Free guides for homeowners stuck in solar leases, loans, and PPAs. Learn your options by contract type, by situation, and by state — then submit your information for a free intake.
If you signed a solar lease, loan, or PPA and the math is no longer working — bills higher than promised, panels not producing, contract blocking a home sale, installer out of business, or sales process that did not match the paperwork — you are not the only one. The resources below are organized to help you find the situation that matches yours, learn what a qualified law firm may review, and decide whether to submit your information for a free intake.
Important: SCRC is not a law firm. We are a marketing and intake service that connects homeowners with Consumer Advocacy Law Group, the qualified law firm we work with. Submitting your information does not create an attorney-client relationship.
Solar lease, loan, PPA, or cash purchase — your options vary by what you signed.
Bills too high, panels not producing, selling your home, or company out of business.
State-specific consumer protections that may apply to your solar matter.
Consumer protections, costs, and the complete cancellation process explained.
What you signed determines what may be possible. A solar lease, a financed solar loan, a PPA, and a cash purchase each have different cancellation considerations. Start with the contract type that matches yours.
The pillar guide. Covers every contract type, every common reason homeowners look to exit, and what the SCRC + qualified law firm process looks like.
How to exit a 20- or 25-year solar lease. The 3 possible grounds a qualified attorney may review, timelines, and what happens to the panels.
Financed solar (GoodLeap, Mosaic, Sunlight) is different from a lease. TILA disclosures, dealer-fee markups, and the UCC-1 lien on the equipment.
Financed solar (GoodLeap, Mosaic, Sunlight) is different from a lease. TILA disclosures, dealer-fee markups, and the UCC-1 lien on the equipment.
Most homeowners arrive here describing the same situations: the bills did not go down, the panels stopped working, the contract is blocking a home sale, or the installer disappeared. Find the scenario that matches yours below.
Verbal promises about savings, rebates, transferability, or tax credits that did not match the contract. What a qualified attorney may review.
System not producing, monitoring offline, panels never turned on, or installer ignoring service calls. Non-performance considerations.
Buyers refusing to take over a 20-year solar agreement. Transfer, buyout, or addressing the contract before the home is listed.
SunPower, Sunnova, and other recent closures. What happens to the contract, the warranty, and the panels still on your roof.
State consumer protection laws vary. California, Florida, Texas, Arizona, and other states each
have their own statutes that may apply to a solar matter. Find your state below.
California Consumer Legal Remedies Act (CLRA), Business & Professions Code 17200, and the CPUC. The largest solar market in the country.
Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (FDUTPA), hurricane impact on solar contracts, and Florida-specific considerations.
Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA), grid interconnection issues, and considerations for Texas homeowners.
Arizona Consumer Fraud Act, ACC oversight, and considerations for the high-volume Phoenix and Tucson solar markets.
Nevada Deceptive Trade Practices Act and considerations for Las Vegas and Reno-area solar contracts.
Foundation guides on consumer protections, costs, and how the SCRC + qualified law firm
process actually works. Read these to set expectations before you submit your information.
Federal protections (FTC Cooling-Off Rule, TILA, CFPB) and state- level consumer protection laws that may apply to a solar matter.
DIY vs. hiring a law firm directly vs. SCRC’s fixed-fee model. What you actually pay and what is included.
Our pillar guide. The full overview of contract types, common reasons, the process, timelines, costs, and what may happen after a matter is resolved.
If you’re not sure which guide fits your situation, start with one of these. You can always submit your information for a free intake first — SCRC will help you organize your documentation, and the qualified law firm we work with will determine whether your matter may warrant a legal
review.
SCRC maintains an A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau, a signal of how we operate with homeowners.
No hourly billing surprises. SCRC's fee is flat, transparent, and disclosed before any engagement begins.
SCRC connects homeowners with Consumer Advocacy Law Group, the qualified law firm we work with for legal review.
The Learning Hub is SCRC's collection of free guides for homeowners who are looking to
understand their options around a solar lease, loan, or PPA. The guides are organized by
contract type, by situation, and by state, plus a foundation section on consumer rights and
costs.
No. The guides are general information. SCRC is not a law firm and does not provide legal
advice. Legal advice can only come from a qualified attorney who has reviewed the specific
facts of your matter. Submitting your information through SCRC does not create an attorney-
client relationship.
SCRC is a marketing and intake service. We collect and organize your documentation —
contract, communications, billing records — and forward your file to Consumer Advocacy Law
Group, the qualified law firm we work with. The qualified attorney determines whether your
matter may warrant a legal review.
No. Every guide on the Learning Hub is free to read. Submitting your information for an intake is
also free. SCRC’s fixed fee applies only if you choose to engage SCRC’s services after the
intake conversation.
If you are not sure where to start, read How to Cancel a Solar Contract — Complete Guide. It is
the pillar guide and walks through every contract type, every common reason homeowners look
to exit, and what the process looks like.
New guides are added on a rolling basis. Several pages are marked Coming Soon on this hub
— they are part of the publishing roadmap and will be added over the coming weeks.
No. The decision to stop making payments must only be considered under the advice and
representation of a qualified attorney. Do not stop making payments based on general
information found in any guide, including the ones on this site.
SCRC works with homeowners across the country. State consumer protection laws vary, and
Consumer Advocacy Law Group reviews matters under the law applicable to each homeowner's
state. Submit your information for a free intake to find out more.
Submit your information for a free intake. SCRC collects your documentation and
forwards it to Consumer Advocacy Law Group, the qualified law firm we work with.