Solar payback period in Las Vegas runs 7–10 years for cash buyers and 11–14 years for financed buyers in 2026. The driver isn't sun hours (we have plenty) — it's NV Energy's rising retail rate, the 30% federal tax credit, and whether you let an installer oversize your system.
What "payback" actually means
Payback period = total system cost (after incentives) divided by annual electricity savings. Once you hit payback, the rest of the panels' 25-year warranty is essentially free electricity. From my last 6 LV installs, the average cash payback came in at 8.2 years.
Cash payback math, line by line
Take an 8 kW system in Henderson on a $230/month NV Energy bill:
- Gross system cost: $24,000
- Federal tax credit (30%): -$7,200
- Net cost: $16,800
- Annual NV Energy bill before solar: $2,760
- Annual residual bill (fixed charges + small offset gap): $360
- Annual savings: $2,400
- Cash payback: 7.0 years
That's before factoring in NV Energy rate increases — which are real and documented in the EIA Nevada electricity profile. Add 3% annual rate inflation and payback shrinks to about 6.4 years.
Financed payback math
Same system, financed at 7.99% over 25 years with a 22% dealer fee:
- Financed amount: ~$29,300
- Monthly payment: ~$226
- NV Energy bill after solar: ~$30
- Combined monthly outlay: ~$256 (vs $230 before)
You're cash-flow negative by about $26/month for the loan term, but you own the asset. Real payback once the loan is paid: 13–14 years.
Lease payback
Trick question — there is no payback on a lease. You're renting power. Savings are typically 10–25% off your NV Energy bill, but you don't own anything and you can't claim the tax credit. I won't quote leases for Vegas homeowners. The math doesn't favor you.
What shortens payback
- Right-sizing. A system that produces 95–105% of your usage pays back faster than one producing 130%, because NV Energy's net metering credit is below retail.
- Battery for self-consumption. Storing daytime solar to use at night beats exporting it for partial credit.
- Cash or HELOC. Avoid the 22%+ dealer fee on solar loans.
- Pre-paid roof prep. If your roof needs replacement in 5 years, do it before the panels go up.
What lengthens payback
- Oversizing past 105% of usage
- Buying premium panels you don't need (Tier-1 monocrystalline at 22% efficiency is plenty in Vegas sun)
- Adding two batteries when one would do
- Door-to-door pricing — usually 25–40% above local installer rates
NV Energy rate increases — the silent accelerator
NV Energy's residential rates have moved up multiple times in the last three years. Every approved rate increase shortens your solar payback because your savings grow. I model 3% annual rate inflation in my quotes — historically that's been conservative.
Henderson vs Summerlin vs central Vegas
Payback differences across the valley are small (within 6 months). What moves it more: pool pumps (faster payback), all-electric homes with heat pumps (faster), gas-heated homes with low summer cooling load (slower). I cover the city-by-city math on my Henderson and Summerlin pages.
The 25-year picture
On the 8 kW Henderson example: $16,800 net cost, ~$2,400/year savings growing 3% annually = roughly $87,000 of lifetime electricity savings. Subtract net cost and you're up about $70,000 over 25 years. That's the real number — payback is just the milestone.
How to verify your own payback before signing
Three things any honest installer will give you in writing:
- Year-1 production estimate based on your address (PVWatts or NREL data)
- Itemized cost broken into hardware + labor + soft costs
- NV Energy rate assumption used in the savings model (anything under 2% is sandbagging payback to look better; anything over 5% is overpromising)
Want your specific payback number with the math visible? Request a quote here and I'll run it on your actual bill.