Skip to content

Solar Panel Installers in Kansas

Find solar panel installers in Kansas. We've gathered 5 solar companies from across Kansas with their phone number, address, hours, and Google rating — so you can compare and reach out for quotes. With residential electricity averaging 14.1¢/kWh in Kansas, going solar can offset a meaningful share of your power bill.

5 solar installers in Kansas

Spread across Kansas so there's likely one near you. Details from public Google Business Profiles — verify before hiring.

Good Energy Solutions

5.0(260)
Hours· tap to view
  • Monday8AM-4:30PM
  • Tuesday8AM-4:30PM
  • Wednesday8AM-4:30PM
  • Thursday8AM-4:30PM
  • Friday8AM-4:30PM
  • SaturdayClosed
  • SundayClosed

Pro Terra Solar

4.5(37)
Hours· tap to view
  • Monday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Tuesday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Wednesday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Thursday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Friday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Saturday8:30AM-8:30PM
  • Sunday8:30AM-8:30PM

Roof Technologies

5.0(18)
Hours· tap to view
  • Monday8AM-6PM
  • Tuesday8AM-6PM
  • Wednesday8AM-6PM
  • Thursday8AM-6PM
  • Friday8AM-6PM
  • Saturday9AM-1PM
  • SundayClosed

Logic Solar

4.9(73)
Hours· tap to view
  • Monday9AM-5PM
  • Tuesday9AM-5PM
  • Wednesday9AM-5PM
  • Thursday9AM-5PM
  • Friday9AM-5PM
  • SaturdayClosed
  • SundayClosed

How to choose a solar installer in Kansas

Check licensing & certification

Solar installs in Kansas involve electrical work, so the contractor (or their electrician) needs the proper state license. Favor companies with NABCEP-certified staff — the industry's recognized credential — and confirm they carry liability insurance and a workmanship warranty, not just the manufacturer's panel warranty.

Get three quotes and compare price per watt

Quotes vary widely. Compare the total cash price divided by system size (dollars per watt) rather than the monthly financed payment, which can hide markups. Make sure each quote lists the same panel and inverter brands, the production estimate, and exactly what's included.

Confirm permits, interconnection & net metering

A reputable installer pulls the building/electrical permits and files the utility interconnection paperwork for you. Ask how net metering works with your local Kansas utility — it determines how much credit you earn for excess power you send back to the grid, which drives your real savings.

Listing data is sourced from public Google Business Profiles and may be out of date. WattSimple is not affiliated with, and does not endorse or recommend, any listed company. Verify licensing and details directly before hiring.

Frequently asked questions

Get at least three written quotes, confirm the company holds the licenses Kansas requires for electrical and solar work, check that they pull permits and handle the utility interconnection, and look for NABCEP-certified installers. Compare total price per watt, the equipment brands offered, and the workmanship warranty — not just the monthly payment.

Plan your solar project

All statesSolar output calculator