Lansing city reference
Solar in Lansing, checked against utility math.
A city-level guide for Cook County homeowners comparing quotes, system size, incentive timing, and Commonwealth Edison billing assumptions.
- Reference ZIP
- 60438
- Utility
- ComEd
- Focus
- Illinois Shines + utility billing
Local numbers
The Lansing baseline
A 7 kW south-facing system in Lansing produces about 9,300 kWh/year per NREL PVWatts. Pre-incentive install cost runs $19,600 to $23,800, with cash payback around 8 to 10 years before financing markup.
9,300 kWh/year
Annual production
PVWatts v8, 7 kW south-facing.
~$9,100
Net cash cost
After incentives, before financing.
8 to 10 years
Cash payback
No dealer-fee markup.
13 to 16 years
Financed payback
With typical dealer fees.
Diagnostic path
Check the Lansing quote from four angles.
Start with fit, then pressure-test price, incentives, and installer risk before a homeowner signs.
- 01 Is it worth it? → Diagnostic: how to know if your Lansing home is a good fit for solar, and what to verify before signing. Real production numbers, current rates, no inflated assumptions.
- 02 Typical cost and payback → Sized for a Lansing median home, with Commonwealth Edison-adjusted production from NREL PVWatts and current Smart Solar Billing (ComEd) / Rider NMOS (Ameren) rates.
- 03 Incentives → Illinois Shines values plus Commonwealth Edison programs. Federal credit context after the December 2025 expiration.
- 04 How to pick an installer → Educational buyer's guide for Lansing: red flags, what to verify, questions to ask before signing.
Utility context
The bill rules are local.
Most of Lansing is served by Commonwealth Edison. Net metering, rate trajectory, and program timing differ by utility; the Illinois state hub covers the cross-utility picture.