Have a question about something you read here? Want to suggest a topic we have not covered yet? Think we got something wrong and want to flag it? This page is the right place to reach out. Every message sent to SolarInfoPath lands directly in my inbox and gets read personally.
Who Is Behind SolarInfoPath
My name is Morgan Lee. I am the founder, the researcher, and the writer behind every article published on this site. I built SolarInfoPath after going through the process of evaluating and installing rooftop solar on my own home and discovering how genuinely difficult it was to find solar information online that was not connected to someone trying to sell something.
Most solar websites are lead generation tools. They are designed to collect your contact information and pass it to installers in exchange for a referral fee. SolarInfoPath has no installer partnerships, no referral agreements, no affiliate links, and no advertising of any kind. The site earns nothing from what you decide to do about solar. That independence is the entire reason this site exists and the only reason it is worth reading.
Every article on SolarInfoPath is researched and written with one goal: to give U.S. homeowners accurate, unbiased information so they can make their own well-informed decision. The content draws on data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the IRS, the Solar Energy Industries Association, and publicly available utility tariff filings. When figures change, articles are updated. When policy shifts, the site reflects it.
How to Reach Us
The only way to contact SolarInfoPath is by email. There is no automated reply system, no chatbot, and no outsourced inbox. When you send a message, I read it and respond personally.
Email: info@solarinfopath.com
LinkedIn: Follow us on LinkedIn
I aim to respond to every genuine inquiry within 1 to 3 business days. During periods of higher message volume, replies may occasionally take a little longer. I appreciate your patience, and I do reply to every genuine message.
What You Are Welcome to Write to Us About

Questions About Our Content
If something you read on this site was unclear, if an article left a specific question unanswered, or if you want to explore a topic in more depth than a published article covers, send a message. Reader questions are genuinely one of the most useful forms of feedback this site receives. If a question comes up repeatedly, it usually means an article needs expanding, or a new one needs to be written.
Before writing in, it is worth checking whether your question is already answered in theSolar Panel Installation Guide for U.S. Homes or the Solar Costs and Incentives section. These two guides cover the most commonly asked questions about how solar installation works and what it costs after available programs and exemptions are applied.
Topic Suggestions
A significant portion of the content on SolarInfoPath came directly from questions that real homeowners were searching for and could not find a straightforward, independent answer to anywhere online. If you have been looking for honest information about a specific solar topic and have not been able to find it, tell us. Reader suggestions carry real weight in deciding what gets researched and published next.
Corrections and Accuracy Reports
Solar policy, tax credit rules, utility tariffs, and incentive program structures change frequently. If you believe something published on this site is factually incorrect, outdated, or misleading in any way, please flag it. Factual accuracy is taken seriously here. When a correction is warranted, the relevant article is updated promptly. Readers who take the time to report inaccuracies genuinely help maintain the quality of this site for everyone who reads it.
General Solar Education Questions
If you are a U.S. homeowner trying to understand whether solar makes financial sense for your home, your roof type, your state, or your current electricity usage pattern, you are welcome to reach out. SolarInfoPath is an educational resource rather than a consulting service, so it cannot provide personalized professional financial or tax advice. That said, if your question relates to how a specific program works, what a particular policy means for homeowners in your state, or where to find the most relevant information for your situation, a genuine response pointing you in the right direction is something this site tries to provide.
If you are researching solar payback timelines specifically, the guide on solar payback periods for U.S. homeowners covers how payback is calculated, what state-level factors affect it most significantly, and what realistic timelines look like across different markets in 2026 after the expiration of the federal Investment Tax Credit.
If your question is about who actually qualifies for remaining state and utility incentive programs, the guide on who is eligible for solar incentives in the USA breaks down eligibility rules by program type, ownership structure, income level, and utility territory.
What SolarInfoPath Cannot Help With on This Page?

Being upfront about this saves time for both of us.
Solar installation quotes or installer referrals. SolarInfoPath has no affiliation with any solar installation company, equipment manufacturer, or financing provider. We do not connect homeowners with contractors, and we do not receive any referral fee or commission of any kind. For installation quotes, use an independent comparison marketplace that does not charge installers for placement.
Legal, tax, or financial advice. For questions about how solar incentives apply to your specific tax situation or about any other financial or legal matter, please consult a licensed tax professional or a certified financial advisor. SolarInfoPath can explain how programs generally work at an educational level, but it is not qualified to advise on individual circumstances.
Paid content, sponsored posts, or commercial partnerships. SolarInfoPath does not accept payment for editorial coverage, sponsored articles, or any content arrangement that would compromise editorial independence. The usefulness of this site to readers depends entirely on that independence.
Unsolicited link exchange or guest post requests. These are received regularly and are not responded to unless the content provides direct, genuine educational value to U.S. homeowners researching solar energy.
Check Our Guides Before Writing In
Many of the questions readers send are already answered in detail in the published guides on this site. Checking these first may save you time.
Curious about how solar installation actually works from start to finish, including what drives permitting timelines across different states? The Solar Panel Installation Guide for U.S. Homes covers the full process from site assessment through utility interconnection with exact timeline data.
Wondering what solar panels actually cost right now and whether the numbers make sense for your household after incentives? The Solar Costs and Incentives guide provides a full, current breakdown, including the impact of the federal ITC expiration at the end of 2025 and what state-level programs remain available in 2026.
Want to understand what your realistic payback period looks like in your specific state under 2026 conditions? The solar payback period guide covers state-by-state payback estimates with the exact figures that drive the calculation.
Need to know whether you actually qualify for solar incentives in your state, your utility territory, and your ownership structure? The solar incentive eligibility guide breaks down qualification requirements program by program.
Our Response Commitment
When you email SolarInfoPath, your message comes directly to me, Morgan Lee. There is no automated system, no virtual assistant, and no outsourced inbox. Every genuine message receives a genuine response. I aim to reply within 1 to 3 business days for standard inquiries. If your message includes context about your home, your state, your utility, or your specific situation, that detail helps provide the most relevant and useful response possible.
A Note on Editorial Independence
SolarInfoPath does not accept advertising, sponsorships, or paid placements of any kind. Every explanation, comparison, and assessment on this site reflects independent research and honest evaluation, not a financial relationship with any solar product, service, or installation company.
This is not incidental. It is the foundation of what makes this site worth reading. Homeowners searching for solar information deserve to know whether the source they are reading has a financial stake in what they decide. SolarInfoPath does not. That commitment is fully maintained and not something that will change.
SolarInfoPath is an independent educational resource for U.S. homeowners researching solar energy. We are not affiliated with any solar installer, manufacturer, utility company, or government agency. All content on this site is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice.
