0-down solar guidance

A lower-friction solar start for New Jersey homeowners who want clarity first.

If the main goal is to improve the monthly story without walking into a pressure-heavy pitch, start with a bill-backed savings analysis.

NJ-specific contextBill-first intakePreferred call window captured up front

0-down start

Lower-friction first review

NJ homeowner

$0

easy first-step structure path

Primary goalImprove the monthly story first
What we checkReal bill behavior and fit
What followsStructure comparison only after the baseline is clear
Bill-backed fit checkCalm first callPreferred time captured up front

Best fit

Lower-friction monthly path

Market

New Jersey

First step

Savings analysis

Request a New Jersey savings analysis and tell us when to call.

Start with the essentials and we’ll follow up with a real, personal conversation about your home and bill.

Start with the essentials

Start with your phone and email. Add your address, bill, or preferred time later if you want us to come in more prepared.

We save this first, then you can add your address, bill, and best time to talk if you want us to come in more prepared.

What to look at before you decide.

The key questions are usually simple: how the structure works, how the numbers behave, and what matters once the project moves past the first call.

A calmer first step

A softer first step for homeowners who want to understand the fit before the sales process starts.

If you want to know whether solar makes sense for your bill and your home before getting deep into the structures, this is the right place to start.

Starts with usage reality
Explains fit before commitment
Keeps the conversation calm

Local proof matters more than polished promises.

Homeowners tend to trust the process when the recommendation sounds like it understands their market and their property.

Request your own comparison

They slowed the whole process down in a good way. We finally understood the service plan versus finance before signing anything.

JR

Jonathan R.

Paramus, NJ · 12-month usage analyzed

Common questions before the next step.

Good solar conversations usually get better once the basic objections are handled in plain language.

Do I need my utility bill before we talk?
No. The form works without it, but attaching your latest bill helps us build a tighter savings analysis and spot utility-specific opportunities faster.
Are you an installer or an advisor?
Both, in practice. The Panels Group acts as your planning and deal-structuring guide first, then stays involved through installer coordination and execution.
Can you compare a solar service plan, finance, and cash for the same home?
Yes. That comparison is the core of the process. We frame the proposal around your usage, roof constraints, local economics, and comfort with ownership.
How quickly do you follow up after I submit?
Usually the same day or the next business day. If you leave an ideal time to call, we use that to make the first outreach more convenient.
What if I already have a solar quote?
Bring it. We can look at the structure, assumptions, pricing story, and what questions still need to be answered before you sign anything.
What if my roof needs work first?
We would rather flag that early than push the project forward anyway. If roof condition affects the fit, we will say so clearly before the process gets too far.
Do you work with my utility company?
Most likely, yes. We regularly review homes across PSE&G, JCP&L, Con Edison, Orange & Rockland, NYSEG, and other utility territories across NJ and NY.
Will solar still make sense if I may move in a few years?
It can, but the structure matters more when your timeline is shorter. That is exactly the kind of tradeoff we want to frame early instead of after you are deep into the process.
Can I start with just phone and email?
Yes. That first step saves your request. You can add your address, bill, and ideal time to talk afterward if you want us to prepare more thoroughly.
Do you stay involved after the analysis?
Yes. The Panels Group stays close through design, paperwork, installer coordination, and the handoff into execution so the homeowner is not left to sort it out alone.