How Much Does Solar Installation Cost in Denver County, CO?
A 6 kW solar system in Denver County, CO typically runs $61,200 pre-incentive — 3.4x the national average. Full cost breakdown inside.
What homeowners in Denver County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
6 kW System (Pre-incentive)
10 kW System (Pre-incentive)
System with Battery Backup
National avg $18,000 × 3.4x multiplier = $61,200
Why Denver County prices look like this.
Labor Costs: Solar Installer Wages in Denver
Hazard Risk: Hail and Lightning Dominate Denver Solar
Climate Zone 5B: Cold-Dry Conditions
Electricity Rates and Payback
Financing: Mortgage Rates and Home Equity
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Questions buyers ask about solar in Denver County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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How much does a 6 kW solar system cost in Denver County?
Pre-incentive, a 6 kW system in Denver County typically costs around **$61,200**, with a range from about **$51,000 to $74,800**. That's the national $15,000-$22,000 range multiplied by Denver's 3.4x regional cost multiplier.
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How much more expensive is solar in Denver versus the national average?
Denver County sits in the **very high** cost tier at a **3.4x national multiplier** per 2023 ACS data. A system that costs $18,000 in an average U.S. market is typically priced at **$61,200** here, and a 10 kW system runs roughly $93,500 versus $27,500 nationally.
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What hazards should I factor into a Denver solar purchase?
**Hail (FEMA score 99.87)** and **lightning (98.57)** dominate — both Very High. Overall county risk is 95.23, Relatively High. Pay for IEC 61215 Class 4 hail-rated panels and verify your homeowner's policy covers roof equipment at replacement cost, not actual cash value.
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What do solar installers earn in Denver?
Per 2024 OEWS data, Solar Photovoltaic Installers (SOC 472231) in the Denver-Aurora-Lakewood metro earn a mean of **$26.51/hr** or **$55,140/yr**. Labor wages this far above minimum reflect steady competition for skilled electrical trades across the Front Range.
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What's my payback on solar given current electricity rates?
Colorado residential power averaged **$0.164/kWh** in January 2026. A 6 kW system producing ~9,000 kWh/year offsets about **$1,476 annually** at that rate, before any rate escalation or time-of-use premiums. Scale proportionally for larger arrays.
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Should I finance solar through a mortgage or a solar loan?
With 30-year mortgages at **6.38%** (MORTGAGE30US, 2026-03-26) and median Denver home values at **$586,700**, a cash-out refi or HELOC is often competitive with dedicated solar loans, which typically price 1-3 points higher. Run both scenarios side by side.
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Does Denver's cold climate hurt solar production?
No — IECC Zone **5B** (cold-dry) actually helps. Cold temperatures improve panel efficiency, and Denver's clear skies deliver strong insolation. Expect 8,500-9,500 kWh/year from a 6 kW system, supporting the roughly $1,400-$1,560 annual offset at $0.164/kWh.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.