
How to find the best solar providers near you
Searching “solar providers near me” turns up a mix of real local installers, national sales companies, and lead-generation sites that sell your information. Knowing how to tell them apart is the whole game. This guide walks through exactly what to check, the red flags to avoid, and how to compare quotes — whether or not you end up working with us.
What to look for in a local solar provider
- A verifiable contractor license — CSLB in California, CILB/county in Florida, NSCB in Nevada. Look it up; it takes two minutes.
- They install their own work — not a sales org that subcontracts to the cheapest crew.
- Real local reviews — Google Business Profile and BBB, with recent dated reviews from your area.
- Designs for your utility — FL hurricane wind-zone mounting + 1:1 net metering; CA NEM 3.0 + battery + SGIP; NV’s 75% export credit.
- Own-vs-lease shown as math — a good provider compares both in writing instead of pushing a lease at the door.
- They service what they sell — proof they’ll be around for the 25-year life of the system.
Red flags to walk away from
- Door-to-door pressure and “today-only” pricing.
- “We work with licensed partners” instead of their own license number.
- Oversized systems “to bank credits” (outdated math in NEM 3.0 markets).
- A lease-only pitch with no own-vs-lease comparison.
- A web form that just sells your info to multiple companies (lead-gen sites).
Why a local provider usually beats a national brand
Solar is a 25-year asset, and the biggest risk is buying from a company that won’t be around to support it — a lesson driven home by SunPower’s 2024 bankruptcy. Local installers carry less sales overhead (so quotes are often lower), design for your specific climate and utility, and answer the phone in year 7. We make the detailed case in our Sunrun, Blue Raven, and SunPower alternative guides.
Solar providers by area
We serve three regions — start with the local guide for your area:
- Southwest Florida — North Port, Venice, Port Charlotte, Punta Gorda, Fort Myers, Sarasota. Solar + roofing, hurricane-rated. See our FL service pages.
- San Diego County — best solar companies in San Diego (NEM 3.0 + battery + SGIP).
- Las Vegas Valley — best solar companies in Las Vegas (NV Energy, desert-rated).
How to compare solar quotes
Get at least two written quotes and compare the total cost, the equipment (panel + inverter + battery brands), the warranty terms, and whether each company self-installs. Use the same checklist on every provider — the license number and the equipment spec end most weak pitches fast. Our how to choose a solar installer guide has the full comparison checklist.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find a reputable solar provider near me?
Check for a verifiable contractor license, real local Google/BBB reviews, proof they install their own work, and a design built for your utility. Get two written quotes and compare them on the same checklist.
Are local solar providers cheaper than national companies?
Usually yes. National door-to-door companies carry a large sales overhead that lands in your price; local installers routinely quote lower for the same equipment.
What licenses should a solar provider have?
California: CSLB (C-46 or C-10). Florida: a certified solar/electrical or roofing license plus county registration. Nevada: NSCB. Always verify the number on the state board’s site.
Should I use a solar lead-generation site?
Be careful — many “find solar near me” forms sell your information to several companies, which means a flood of sales calls. Going directly to a licensed local installer avoids that.
Get a quote from a local provider you can verify
Call (941) 830-4937 (Florida) or (619) 456-5352 (California & Nevada). We’ll give you a written quote you can hold against every box on this page — license, equipment, warranty, and own-vs-lease math. See our solar installation guide to know what to expect.