Why the Incentive Stack Still Matters in 2026
The cost of commercial solar has declined substantially over the past decade, but the incentive environment remains one of the meaningful variables in whether a project pencils out on a given timeline. For California commercial facilities in 2026, the relevant incentives layer from federal to state to utility, and understanding how they interact affects both the net project cost and the financing structure that makes the most sense for a given ownership situation.
The Federal Investment Tax Credit
The federal Investment Tax Credit provides a credit against federal income tax liability equal to a percentage of the eligible cost of a solar installation. The current base credit rate under the Inflation Reduction Act is 30 percent, with potential bonus credit adders for facilities in designated energy communities or that use domestic content components meeting specific thresholds. For commercial property owners with federal tax liability, this is typically the largest single incentive in the stack. Tax-exempt entities can access the credit through direct pay provisions introduced under the Inflation Reduction Act.
Accelerated Depreciation
Commercial solar systems qualify for Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System depreciation, with bonus depreciation allowing a significant portion of the system cost to be deducted in the year of installation. This benefit accrues alongside the ITC and further improves the after-tax economics for taxable entities. The interaction between the ITC and depreciation basis requires coordination with a tax advisor, but the combined effect meaningfully reduces the effective cost of a commercial solar investment.
California-Specific Programs
- SGIP provides rebates for commercial battery storage systems in SCE territory, paid in annual installments over the warranty period.
- Some utilities have demand response programs that provide ongoing compensation for storage systems that participate in grid management events.
- Local jurisdictions periodically offer expedited permitting for solar projects, which reduces soft costs rather than hard costs but affects project timeline.
How to Approach the Incentive Analysis
The most common mistake in evaluating commercial solar incentives is treating each benefit in isolation rather than modeling their combined effect on the net cost and payback period. OM Energy provides incentive analysis as part of the pre-design process for every commercial client, so that the proposal reflects the actual financial picture, not a best-case scenario that assumes every potential adder applies.