Your forecast calls for —

mostly sun, with a good chance of savings.

Drop in your address. In thirty seconds you'll see a year of sunshine on your own roof, the panels laid out, and the honest dollar number. That's the whole pitch.

no obligation, no one showing up unannounced
By the numbers,

nine summers of quiet work.

3,500+
Rooftops
and counting
9
Years local
since '15
4.9/5
Neighbor reviews
thank you!
25 yr
Workmanship warranty
on every panel
a gentle three-step

How it works

i.

Point us at your roof.

Type your address. We'll pull a satellite view and measure every slope, eave, and overhang — no one climbs anything yet. Takes about half a minute.

ii.

See the year in sunshine.

Watch a whole year of sun pass over your rooftop in seconds. We show you what the panels would look like, where they'd go, and what you'd save, to the dollar.

iii.

A neighbor, on the phone.

Like what you see? A real person from down the road calls to walk through it. Install is usually one long afternoon, and then the roof quietly gets to work.

word from the block

What the neighbors say

"
They showed me exactly where the panels would sit before I'd paid a cent. Felt like a conversation, not a sales pitch.
M Margaret K.
Maple Street
★★★★★
"
Crew showed up at eight, were gone by five, and my bill dropped by ninety dollars the very next month. They left the driveway cleaner than they found it.
R Ray & Inez D.
Orchard Lane
★★★★★
"
I got three quotes. Theirs was the honest one — no mystery fees, no ten-year lock-in. The estimate tool sold me before the salesperson even called back.
J Jonah P.
Cedar Hollow
★★★★★
the neighborhood almanac of rooftop sunshine

A quieter kind of power company — the one next door.

Since 2015, we've climbed 3,500 rooftops across the valley, fitted panels warmed by the same sun that warms your porch, and quietly shrunk a lot of electric bills. No pushy sales. No jargon. Just careful work, a clear number, and a neighbor on speed dial.

takes about 30 seconds
A sunlit home with rooftop solar panels
— the Hendersons' place, last Tuesday
An illustration of a sunlit rooftop
— and one more down the block