Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in La Verkin, Utah
La Verkin sits at the edge of Utah's Dixie, about 20 minutes northeast of St. George and right on the way to Zion National Park. The town averages around 255 sunny days a year, with summer highs that routinely push past 100°F from June through September — which is exactly why solar makes financial sense here. Air conditioning runs hard for five months straight, and rooftop systems sized correctly can knock a $300+ summer Rocky Mountain Power bill down to the monthly minimum connection fee. Most solar homes in La Verkin are single-family builds from the late 1990s onward in neighborhoods off State Street and up toward the Hurricane bench, with newer construction along the rim carrying the larger 8-12 kW arrays.
When shopping solar-equipped listings here, the big question is always ownership: is the system owned outright, financed, or leased through a third party like Sunrun or Sunnova? Owned systems add resale value and transfer cleanly at closing. Leased or PPA systems require the buyer to qualify with the solar company and assume the contract, which can complicate financing. Ask for the most recent 12 months of power bills, the inverter age, and whether the panels convey with a transferable workmanship warranty. Net metering rules in Utah have shifted over the past several years, so the export credit rate the seller locked in may or may not transfer — worth confirming with Rocky Mountain Power before you write an offer. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in La Verkin.
June 2026 · La Verkin market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in La Verkin right now.
4 matching · page 1 of 1
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 4 homes with solar panels on a map
Pan around La Verkin and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About homes with solar panels in La Verkin.
Are most solar systems on La Verkin homes owned or leased? ▾
It's a mix. Homes built or upgraded between roughly 2016 and 2020 often have leased or PPA systems through Sunrun, Vivint Solar (now Sunrun), or Sunnova, while newer construction and owner-installed retrofits tend to be owned outright. The listing remarks should specify, but always verify with the title company before closing — a leased system requires the buyer to qualify and assume the contract.
How much can solar realistically save on a La Verkin power bill? ▾
With summer AC loads, an unshaded 8-10 kW system covering a 2,000-2,500 sq ft home typically offsets 80-100% of annual usage. Real-world owners here often see July and August bills drop from $250-$400 down to the $8-$10 minimum Rocky Mountain Power connection charge, with small credits banked in shoulder months.
Does Utah still offer net metering for new solar owners? ▾
Rocky Mountain Power moved from full retail net metering to a lower export credit rate several years ago, and existing customers were grandfathered at higher rates through specific cutoff dates. If the seller installed before that cutoff, confirm in writing whether the favorable rate transfers to a new owner — in many cases it does not, which changes the long-term savings math.
Will solar panels affect my mortgage or appraisal? ▾
Owned systems generally appraise as a value-add and don't complicate financing. Leased systems are the issue — the lease shows up as a lien (UCC filing) on the property, and some lenders require it to be subordinated or paid off before closing. FHA and VA loans can be especially picky here, so loop your lender in early.
What should I inspect on a solar-equipped home in La Verkin? ▾
Get the system age, inverter warranty status (string inverters typically last 10-15 years, microinverters 20-25), roof condition under the panels, and the last 12 months of production data from the monitoring app. Dust and red-rock grit accumulate fast down here, so ask when the panels were last cleaned and whether there's any visible hot-spot damage.
Are there HOA restrictions on solar in La Verkin neighborhoods? ▾
Utah state law (HB 330 and related statutes) prevents HOAs from outright banning rooftop solar, but they can regulate placement and appearance within reason. La Verkin has relatively few strict HOAs compared to St. George master-planned communities, so most homes have straightforward south- or west-facing arrays without aesthetic battles.