Your solar contract may have legal problems worth reviewing.
If you financed panels or signed a solar loan, lease, or PPA and the deal isn't what you were promised, you don't have to figure it out alone. Tell us the basics — what you signed, who financed it, and when — and request a short, document-first review of your situation.
A simple, document-first intake
Four short steps. The first screen is intentionally light so the follow-up can reach you while the details are still fresh.
First name, last name, email, phone, finance company, and the year you purchased solar.
Expect a call, text, or email — typically within one business day during normal hours.
Your contract, financing paperwork, disclosures, and timeline are reviewed before anything is decided.
A plain-English explanation of possible issues and what realistic next steps could look like for you.
Common situations homeowners bring us
Whether any of these apply to you depends on your documents, facts, timing, and applicable law. These are the patterns people most often want a closer look at.
Misleading savings promises
You were told solar would lower your bills or pay for itself, but the math never worked out that way.
Tax-credit pressure
You were counting on a federal tax credit that turned out smaller, later, or different than promised.
Hidden & dealer fees
The financed amount was far higher than the cash price — and no one clearly explained why.
Escalating lease / PPA payments
Payments climb every year under an escalator clause you didn't realize you'd agreed to.
UCC / fixture filings
A lien or UCC fixture filing on your property is causing trouble with a sale or refinance.
Transfer / refinance problems
You're trying to sell or refinance and the solar agreement is blocking or complicating the deal.
Installer / lender runaround
Production issues, unfinished work, or unanswered calls — and each party points at the other.
Arbitration & complaints
You found an arbitration clause, or a complaint history, and aren't sure what it means for you.
Not sure which applies?
Browse the resource library to read about each issue in plain English before you decide.
Open the library →Learn the issues before you decide anything
Plain-English, educational explainers — not legal advice. Each one helps you understand a piece of the solar puzzle so your review conversation is more productive.
Financial issues Money
Where the real cost of a solar deal hides — and who's holding the paper.
Legal concepts Issue-spotting
General legal theories people ask about — facts and law decide if any apply.
- Fraudulent Solar Sales ProcessHow a high-pressure pitch can cross legal lines.→
- How You Were DefraudedRecognizing misrepresentation and omitted facts.→
- TILA ViolationsTruth-in-Lending disclosure issues in solar loans.→
- RICOWhat people mean when they raise RICO — and its limits.→
- Hiding Behind Arbitration ClausesWhat an arbitration clause does and doesn't do.→
Government & enforcement Context
Background on public actions — context, not proof your case will succeed.
Process & documents Get ready
Practical steps to prepare for a productive review conversation.
Not sure if a review makes sense?
Most homeowners start with a short request. Tell us who financed it and when, and intake can let you know whether a deeper look is worth pursuing for your situation — with no obligation.
Start a free review requestCan you tell me whether I can cancel my contract?
Not from a web form. A real answer depends on your contract, financing documents, timing, communications, and the law in your state. This page only requests contact so your situation can be reviewed with the actual paperwork in hand.
Should I stop making my payments?
We can't tell you to stop paying. Payment decisions carry credit and legal consequences and require individualized advice based on your documents and circumstances. Bring it up during your review so it can be addressed for your specific situation.
Why do you ask for the finance company and purchase year?
The finance company helps identify what kind of agreement may be involved, and the purchase year matters because timing can affect how a review is approached. Both also help route your request appropriately.
Is this a government, lender, or utility program?
No. Solar Cancellation is an independent consumer intake and educational resource site. It is not affiliated with any government agency, lender, solar installer, or utility, and it is not a portal for any of them.
Does submitting the form cost anything or commit me to anything?
No. The form is a request for contact only. It does not create an attorney-client relationship and does not commit you to anything. No specific outcome is promised.
Educational information, not legal advice. Solar Cancellation provides general information and a request-for-contact intake. It is not affiliated with any government agency, lender, solar installer, or utility. Submitting a form does not create an attorney-client relationship, and no specific outcome can be promised. Any review depends on your documents, facts, timing, and applicable law.