost values — usually just a few cents per kWh, far below the retail rate you pay. The winning strategy is to size the system to use your own solar during the day and add a battery to store midday production for the expensive 4–9 pm peak.
A typical 7 kW rooftop system in Vallejo produces about 10,500 kWh per year (roughly 1500 kWh for every kW installed — Vallejo’s local sun). Installed prices in Northern California generally run about $3.50–$4.50 per watt, so a 7 kW system lands around $24,000–$31,000 before a battery. Financing can spread that cost but doesn’t lower it, and the 30% federal tax credit ended after 2025. Your real number depends on your roof and usage, which is exactly what the rooftop designer estimates from satellite imagery.
Summers around Vallejo run hot, when air-conditioning drives the late-afternoon peak and grid Flex Alerts. Solar covers the daytime load, and adding a battery stores cheap midday sun for the 4–9 pm peak — and keeps your AC and fridge on through the outages that heat waves can trigger.
Incentives & what changed in 2026
The 30% federal residential solar tax credit ended after 2025, so a cash or financed purchase no longer earns it. What still helps with a battery: California’s SGIP program — though its general and equity budgets closed to new applications at the end of 2025, so in 2026 the main pathway open to new applicants is the income-qualified Residential Solar & Storage Equity (RSSE) track. Lease / PPA financing may still capture the federal business credit through 2027 and pass some of it through — ask any installer to show you both a cash and a financed option. Program budgets and rules change often, so confirm what’s currently available before you decide.
How to start in Vallejo
Skip the high-pressure sales visit. Start with your own numbers: design a system for your address to see your roof’s potential, read how NEM 3.0 and PG&E rates work in Northern California, then request a free, no-pressure check below — a local specialist follows up with a straight answer for your home.
Is solar worth it in Vallejo?
For most Vallejo homeowners, yes. A typical 7 kW system here produces roughly 10,500 kWh a year, which offsets a large share of a normal home's usage. Because PG&E credits exported energy below the retail rate under NEM 3.0, the best returns come from using your solar during the day and adding a battery to cover the evening peak. Payback commonly lands in the 8-12 year range depending on your bill, roof and whether you add storage.
Which utility handles net metering in Vallejo?
Vallejo is served by PG&E. That matters because the rules for crediting the solar you export differ by utility, and it changes how you should size the system and whether a battery pays off. Always confirm the current tariff before you sign.
Do I need a battery to go solar in Vallejo?
A battery isn't required, but in Vallejo it usually makes sense: it stores cheap midday solar for the expensive evening peak and keeps your home powered during outages. Solar panels by themselves shut off in a grid outage for safety, so storage is what actually gives you backup.
More Northern California cities
See if solar is right for your Northern California home
Share a few details and a specialist will get back to you with a free, no-obligation look at whether solar makes sense for your roof, your PG&E bill, and your local sun. We’ll also tell you if a battery for PSPS backup is worth it.
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Golden State Solar Guide is an independent guide, not a solar installer. We give you honest information, then connect you with a vetted, licensed local solar professional if you want one. You’re never obligated to buy.