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Provo, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Provo, Utah

Solar makes a lot of sense in Provo. Utah Valley sits at roughly 4,500 feet with more than 230 sunny days a year, and the combination of high elevation, dry air, and long summer daylight gives rooftop arrays strong year-round production. Provo homeowners have been adding panels steadily for the past decade, helped along by federal tax credits and Utah's now-retired state credit, so it's common to see resale homes east of University Avenue, up on the foothills above BYU, and out in newer Lakeview and west-side subdivisions already wired with 6–10 kW systems on the roof.

For buyers, the details matter more than the panels themselves. Whether a system is owned outright or still on a lease changes how the deal is written, and Rocky Mountain Power's current net billing rules mean newer systems credit exports at a lower rate than the original net-metering era. Inverter age, roof condition under the array, and transferable warranties all belong on your due-diligence list. Provo's mix of older homes near downtown and newer construction toward the south and east sides means solar setups vary widely in size, age, and value. The listings below show what's currently active with solar already installed — browse through to see system sizes, ownership status, and how each one fits the rest of the home.

May 2026 · Provo market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Provo right now.

Full Provo market report
Median sale
$445,000
61 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
20 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
247
active + pending

7 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Provo.

Does Provo get enough sun to make solar worthwhile?

Yes. Provo averages around 230+ sunny days a year, and Utah Valley's high elevation means strong solar irradiance even in winter. Most south-facing roofs here produce well, though heavy snow days and the January inversion can cut output for short stretches. Annual production usually pencils out close to what installers project.

Are the solar panels owned or leased on most Provo listings?

Both show up on the MLS. Owned systems (paid in full or financed) typically transfer with the home and add resale value. Leased systems or PPAs require the buyer to qualify with the solar company and assume the remaining payments — always ask the listing agent which arrangement applies before writing an offer.

How does Rocky Mountain Power handle net metering in Provo?

Provo is served by Rocky Mountain Power, which uses a net billing structure rather than full 1:1 net metering for newer installs. Export credits are lower than they were under the old program, so the financial picture depends heavily on when the system was installed and which rate schedule it locked in.

Will a solar system affect my mortgage or appraisal?

Owned systems generally appraise as part of the home and don't complicate financing. Leased systems can be trickier — lenders sometimes count the lease payment as a debt, and the UCC-1 filing on the panels has to be resolved at closing. Loop your lender in early if the listing mentions a lease.

Do solar homes in Provo command a price premium?

Owned systems typically add somewhere in the $10K–$20K range to a Provo home's value, depending on system size and age. Premiums are stronger in neighborhoods near BYU and in newer east-bench subdivisions where buyers expect efficiency upgrades. Older or undersized systems add less.

What should I inspect on a home with existing panels?

Ask for the last 12 months of production data and power bills, the inverter age (inverters usually need replacement around year 12–15), the roof condition under the array, and any transferable warranties. A roof nearing the end of its life under a 25-year solar array is a real cost to factor in.