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Solar Panels: The Biggest Scam in Modern Homeownership

Solar Panels: The Biggest Scam in Modern Homeownership

Every few weeks, it happens again.

A homeowner calls us excited about selling their home—until we ask one simple question:

“Do you have solar panels?”

If the answer is yes, especially if they’re leased or financed, we already know what’s coming next: shock, frustration, and a rough road ahead.

The Door-to-Door Solar Pitch

Solar salespeople are everywhere right now. They knock on doors, blanket entire neighborhoods, and pitch the same lines over and over:

What they don’t tell homeowners is far more important:


A Real-World Example From a Deal That Is Failing Right Now

We’re currently working with a buyer who attempted to purchase a home built in 2023, bought new from the builder for $885,000 by the current owner.

The sellers added a leased solar panel system shortly after purchase.

Here’s what that lease actually looks like:

Let that sink in.

Nearly $90,000 paid over time for something the homeowner does not own, cannot freely remove, and cannot force a buyer to accept. And, they gave the tax credit to the solar company! If this isn’t a scam, what is?


Why This Kills Resale Value

The home is currently listed for $899,000.

But here’s the problem:

That’s a $100,000+ problem.

The sellers don’t have the cash to cover the difference, and buyers are rightfully refusing to:

The result?

The house can’t sell.


Appraisers Don’t Care About Your Solar Panels

This is one of the most misunderstood parts of solar.

In most cases:

Why?

Because appraisers value market reaction, not marketing claims.

And the market reaction to solar leases is simple:

Buyers see them as a liability. Dozens of holes in the roof created by solar panels cause many leak points in the roof. When roofs have to be changed, you have to pay to have solar removed, then reinstalled each time.


The Transfer Myth

Solar companies love to say:

“The loan or lease can be transferred to the new buyer.”

What they don’t say:

And per the loan or lease itself, if the buyer doesn’t qualify, the seller must:

That’s not flexibility. That’s a trap.


Who Actually Wins With Solar Leases?

Let’s be honest:

This is not green energy.
This is green marketing.


When (If Ever) Solar Makes Sense (Hint: It doesn’t)

Solar can make sense in very specific situations:

But leased or heavily financed systems sold as “free” upgrades?

Those are financially reckless for most homeowners.


Final Warning to Homeowners

If a solar salesperson is at your door, tell that scammer to go home, or if you’re really curious, ask them one question:

“What happens when I sell my home?”

Then read the contract.
Then talk to a real estate professional.
Then talk to your lender.
Then talk to your appraiser.

Because once those panels are on your roof, the problem becomes yours—not theirs.


Bottom Line

Solar panels are being sold as an upgrade, but in reality, they often act as a financial anchor.

We’re seeing it every day in real transactions.

And for many homeowners, the realization comes far too late.

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