Solar is still financially viable in Jacksonville — but the economics require a different conversation than in other Florida markets. The key variables that affect whether solar pencils in JEA territory:
JEA’s retail rate is competitive. EnergySage puts the current Jacksonville electricity rate at approximately 15 cents per kilowatt-hour as of early 2026, below the state average and well below utilities like TECO or FPL. That lower rate means every kilowatt-hour your solar panels produce and use in your home offsets a 15-cent purchase from JEA. That’s a solid return on self-consumed production.
Exported electricity is worth far less. Under JEA’s Distributed Generation program, electricity your panels send to the grid is valued at JEA’s variable monthly fuel rate — typically in the 3–4 cents per kilowatt-hour range. The gap between self-consumed solar (worth ~15¢) and exported solar (worth ~3–4¢) is the defining feature of solar economics in Jacksonville. Every kilowatt-hour you export is worth roughly one-quarter of one you consume directly.
Installation costs are competitive. EnergySage data puts the Jacksonville market at approximately $2.29 per watt as of late 2025. Average system sizes in Jacksonville run smaller than other Florida markets — typically 10–11 kW — reflecting the premium on right-sizing under the DG export policy. EnergySage estimates 25-year net savings of approximately $57,945 for Jacksonville homeowners, with an average payback period around 8–9 years for well-sized systems.
The federal residential tax credit expired December 31, 2025. Florida’s property tax exemption and sales tax exemption on solar equipment remain in place. JEA’s battery rebate (up to $4,000) is the most significant local incentive available and is integral to the optimal system design strategy under the DG program.
Understanding JEA’s Distributed Generation policy is the prerequisite for making a good solar decision in Jacksonville. Here is how it works and what it means for you:
How the DG program works: JEA replaced retail net metering in April 2018. Customers who installed systems with permit final inspections by March 31, 2018 are grandfathered under the old net metering policy (full retail credits) for 20 years. All new solar customers operate under the Distributed Generation policy. Under DG, JEA credits exported electricity at the monthly variable fuel rate — currently approximately 3–4 cents per kilowatt-hour. JEA uses 15-minute interval metering, meaning your system’s output is measured against your home’s consumption in 15-minute windows rather than monthly. This matters because it limits the periods during which your solar production can directly offset your grid draw, compared to monthly net accounting.
The self-consumption principle: Under the DG program, every kilowatt-hour your home consumes directly from your solar panels is worth JEA’s full retail rate (~15¢). Every kilowatt-hour that flows to the grid is worth the fuel rate (~3–4¢). The economics therefore reward maximizing self-consumption and minimizing exports. The worst outcome under DG is a significantly oversized system that exports large quantities throughout the year at fuel rates.
Optimal sizing strategy: Most solar professionals experienced with JEA territory recommend sizing a system to cover approximately 60–80% of your annual consumption rather than targeting 100% or more. A conservatively-sized system is more likely to be fully consumed each day, keeps exports low, and preserves full retail-rate value for every kilowatt-hour produced. A homeowner who designs for 60% offset and uses everything they generate comes out ahead of a homeowner with 100% offset who exports 30–40% at the fuel rate.
Battery storage changes the math entirely: If you add battery storage to a Jacksonville system, you can capture midday solar surplus in the battery rather than sending it to JEA at 3–4¢. That stored energy then covers evening consumption at full retail value (~15¢). With a well-sized battery, a full-offset solar system becomes viable in JEA territory — you’re no longer limited to what you can consume instantaneously, because excess generation fills the battery first. This is precisely why JEA’s battery rebate (up to $4,000) exists and why solar-plus-storage is a particularly coherent product in the Jacksonville market.
Jacksonville has a more interesting incentive picture than most Florida markets — specifically because JEA offers a meaningful battery rebate that is directly tied to the logic of its DG export policy.
JEA battery rebate: JEA offers a rebate of up to $4,000 for residential battery storage systems with a minimum usable capacity of 6 kWh and a minimum 10-year warranty. This is the largest utility battery rebate in Florida. The rebate is subject to program funding availability — caps have applied historically, so verify current availability with JEA or your installer before committing. Note that if you are a grandfathered net metering customer and you accept the battery rebate, you lose your grandfathered net metering status and move to the DG program.
Why the battery rebate is significant here: In most Florida markets, battery storage is primarily a resilience decision — it keeps the lights on during outages. In Jacksonville, battery storage is also a financial optimization tool. By storing solar surplus rather than exporting it at the fuel rate, a battery allows you to maintain full retail value for all of your solar production. The $4,000 rebate meaningfully improves the battery payback calculation.
State incentives: Florida’s property tax exemption prevents your home’s assessed value from increasing due to a solar installation, so there is no property tax penalty for going solar. The 6% sales tax exemption on solar equipment and installation is still available. On a $25,000 system, that represents approximately $1,500 in savings.
JEA Solar Concierge Program: JEA operates a Solar Concierge Program designed to connect homeowners with vetted local installers and give them accurate information before making a purchase decision. JEA’s concierge resources are particularly relevant in Jacksonville because the DG program requires installers who understand the local export policy and can correctly model self-consumption under 15-minute interval metering. An installer unfamiliar with JEA’s DG rules may produce inaccurate savings projections based on retail-rate export assumptions used elsewhere in Florida.
JEA SolarSmart: Customers who cannot or do not want to install rooftop solar can subscribe to JEA SolarSmart, a community solar program sourcing energy from JEA’s local solar farms. Note that SolarSmart and private rooftop solar are mutually exclusive — you cannot participate in both simultaneously.