TL;DR
If you’ve been thinking about solar but haven’t yet taken the plunge, year-end is a good time to clarify your questions and priorities for the coming year. A few focused questions can make early conversations with installers more productive.
Short Intro
Many Washington and Oregon homeowners spend a year or more in the “research and thinking” phase before deciding on solar. That’s normal.
This post suggests a handful of questions you can bring into 2027 to help turn curiosity into a clear decision, whether the answer ends up being yes or no.
Key Takeaways
Clarifying your goals—savings, resilience, sustainability—guides system design.
Understanding your roof, shading, and electric usage is foundational.
Asking installers about process and support is as important as asking about equipment.
A prepared homeowner tends to get more useful proposals.
Clarify What You Want Solar to Do for You
Before you talk to anyone, take a few minutes to write down what you hope solar will accomplish.
Are you mainly interested in lowering bills, gaining some backup capability, reducing your carbon footprint, or a mix of these? How long do you plan to stay in your home?
These answers shape whether solar is a good fit and what kind of system makes sense.
Gather Basic Information About Your Home
Installers can give better guidance when you provide a bit of context up front.
Useful information includes:
Your roof type, age, and any known issues.
Whether you have shading from nearby trees or structures.
A recent electric bill or, ideally, 12 months of usage.
You don’t need to have every detail perfect, but the more accurate your picture, the more tailored the conversation can be.
Questions to Ask Prospective Installers
When you’re ready to talk with installers, consider asking:
How do you size systems for homes like mine in this part of the PNW?
What does your process look like from proposal through interconnection?
How do you handle service and support after installation?
Pay attention not just to the answers, but to how clearly they’re explained and how willing the company is to address your specific concerns.
Planning Your Own Timeline
Solar doesn’t need to be an impulse decision.
Think about:
Whether any roof or electrical work should come first.
How incentives, budgets, and personal timing line up.
Whether you want to complete a project in 2027 or simply gather information.
Even deciding that “this is the year we’ll get clear answers” is a meaningful step forward.
Closing
Heading into 2027, asking the right questions about solar is often more important than knowing all the answers in advance.
If solar has been on your mind, consider using this year-end period to clarify your goals and gather a bit of home and usage information. With that foundation, conversations with local installers in the new year will be more focused, transparent, and useful.
