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

Vetted Solar Installation Contractors Serving Weathersfield

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
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About Weathersfield

Typical home era: 1960s–1980s

ZIP code: 32701

Weathersfield is a centrally-located residential neighborhood in Altamonte Springs, situated near the SR 436 commercial corridor with a mix of single-family homes from multiple eras.

Notable features:

  • Central Altamonte Springs location
  • Close to the Altamonte Mall and SR 436 corridor
  • Mix of single-family homes from multiple decades

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Duke Energy's net metering work for Weathersfield solar homeowners?
Under Duke Energy's current net metering program, excess solar generation credits your bill at the retail rate — the same rate you pay for electricity from the grid. Monthly surplus credits roll forward. Any remaining annual balance is settled at an avoided-cost rate (lower than retail), so while annual true-ups in Florida can result in a small net payment to the utility, the system has significant value across most months. Duke Energy's interconnection queue for residential systems has been running 30–90 days in Seminole County from application submission to meter set. Your installer should handle the interconnection paperwork.
What's the first thing I should do before getting solar quotes?
Pull your last 12 months of electric bills and note your average monthly kWh consumption. This tells an installer how large a system you actually need. Most Florida homeowners in 1,500–2,500 sq ft homes average 1,200–1,800 kWh/month — a 10–15 kW system covers most or all of that. The second step is to look at your roof: note which faces are south-facing and roughly how much tree cover exists. A Google Maps satellite view gives a reasonable first read. Bring these two pieces of information to every solar consultation — it lets you evaluate whether each installer's proposed system size is appropriate for your home's actual consumption and sun exposure.
What are the Florida solar incentives available in 2025-2026?
Florida's primary solar incentives are: (1) the federal Residential Clean Energy Credit (ITC) at 30% of total system cost, applied as a federal tax credit; (2) Florida's exemption from sales tax on solar equipment (saving 6% of equipment cost); and (3) Florida's property tax exemption for the added value of a solar installation — your property tax assessment does not increase due to the solar system. There is no longer a Florida state tax credit for solar (it expired). Duke Energy does not offer installation rebates, though it does offer a pilot battery storage incentive program that varies by year.
What happens to my solar system if I sell my Weathersfield home?
A solar system is a fixture that conveys with the home sale in Florida under standard real estate contract terms unless specifically excluded. A fully owned (not leased) solar system typically adds value to the home — appraisers use a variety of methods, including cost approach and income approach based on utility savings. If the system was financed with a solar loan secured against the home (as opposed to an unsecured personal loan), that lien must be paid off at closing. Solar leases and PPAs are more complicated to transfer — many buyers are wary of assuming a lease obligation. Owned systems are far cleaner for a future sale.
How do I evaluate competing solar quotes?
Compare quotes on: system size (kW DC and AC), estimated annual production (kWh/year), panel efficiency and warranty (25-year performance warranty is standard), inverter type and warranty, installation warranty (10 years minimum labor), total cost before incentives, cost per watt installed (typically $2.50–$3.50/watt in Florida), and the installer's license number (verify at myfloridalicense.com). Avoid comparing on monthly payment alone — different loan terms can make an overpriced system look affordable. The cheapest per-watt quote is not always the best: factor in the installer's track record, response time for service, and whether they handle Duke Energy interconnection directly or subcontract it.

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