Solar Savings in Midland, Texas

Midland homeowners on AEP Texas pay an average of $150/month. At 11.5¢/kWh (Tier 1), here is what solar can realistically do for that bill.

$150
Avg Monthly Bill
$101
Est. Monthly Savings
$1,212
Est. Annual Savings
5 hrs/day
Peak Sun Hours

AEP Texas Rates in Midland

AEP Texas charges 11.5¢/kWh for the first 1000 kWh/month (Tier 1) and 13.5¢/kWh above that (Tier 2). The average Midland household uses around 1150 kWh/month, putting most usage into the higher Tier 2 bracket — where solar saves the most per kWh.

Rate trajectory

AEP Texas rates have increased 19% (2014-2024). At that pace, the average Midland bill could reach $178/monthby 2036 without solar. A solar system locks in production at today's value and insulates you from future hikes.

UtilityAEP Texas
Tier 1 rate11.5¢/kWh (first 1000 kWh/mo)
Tier 2 rate13.5¢/kWh (above 1000 kWh/mo)
Avg monthly bill$150
Avg monthly usage1150 kWh
Net meteringNo statewide mandate — varies by retail provider
Export creditvaries by retail electric provider
Rate increase (10yr)19% (2014-2024)

Solar Production in Midland

Midland receives 5 peak sun hours per day. This is the key input that determines how much electricity your panels produce. More sun hours mean more kWh generated, which translates directly to a lower bill.

10,220 kWh
Annual Production (7kW system)
852 kWh
Monthly Production
5 hrs/day
Peak Sun Hours

Production estimates use a 7kW system at 80% efficiency (accounting for inverter losses, shading, and temperature derating). Actual output depends on roof orientation, tilt, and shading.

Real Savings Math for Midland

At AEP Texas's 11.5¢ and 13.5¢/kWh rates, the average Midland homeowner pays ~$150/month. A 7kW system producing 852 kWh/month replaces most of that grid usage — cutting the bill to around $34/month.

Current bill
$150/mo
With solar
$34/mo
Monthly savings
$101/mo

Based on a 7kW system at $3/watt. Actual savings depend on your roof, usage pattern, and AEP Texas rate plan. NEM 3.0 export credits (varies by retail electric provider) apply to power sent to the grid.

System Cost and Payback in Midland

A 7kW system in Midland costs approximately $21,000 installed (at ~$3/watt, the current California market rate). With annual savings of $1,212, the estimated break-even point is 17.3 years. Systems carry 25-year manufacturer warranties, leaving 15+ years of essentially free electricity.

System size7kW (typical for this usage level)
Installed cost (~$3/W)$21,000
Est. monthly savings$101
Est. annual savings$1,212
Payback period17.3 years
25-year savings$30,300+
Peak sun hours5 hrs/day
Annual production10,220 kWh
UtilityAEP Texas
CountyMidland

Solar Incentives for Midland Homeowners (2026)

  • Net metering (NEM 3.0 in CA) — sell excess power back to your utility
  • Federal Section 48E credit (commercial/PPA structures only — residential Section 25D expired Dec 31 2025)
  • Texas property tax exemption — added solar value excluded from taxable home value
  • Some AEP retail providers offer export credits — confirm before signing

Incentive eligibility depends on your tax situation and installation timeline. Consult a licensed solar installer before making decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions — Solar in Midland

How much can Midland homeowners save on solar?
At AEP Texas's current 11.5¢/kWh (Tier 1) and 13.5¢/kWh (Tier 2) rates, a typical Midland household pays around $150/month. A 7kW solar system producing roughly 852 kWh/month can reduce that bill to approximately $34/month — saving around $1,212 per year.
What is the payback period for solar in Midland?
A 7kW system in Midland costs approximately $21,000 installed (at ~$3/watt). With annual savings of $1,212, the estimated payback period is 17.3 years. Systems typically last 25-30 years, so you can expect 15+ years of free electricity after payback.
How many peak sun hours does Midland get?
Midland averages 5 peak sun hours per day. This means a 7kW system produces approximately 10,220 kWh per year.
What is NEM 3.0 and how does it affect Midland solar savings?
NEM 3.0 (Net Energy Metering 3.0) took effect in April 2023 for AEP Texas customers. Unlike NEM 2.0, export credits are now around varies by retail electric provider instead of near-retail rates. This means self-consumption — using solar power as it is produced — is more valuable than exporting to the grid. Pairing solar with a battery shifts more production to evening hours when you would otherwise buy from the grid.
What incentives are available for solar in Midland in 2026?
In 2026, Midland homeowners can benefit from: California's property tax exclusion for solar, the SGIP battery incentive, and the California Solar Rights Act (HOAs cannot block installation). Note: the federal residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired December 31, 2025. The commercial Section 48E credit remains active for PPAs and business installations.

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These numbers are based on AEP Texas rates and Midland sun data. A local installer will give you exact figures based on your roof, shading, and actual usage.

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