Below: verified Solar Installation Contractors serving Oakland Estates, followed by guidance specific to this neighborhood.

Vetted Solar Installation Contractors Serving Oakland Estates

Solar Source

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CVC56931 40 yrs in business
(407) 331-9077

925 Sunshine Lane, Suite 1010, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714

Altamonte Springs solar installer with 40+ years in Florida (CVC56931, EC13009473). Rooftop solar electric, pool heating, battery backup (Tesla Powerwall 3, Enphase), solar water heating, and commercial systems.

  • Rooftop solar
  • Battery backup
  • Solar pool heating
  • Solar water heating
  • Commercial solar
  • System repair

Radiant Energy and Solar

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #EC13013864 16 yrs in business
(407) 915-2116

157 Drennen Road, Orlando, FL 32806

Tesla Certified solar installer (EC13013864) based in Orlando serving Seminole County since 2010. 5,000+ installations. Rooftop solar, battery storage, off-grid systems, EV charging, and Duke Energy interconnection.

  • Rooftop solar
  • Tesla Powerwall
  • Battery storage
  • Off-grid systems
  • EV charging
  • Duke Energy interconnect

Sailfish Solar

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CVC57245
(407) 815-5071

1111 SW Martin Downs Boulevard, Palm City, FL 34990

Florida-licensed solar contractor (CVC57245) serving Altamonte Springs and all of Seminole County. Rooftop solar panels, EV charging stations, solar carports, and ground mount systems for residential and commercial clients.

  • Rooftop solar
  • EV charging stations
  • Solar carports
  • Ground mounts
  • Commercial solar
Listings are independently curated. We verify license status, address, phone, and service area before publishing. Read our methodology →

About Oakland Estates

Typical home era: 1960s–1970s

ZIP code: 32701

Oakland Estates is a small, established residential subdivision in central Altamonte Springs, with mid-century single-family homes and easy access to the SR 436 corridor.

Notable features:

  • Established residential pocket
  • Central Altamonte location
  • Convenient SR 436 access

Frequently Asked Questions

Should Oakland Estates homeowners re-roof before installing solar?
This is the most important practical question for Oakland Estates' late-1960s homes. Solar panels on a roof with less than 10 years of remaining useful life will need to be removed and reinstalled at roof replacement — a cost of $2,000–$5,000 for a typical residential system. A 1960s home on its original or first-replacement roof should have a roofing contractor assess remaining life before solar installation is scheduled. If re-roofing is needed within 5 years, combine the projects: the roofing crew completes the new shingles first, the solar crew follows immediately on the fresh roof surface. Many solar contractors have roofing subcontractor relationships and can facilitate coordinated scheduling and pricing.
What is a realistic solar payback period for an Oakland Estates home?
For a well-sited Oakland Estates home with good sun exposure, a $20,000 system after the 30% federal ITC credit costs $14,000 net. Annual electricity savings at Duke Energy's current residential rates are typically $1,200–$1,800/year for a correctly sized system. That yields an 8–12 year payback on the net out-of-pocket cost. Cash flow analysis changes with financing: solar loan payments at 5–8% over 20 years may be comparable to monthly electricity savings, producing near-neutral cash flow from day one. Actual payback depends on your specific shading situation, roof orientation, system production, and future Duke Energy rate trends. Duke Energy residential rates have increased 15–25% over the past 5 years — a trend that, if continued, improves the solar economics over a 25-year panel life.
How does Oakland Estates' location affect solar panel access and installation logistics?
Central Altamonte Springs is well-served by solar contractors with operations throughout Orange and Seminole counties. No unusual access challenges affect Oakland Estates installations — the neighborhood is easily reached from I-4 and SR 436. Some individual properties may have landscaping or overhead utilities close to the roofline that affect staging and crew access, but these are site-specific rather than neighborhood-wide constraints. During your site assessment, point out any specific access limitations: narrow side yards, overhead service drops near the installation area, or landscaping close to the home that would affect crew movement and equipment staging.
What warranty should Oakland Estates homeowners expect from a solar installer?
A complete solar system warranty includes: panel performance warranty (25 years, guaranteeing 80–85%+ of rated output at year 25 from major manufacturers); panel product warranty (12–25 years depending on manufacturer); inverter warranty (12–25 years — microinverters typically carry 25-year warranties, string inverters 12 years standard with extended options); and installer workmanship warranty (10 years minimum). The installer's own warranty is only as strong as the company's longevity — ask how long they've operated in Florida, whether they service their own warranty claims or outsource to subcontractors, and what their warranty response time commitment is. A panel manufacturer warranty is transferable if you sell the home; the installer's workmanship warranty typically is not.
How do I compare solar quotes from multiple Oakland Estates installers?
When comparing three quotes, standardize on: system size in kW DC; panel manufacturer and model (tier-1 manufacturer vs. lesser-known brands carry different warranty and longevity confidence); inverter type (microinverters vs. string inverter with or without power optimizers — affects monitoring, shading impact, and warranty); production estimate in kWh/year (compare this across quotes for the same system size — widely varying production estimates are a red flag); total cost before and after ITC; and what's included in the labor warranty. Ask each contractor to provide the production estimate methodology — estimates derived from PVWatts with measured shade inputs are more reliable than estimates from visual assessment alone.

Last verified: