| Streamlining rooftop solar permitting could cut costs by 61% 
 Permit   Power finds that by reducing bureaucratic barriers to residential   solar, nearly 20 million more families in the U.S. could install solar   by 2040, leading to $1.2 trillion in lifetime bill savings.
 
 October 27, 2025                                               Anne Fischer
 
 
   SunPower residential rooftop solar installation.
 
 Image: SunPower
 
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 A recent report by Permit Power,   As Cheap as Our Peers: How cutting red tape can lower the cost of rooftop solar and offset rising utility billsfinds that by cutting the red tape in rooftop solar permitting, almost 20 million more families would install solar by 2040.
 
 Solar in the U.S. costs   up to seven times more   to install than in Australia and Germany, according to the Permit  Power  report. It estimates that in the U.S. the median cost is $28,000  for a 7  kW system, whereas it would be $4,000 in Australia and $10,000  in  Germany. These high costs are impediments to adoption, the report  notes,  with just one in ten families in the U.S. having solar, compared  to one  in three in Australia.
 
 
  Image: Permit Power
 
 Prior to the passage of the   One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), people in the U.S. were incentivized to go solar with a 30% tax credit; however, that credit ends at the end of 2025.
 
 The high cost of solar comes at a time  when utility bills are rising  faster than inflation, with that trend  expected to continue, according  to Permit Power. The report notes that  while one in seven households  are living in energy poverty, most cannot  afford the high cost of  solar, which would help cut their energy costs.  Rooftop solar can  reduce electricity bills by over 80%, according to the  report.
 
 The report finds that if U.S. households  could buy rooftop solar at  the same price as Australian or German  households, almost 20 million  more would install solar by 2040. Permit  Power estimates they would see  average annual bill savings of $1,600,  resulting in aggregate  electricity bill savings of $1.2 trillion over  the lifetime of these  additional rooftop solar systems.
 
 Reducing bureaucratic  barriers,  particularly rooftop solar permitting, inspection and  interconnection  processes, will reduce installation costs in many areas  in the United  States, the report finds.
 
 “There is strong  research that shows how  unnecessary bureaucratic barriers raise the  cost of rooftop solar and  home batteries in the United States,” said  Talor Gruenwald, Research  Director of Permit Power and author of the  report. “This is the first  research that shows the enormous benefits  that would accrue to American  families if we removed those bureaucratic  barriers and brought the costs  of home solar and batteries down to  levels in other peer countries.”
 
 
  Image: Permit Power
 
 According  to OpenSolar, a solar design and  permitting software specialist, soft  costs account for 78% of the total  installed cost for residential  solar. These  can include what the report describes as “costs and delays  associated  with outdated and cumbersome approval processes, such as  varying and  convoluted permitting requirements across localities,  differing  requirements between plan reviewers and inspectors within the  same  jurisdiction, and unresponsive and bureaucratic utility  interconnection  processes that can stop projects being turned on for  months after they  have been completed.”
 
 The solution
 
 The report outlines ways in which policymakers can cut the bureaucratic red tape:
 [Also read “  Simplify solar volunteer campaign launches across the U.S.“]Adopt  instant permitting software or  qualified third party permitting to  issue instant permits for standard  residential solar and battery  projects.Use remote inspection protocols that allow code  compliance to be  verified through photos or video submissions for  routine residential  installations.Implement automatic utility  interconnection approvals for qualifying  residential systems that use  smart inverters and meet established  technical screens.Update  outdated local government and utility requirements that  mandate the  installation of unnecessary and expensive hardware and  prevent the use  of modern cost-saving technology.These and other policies to  cut red tape would enable 23% of U.S.  households to get rooftop solar  by 2040, according to the report.
 
 pv-magazine-usa.com
 
 My comments:
 
 I can personally directly confirm the cost difference of solar installed here vs Australia.
 
 About a dollar a watt installed in Australia in March of 2020 vs $2.80 a watt installed here in the U.S.  for a typical 7 kW PV system.
 
 Eric
 
 P.S. It's cheaper in Australia today along with storage to boot!
 
 Those impressive cost declines just keep coming...
 
 The beauty of scale.
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