Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Park City, Utah
Solar makes a different kind of sense in Park City than it does down in the valley. At 7,000 feet, the air is thinner and the sun hits harder — Summit County averages around 230+ sunny days a year, and even mid-winter produces strong solar yields once crews clear the panels. That matters because Park City homes are energy-hungry: long heating seasons, snowmelt driveways, hot tubs running year-round, and increasingly EV chargers in the garage for the commute down to Salt Lake. A well-sized PV array on a south-facing roof in Old Town, Promontory, Jeremy Ranch, or Silver Springs can offset a serious chunk of a Rocky Mountain Power bill, and Summit County's net metering rules still make residential solar pencil out for most owners.
Buyers shopping solar-equipped homes here tend to fall into two camps: primary residents who want predictable energy costs on a 4,000+ sq ft mountain home, and second-home owners who want the property running efficiently while they're away in Los Angeles or Park Avenue. Pay attention to whether the system is owned outright or on a lease/PPA — that distinction changes the closing process and the appraisal. Also worth checking: battery storage (Tesla Powerwall is common up here for outage backup during winter storms), panel age, inverter warranty, and whether the HOA in places like Deer Crest or Glenwild had design review input. Browse the active listings below to see which Park City homes currently have solar installed.
May 2026 · Park City market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Park City right now.
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Common questions
About homes with solar panels in Park City.
Does solar actually work well at Park City's elevation and snow load? ▾
Yes — the high-altitude sun is intense, and cold panels are more efficient than hot ones, so spring and fall production is excellent. The trade-off is snow cover. Most local installers tilt arrays steeply (35-45 degrees) so snow sheds quickly, and some owners add heated panel edges or simply accept lower December-January output.
Are owned solar systems or leased systems more common on Park City listings? ▾
Owned systems are more common in the higher price tiers around Promontory, Glenwild, and Deer Valley, where buyers paid cash or rolled the cost into construction. Leases and PPAs show up more often in Jeremy Ranch, Pinebrook, and Silver Springs resale homes. Always ask for the contract — a transferable lease vs. an owned array is a meaningfully different transaction.
Will solar panels affect my HOA approval in places like Promontory or Deer Crest? ▾
Utah state law protects a homeowner's right to install solar, but HOAs in design-sensitive communities can dictate placement, color, and racking style. Promontory, Deer Crest, and parts of Park Meadows have specific guidelines. If you're buying a home with existing panels, confirm the original install was approved in writing through the HOA's architectural committee.
Does a solar system add resale value in Park City? ▾
Appraisers in Summit County have gotten more comfortable assigning value to owned PV systems over the last several years, particularly when paired with battery storage. Expect a partial cost recovery rather than dollar-for-dollar. Leased systems generally don't add appraised value and can complicate financing if the lease isn't cleanly assumable.
What about battery backup for winter power outages? ▾
Outages do happen in Park City during heavy storms and high winds, so battery storage is a popular add-on. Tesla Powerwall and Enphase IQ batteries are the two systems you'll see most often on local listings. A battery lets the solar keep critical loads — furnace, well pump, refrigerator — running when the grid goes down.
How do I verify the system specs before making an offer? ▾
Ask the listing agent for the original installation contract, system size in kW, panel and inverter manufacturer, install date, warranty documents, and the last 12 months of production data (most owners can pull this from an Enphase or SolarEdge app). Also request the most recent Rocky Mountain Power bills to see net metering credits.