
Solar and Roofing Advisor
PWP's solar rebate is first-come, first-served, here's how to claim yours fast.

Most Pasadena homeowners are still finding out about PWP's new solar rebate pilot. By the time everyone knows, the money will be gone.
That's not a scare tactic — it's how pilot programs work. Pasadena Water and Power allocated $2.65 million in total funding. There is no fixed expiration date. The program ends the moment that budget is exhausted. First homeowner in, first homeowner paid.
If you've already read up on how the PWP solar rebate works, this post is your action guide — not what the rebate pays, but exactly what to do, in what order, to claim it before someone else does.
⏳ The Clock Isn't Counting Down — The Budget Is
PWP's rebate has no end date — it ends when $2.65M is claimed. Every consultation booked today is one step ahead of the homeowner who waits until next month. Get yours scheduled now.
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PWP serves over 65,000 electricity customers. Even a small fraction acting on this rebate drains the fund quickly.
A standard residential system in Pasadena runs between 7 and 9 kilowatts. At $0.60 per watt, that's a rebate of $4,200 to $5,400 per home. If just 500 homeowners claim the standard rebate on a 9 kW system, that's $2.7 million — the entire fund, gone. Five hundred is less than 1% of PWP's customer base.
Add battery rebates at $350 per kWh, commercial installations up to $80,000, and income-qualified customers at $1.00 per watt — and that $2.65 million gets consumed faster than most people expect.
California's SGIP battery rebate is a useful comparison. That statewide program ran for years before its ratepayer-funded budgets exhausted completely at the end of 2025 — not because of a policy change, but simply because the money ran out. It is now closed with no confirmed reopening date.
The PWP rebate pilot operates the same way. The homeowners who move early get paid. The ones who wait, don't.
Speed matters — but so does doing this right. A misstep at any stage can delay your rebate application or disqualify you entirely. Here's the correct sequence.
This sounds obvious, but it's worth verifying. PWP serves customers within the City of Pasadena only — not Arcadia, not Monrovia, not Altadena. If your electricity bill comes from PWP, you're in. If it comes from SCE, this specific rebate doesn't apply to you.
Pull out a recent electric bill and confirm the utility name. Takes 30 seconds and eliminates any uncertainty before you invest time in the process.
The consultation is free and the step most people delay — which is exactly what costs them the rebate.
During your consultation, US Power's CSLB-licensed consultants will assess your roof, pull your PWP usage history, design your system, and calculate your exact rebate amount. You'll get a transparent, line-item proposal with no hidden fees. This step costs nothing and puts you in the queue ahead of every homeowner who hasn't scheduled yet.
Why this week matters: Your rebate eligibility isn't locked in until installation and PWP's NEM approval. But every week of delay is a week closer to the fund running out — while your PWP bill keeps climbing.
The PWP rebate is available only to customer-owned systems. Solar leases and PPAs are explicitly excluded. If a sales rep pitches you a lease or PPA, walk away — you won't see a dollar of the rebate regardless of how attractive the monthly payment looks.
Beyond ownership, choose an installer who knows PWP's process specifically. PWP requires pre-approval through their PowerClerk portal before a building permit is issued. Installers unfamiliar with this step can cause delays that push your timeline back weeks.
US Power handles the entire PWP pre-approval, permit, and rebate paperwork. You don't manage a single form.
Once PWP pre-approves your system and the City issues your permit, installation typically takes one to two days. US Power's average timeline from permit approval to completion runs 3 to 4 weeks — one of the fastest in Southern California.
After installation, Pasadena conducts a code compliance inspection. Your system must stay off until PWP swaps your standard meter for a bi-directional solar meter. Only then are you cleared to operate.
Permission to Operate (PTO) is PWP's official green light to turn your system on. It arrives after your bi-directional meter is installed and interconnection is confirmed.
The step that catches homeowners off guard: you cannot submit your rebate application until after NEM approval is finalized. Submitting early — even with a fully operational system — results in rejection and a restart.
US Power submits your rebate application on your behalf after PTO, with complete documentation. Your check arrives within 6 to 8 weeks of PWP approval.
📋 Don't Navigate the PWP Process Alone
US Power manages every step — pre-approval, permitting, installation, inspection, and rebate submission. One wrong step can delay your check by weeks. Let our CSLB-licensed team handle it.
Start My Rebate Process →
Solar companies that lead with "no upfront cost" are typically selling leases or PPAs. Those deals disqualify you from the PWP rebate entirely — the rebate goes to the system owner, and under a lease, that's the solar company, not you.
Before you sign anything, confirm in writing: do I own this system from day one? If the answer is anything other than a clear yes, it's not an ownership deal.
PWP requires pre-approval before you apply for a City building permit. Installing without this step means your system cannot receive NEM approval — which means no rebate application, period.
Some out-of-area installers who aren't familiar with PWP's process skip or rush this step, leaving homeowners managing follow-up calls with both PWP and the City. An installer who knows PWP's process builds pre-approval into the project plan from day one.
The urgency here isn't manufactured. If you've been going solar in Pasadena, the financial case was already strong — full retail-rate net metering unaffected by NEM 3.0, PWP rates rising at 3.5% annually, and above-average sun exposure year-round.
The PWP rebate pilot stacks on top of all of that. A homeowner who acts now captures the rebate and locks in their energy cost and starts earning full retail credits on surplus production.
A homeowner who waits until the rebate is gone still benefits from solar — but leaves real money on the table. On a 9 kW system with a 13.5 kWh battery, the combined rebate at standard rates exceeds $9,000. That's a meaningful reduction in net system cost that disappears the moment the pilot closes.
🏆 US Power: California's Exclusive QCells Partner
American-made panels. Factory-direct pricing 15–20% below market. 200+ five-star Google reviews. 25-year comprehensive warranty. And a team that knows the PWP rebate process inside and out.
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The PWP solar rebate pilot is funded, live, and draining with every system that enters the queue ahead of you. There's no penalty for starting your consultation today and taking a week to review your proposal. But there is a real cost to waiting — measured in rebate dollars that won't be there when you're finally ready.
A free consultation with US Power takes less than an hour. You'll walk away knowing your exact rebate amount, system size, monthly savings projection, and installation timeline. No pressure, no commitment. Just the numbers your decision deserves.
The rebate won't wait. Your PWP bill won't either.
⚡ Pilot Funds Won't Last — Claim Your Spot Today
US Power offers free virtual or on-site consultations for Pasadena homeowners. Know your exact rebate number, your savings estimate, and your installation timeline — before the funding window closes.
Claim My Free Consultation →
No fixed deadline exists. The program runs until PWP's $2.65 million in funding is fully claimed. Once exhausted, the pilot closes — with no announced renewal timeline. Acting now is the only reliable way to secure your rebate.
Not officially — but it starts the clock. Rebate eligibility is confirmed only after installation and final PWP Net Energy Metering approval. Every step you take now puts you ahead of homeowners still deciding.
Expect roughly 10 to 14 weeks from consultation to rebate check. That breaks down as: 1–2 weeks for proposal and design, 2–3 weeks for permits, 3–4 weeks from permit to PTO, and 6–8 weeks for the rebate check after submission.
Yes, if you expand your existing owned system. The rebate applies to expansion capacity installed on or after January 1, 2026. Existing systems do not retroactively qualify, but adding panels or a battery can make you eligible.
Technically yes, but errors or missing documents restart the process. US Power submits the complete application on your behalf after PTO to ensure your check arrives without delays.
As a specialist in solar-roofing synergy, the author focuses on the intersection of structural integrity and energy production. Their expertise lies in optimizing residential energy footprints through the use of high-performance components, including Qcells technology and sleek, all-black solar arrays. The author serves as a consultant for homeowners looking to navigate the technical complexities of modern sustainable building standards.
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