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Solar Panels Can be a Deal Killer

By
Real Estate Agent

solar panels

Studies have suggested that the addition of solar panels on a home can boost a home's value. But sometimes those solar panels can sabotage a deal when it comes time to sell.  Why can something that is so good cause so much trouble.  Read on to see what can happen.  This article will deal with 2 different programs that can cause problems when you go to sell your home.  We will look at lease programs and PACE purchase programs.

LEASE SOLAR PANELS PROGRAMS

More companies are offering home owners a contract to lease solar panels where they pay no upfront costs for the installation and could start saving on their electricity bills right away. But home owners who sign onto these deals are finding some snags when they go to sell.

Potential buyers are leery of taking on the leasing payment contracts for the next 15 to 17 years because they often have to qualify on credit from the solar companies themselves. Also, some buyers are hesitant to sign a contract because they're concerned the solar equipment will become obsolete or won't amount in a big savings in the end after paying the leasing fee.

Some home buyers are refusing to buy the house unless the seller buys out of the remaining lease payment stream -- which could be $15,000 or more.

For example, a Fresno, Calif., couple trying to sell their house told The Los Angeles Times that it attracted multiple offers but two sets of buyers backed out of the contracts due to the leased solar panels on their roof. The buyers felt the long-term cost of the lease agreement was too high or they were concerned about the credit qualifications they had to meet in order to take over the lease. Ultimately, the couple had to pay $22,000 to break the lease with the solar company so that they could sell the house.

With the rising popularity of solar, Lynn Farris, a real estate professional in Windermere Hulsey & Associates in Vacaville, Calif., says she's already seen several disputes arise over solar panel leases, and she expects the problem to get worse.

After all, residential solar installations are rising dramatically -- up by 50 percent per year since 2012, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association.

PACE SOLAR PANEL PURCHASE PROGRAMS

What is a PACE program?  It is a PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) Financing program.  Basically, it’s a way to finance solar systems or energy efficiency retrofits, where the city offers you a loan, and you pay it back through your property tax bills over 15 to 20 years. Sweet right? The program doesn’t require shelling out any cash upfront or reducing equity in your home. You repay on your property taxes. That is the problem.  If you default on your home loan --- property taxes are the first lien to be repaid....then the home lender.  So what?  Well lenders do not like that possibility.  The don't like it so much that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will not fund loans on home that have a PACE program lien on it.  Once again, so what I have my loan?  Yes but if you need to sell your home ...guess what....the people that may buy it..... they will need a loan.....and Fannie and Freddie....... they fund most of the loans.  So you have a problem....great house.....great solar panels......and a very limited pool of buyers.

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Eric Kodner
Madeline Island Realty - La Pointe, WI
CRS, Madeline Island Realty, LaPointe, WI 54850 -

The secondary mortgage market will eventually have to make peace with the solar energy industry.  From a public good standpoint, it makes little sense to have lending institutions dictate whether or not homeowners can take advantage of alternative energy options.

Apr 14, 2015 08:27 AM