It doesn’t matter if you rent, lease, or own your home. Thanks to community solar, anyone with an electricity bill from a major utility across our service territory can save money while supporting locally generated renewable energy through our state-supported community solar program.
If you pay an electric bill, you can take advantage of a local community solar project and save on energy costs each month. You benefit by reducing utility costs while the planet benefits from a greener grid.
When you subscribe to community solar, we connect you with a local solar farm in your community so you can get a designated share of the clean energy it produces (based on your average monthly energy usage).
You pay Neighborhood Sun for your share of community solar energy at a discounted rate (between 5-30% savings, depending on your project and income level) via a separate bill each month. We’re doing our best to advocate for consolidated billing, but New York is currently the only state that allows it.
By participating in a local solar farm, you are promoting equitable access to solar in your community, creating local green jobs, and raising money for local nonprofits that partner with Neighborhood Sun.
The U.S. Department of Energy is leading an initiative to bring community solar to 5 million households by 2025, creating a whopping $1 billion in energy bill savings along the way. Thanks to our amazing solar community, we’re helping to make that dream a reality. Will you join us?
saved by subscribers on electricity costs
Kilowatt-hours of clean energy generated
Metric Tons CO2 prevented
As a Certified B Corp and Public Benefit Corporation, we’re here to use business as a force for good. Do you have a healthy level of skepticism towards corporations? Good. We think you should too. That’s why we share an annual impact report each year. Read our 2022 Impact Report to see us walk the talk for yourself.
In 2016, Neighborhood Sun set out to disrupt the broken utility industry that profits off pollution while distributing the health and financial costs to the customers it supposedly serves. Instead, Neighborhood Sun leverages collective action, empowering communities through access to clean, affordable energy, one individual or business at a time. Learn more about our corporate values and explore a breakdown of our B Corp Score to better understand how we use business as a force for good.
Our dependence on fossil fuels is costing us more than just money (Spend a lot on gas lately?). We’re funding the fossil fuel industry at the cost of our health, our financial independence, and our futures. Climate change is about more than just “saving the polar bears.” It’s about people and the resources we desperately need, not only to thrive but even just to survive. Renewable energy offers us a future where we don’t have to choose between the right thing to do and the convenient thing. Shared renewables are cheaper, safer, and cleaner than fossil fuels, so what are you waiting for?
Rooftop solar isn’t an option for 80% of Americans, but community solar changes that by eliminating all the traditional barriers to solar adoption, such as upfront costs and housing requirements. Thanks to our community solar subscription model, anyone who pays an electric bill can now access discounted clean energy from a local solar farm. In addition to advocating for equitable energy policies, Neighborhood Sun provides additional discounts and financial support to low-income households through our S.H.A.R.E. (Solar Helps Advance Resident Equality) program and Neighbor Benefit Fund.
If we have a solar project under construction or already built in your area, you can subscribe to get a share of its energy output at a discount through clean energy credits. You accumulate savings because the cost of solar energy is always less than the utility’s standard offer, thus lowering your electricity costs every month.
Neighborhood Sun’s community solar subscribers have saved more than $6 Million on their electricity bills by choosing to support clean, local energy.
If you are getting solar from: