Short version: for most homes with a monthly electricity bill above roughly ₹2,500–3,000, rooftop solar in India usually pays for itself within a handful of years and then keeps saving for two decades. But "most" isn't "all" — and the honest answer depends entirely on your bill, your roof, and your tariff.
I'm an energy engineer, not a salesperson, so let me give you the version a vendor won't: solar is a good investment for a lot of Indian households right now, mainly because the PM Surya Ghar subsidy slashes the upfront cost. But it's a genuinely bad fit for some homes, and no amount of marketing changes that. Here's how to tell which group you're in.
When solar is clearly worth it
- Your monthly bill is ₹2,500 or higher. The bigger your bill, the faster solar pays back, because every unit you generate is a unit you don't buy at grid rates.
- You own your home and roof. The central subsidy currently requires ownership, and you want to be there long enough to collect the savings.
- You have unshaded roof space facing roughly south. As a rough guide you need about 100 sq ft per kilowatt of panels.
- Your electricity tariff is high. Higher per-unit rates mean bigger savings — and tariffs in India have generally risen over time, which works in solar's favour.
When it's a weaker case
- Your bill is small (say under ₹1,000/month). The savings may be real but the payback stretches out, and the upfront cost is harder to justify. See the dedicated guide on small bills for the exact math.
- You rent, or don't own the roof. Subsidy eligibility and installation rights get complicated.
- Heavy shading from buildings or trees, or very little usable roof area.
- You may move soon. Solar rewards staying put; the savings accumulate over years.
Not sure which group you're in?
See your system size, cost after subsidy, and payback period in 30 seconds — with every assumption shown.
The thing most people get wrong
People fixate on the sticker price of the system. What actually matters is the payback period — how long until the savings have repaid your net cost — and what happens after. A system that costs more but generates more, or qualifies for a bigger subsidy, can be the better deal even though it "costs more".
After payback, a solar system keeps producing electricity for many more years (panels typically carry performance warranties around 25 years). Everything generated in those later years is essentially free electricity, minus small maintenance like occasional cleaning. That long tail is where solar quietly makes its money.
What can go wrong
Being honest means naming the risks. Panels degrade slowly over time, so output in year 20 is lower than year one. Cheap or non-approved equipment can underperform or fail early — insist on ALMM-approved panels, which the subsidy scheme requires anyway. Savings also depend on net metering rules and tariffs set by your state, both of which can change. And a system that's oversized for your usage wastes money you won't fully recover.
So, should you do it?
If you own your home, have a decent roof, and your bill is comfortably into four figures each month, the maths in India today is usually favourable — largely thanks to the subsidy. If you're a renter, heavily shaded, or barely using any electricity, be skeptical of anyone telling you it's a no-brainer.
The best next step isn't to call a vendor — it's to know your own numbers first. Run your bill through the savings calculator, read up on the subsidy and real costs, and then get quotes. You'll negotiate far better when you already know roughly what you should be paying and saving.
A note on the numbers: figures here are typical ranges as of June 2026 and change often. The PM Surya Ghar subsidy structure, your state's top-up, per-kW prices and electricity tariffs all vary — always confirm current rates on the official portal (pmsuryaghar.gov.in) and get written quotes before you buy. This is planning information, not financial advice.