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Syracuse, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Syracuse, Utah

Syracuse sits on the west side of Davis County between Antelope Island and I-15, and it gets the same high-altitude sun the rest of the Wasatch Front does — roughly 230 sunny days a year, with long summer afternoons that push rooftop arrays into their best production months. That climate, combined with Rocky Mountain Power's net metering program and the federal residential solar tax credit, is why a growing share of newer Syracuse builds in neighborhoods like Bluff Ridge, Wasatch Acres, and the developments off Bluff Road and 2000 West already have panels on the roof. Homes here tend to be 2010-or-newer two-story builds on quarter-acre lots, which means south-facing roof planes large enough to host a meaningful 6-10 kW system.

Buyers shopping solar-equipped homes in Syracuse are usually weighing two things: whether the system is owned outright (rolled into the purchase price) or leased/PPA (you assume the contract), and how the array pairs with the home's electric load — heat pumps, EV chargers, and air conditioning all matter when summer bills climb. Most listings in Syracuse with solar are owned systems financed through the original build, which is the cleaner scenario at closing. It's worth asking for twelve months of power bills and the interconnection agreement before you write an offer. Browse the active listings below to see which Syracuse homes currently have solar, and reach out if you want help reading the system specs on a specific property.

May 2026 · Syracuse market

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

Full Syracuse market report
Median sale
$597,000
30 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
16 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
125
active + pending

8 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Syracuse.

Is solar worth it in Syracuse's climate?

Yes — Davis County averages around 230 sunny days, and the high elevation means panels produce efficiently even in cold weather. A typical 7-8 kW system on a Syracuse home offsets most or all of the annual electric bill, especially if the roof has a clean south or southwest exposure.

How do I tell if the solar panels are owned or leased?

Ask the listing agent for the original solar contract and the UCC-1 filing, if any. Owned systems transfer with the home and add value; leased systems or PPAs require the buyer to qualify with the solar company and assume the monthly payment. Lenders will want this sorted before closing.

Does Rocky Mountain Power still offer net metering in Syracuse?

Rocky Mountain Power operates an export credit program rather than the old 1:1 net metering — credits for exported power are lower than the retail rate, but the math still works for most owned systems. Homes interconnected before 2017 may be grandfathered into better rates, which is worth verifying on a specific listing.

Will solar panels affect my property taxes in Utah?

Utah exempts residential solar from property tax reassessment, so adding panels — or buying a home that already has them — doesn't push your tax bill higher. The system does typically add to appraised value when it's owned outright.

Are there many solar-equipped homes on the market in Syracuse right now?

Inventory shifts week to week, but Syracuse consistently has more solar listings than older Davis County cities because so much of its housing stock was built after 2015, when residential solar adoption took off along the Wasatch Front. The active count is shown above.

What should I check during the inspection on a solar home?

Have the inspector verify roof condition under and around the array, check the inverter age (most last 10-15 years), and request a recent production report from the monitoring app. Also confirm the system is properly permitted with Syracuse City and interconnected with Rocky Mountain Power.