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Solar and Roofing Advisor
Your solar panels are working perfectly, but you're still getting a bill from SCE. Here's why connection fees exist and what you'll actually save.

You installed solar panels. Your system is generating power. Your net metering credits are building up each month.
So why is SCE still sending you a bill?
If you're seeing a $15-$25 monthly charge despite producing more electricity than you use, you're not alone. Thousands of Southern California homeowners are confused by this "connection fee" that never seems to go away—even when their solar system covers 100% of their energy needs.
Here's the truth: connection fees are unavoidable, but they don't mean solar isn't working. In fact, that $17 monthly bill is proof your system is doing exactly what it should. Let's break down why these fees exist, what you're actually paying for, and how much you're still saving compared to life before solar.
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Let's start with the Reddit post that inspired this article. A homeowner built an ultra-efficient 1,800 sq ft home, installed solar in April, and used net metering credits all winter to keep their house at 70°F. Their bill? Just $17.
But then they got a message from their utility company saying they could be "more efficient" and that similar homes were paying only $10 per month.
The problem? That $10 bill doesn't exist for regular homeowners. It's likely a low-income subsidy program, or it's simply bad data from an automated system that doesn't understand how net metering works.
Here's what's really happening. When you go solar in California, you're still connected to the grid. That connection costs money to maintain, and utilities charge a fixed monthly fee to cover:
In Southern California, these connection fees typically range from $15-$25 per month depending on your utility provider. This is what you see on your bill even when you've used zero grid electricity.
The confusion happens because utility companies send automated "efficiency comparison" emails that don't account for solar customers. The algorithm sees your $17 bill and compares it to fictional averages—without realizing you're already producing more power than you're consuming.
Understanding why electricity bills are so high in Southern California makes the connection fee seem trivial by comparison. Before solar, the average SCE customer pays $180-$300+ per month.
California's net metering system (NEM 3.0) allows you to bank excess solar production during sunny months and draw from those credits during winter or cloudy periods.
Here's a simplified example:
April-September (high production months):
October-March (lower production months):
Your total annual cost with solar? About $204 in connection fees ($17 × 12 months).
Compare that to the $2,400-$3,600 you'd pay SCE without solar, and the connection fee suddenly feels insignificant.
Under NEM 3.0, the value of your solar credits has changed compared to older NEM 2.0 policies. Export rates are lower, which is why net metering credits now work differently than they did just a few years ago. But even with reduced export rates, solar still delivers massive savings—you're just not getting dollar-for-dollar credit like before.
The connection fee remains constant regardless of which NEM policy you're under. Whether you're on NEM 2.0 (grandfathered for 20 years) or NEM 3.0, you'll pay that fixed monthly charge.
If you're considering solar in 2025, here's the uncomfortable truth: panels alone aren't enough anymore.
NEM 3.0 changed the game by dramatically reducing the value of electricity you export to the grid during peak production hours (10am-3pm). Instead of getting credited $0.30-$0.40 per kWh like under NEM 2.0, you now get $0.05-$0.08 per kWh during those hours.
Meanwhile, when you import electricity during expensive evening hours (4pm-9pm), you're paying $0.50-$0.70 per kWh from SCE.
That's a 10x difference.
Battery storage solves this problem by storing your excess daytime production and using it during expensive evening hours instead of exporting it for pennies. This is exactly why solar batteries can maximize your savings under the current rate structure.
Without battery:
With battery:
The connection fee doesn't change, but your ability to avoid expensive grid electricity does. For most Southern California homeowners, a battery system pays for itself in 7-10 years through avoided peak-rate charges alone.
🔋 Should You Add Battery Storage?
US Power specializes in solar + battery systems designed for NEM 3.0. Get a custom analysis showing how much more you'll save with storage.
Explore Battery Options →
Connection fees are unavoidable, but overpaying for your solar system isn't.
US Power is the exclusive QCells partner in Southern California, which means we offer factory-direct QCells pricing that's typically 15-20% below market rates. Here's what that means for you:
Typical solar company pricing:
US Power factory-direct pricing:
That's $3,500-$4,200 in upfront savings for the same American-made QCells panels with the same 25-year comprehensive warranty.
Even accounting for the $204 annual connection fee, you're still saving $2,000-$2,400 per year compared to paying SCE's rates. Over 25 years, that's $50,000-$60,000 in total savings.
Our CSLB-licensed consultants provide transparent pricing with no hidden fees. We complete installations in 3-6 weeks after approval, significantly faster than the industry average of 8-12 weeks. And with 175+ five-star Google reviews, we've proven that quality installations and honest communication matter more than aggressive sales tactics.
Let's run the numbers for a typical 2,000 sq ft home in Los Angeles with a monthly SCE bill of $250.
Without solar (25 years):
With solar (25 years):
Even with connection fees factored in, you're saving nearly $100,000 over the life of your system.
The 30% federal solar tax credit drops to 26% in 2026 and 22% in 2027 before potentially expiring entirely. That's an additional $1,000-$2,500 in lost savings if you wait.
For more detailed calculations specific to your home, check out how much solar panels save in 2025 with real examples from Southern California homeowners.
💰 Ready to Lock In Maximum Savings?
Get a no-pressure consultation with our CSLB-licensed experts. We'll show you exactly how much you'll save—connection fees and all.
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The connection fee isn't a hidden cost—it's a transparent, unavoidable charge that represents less than 4% of what you'd otherwise pay your utility company.
Here's what you should do next:
Step 1: Calculate your current annual electricity costs. Pull up your last 12 months of SCE bills and add them up. Most LA-area homeowners are paying $2,400-$3,600 per year.
Step 2: Get a solar quote that includes connection fees. US Power provides transparent estimates that show your true annual costs with solar, including connection fees, so you know exactly what to expect.
Step 3: Compare the 25-year cost difference. Even with connection fees, solar typically saves Southern California homeowners $80,000-$120,000 over the life of the system.
Step 4: Understand what to expect during solar installation. The process takes 3-6 weeks with US Power, and we handle all permitting, inspections, and utility coordination.
The bottom line? Connection fees are real, but they're insignificant compared to the savings solar delivers. That Reddit homeowner paying $17/month instead of $250/month? They're doing everything right.
You'll never eliminate your connection fee. But you can eliminate 95% of your electric bill.
SCE rates have increased 32% since 2014 and show no signs of slowing down. The connection fee you're worried about? It's less than what SCE charges for a single day of electricity usage.
US Power specializes in helping Southern California homeowners maximize their solar savings through factory-direct QCells pricing, expert system design, and transparent communication. We don't hide costs or make unrealistic promises about $0 bills.
What we do promise: American-made panels, CSLB-licensed consultants, 25-year comprehensive warranties, and installations completed in 3-6 weeks.
⏰ The 30% Tax Credit Expires December 31, 2025
Every month you wait costs you $200-$300 in utility bills you could be avoiding. Get started today and lock in maximum savings before incentives disappear.
Claim Your Tax Credit Now →
No. As long as you're connected to the utility grid, you'll pay this monthly charge. The only way to avoid it is to go completely off-grid, which requires significant battery capacity and backup generators—typically costing $40,000-$60,000 more than a standard grid-tied system. For 99% of homeowners, paying the connection fee and staying grid-connected is far more economical.
SCE, SDG&E, and PG&E each have different infrastructure costs and service territories. SCE's connection fee is typically $17-$19/month, while SDG&E charges $15-$18/month. Rural electric co-ops often charge $25-$45/month because they have fewer customers sharing the infrastructure costs.
No. Connection fees are separate from your energy usage charges. Net metering credits only apply to the electricity portion of your bill (the kWh you import from the grid). You cannot use solar credits to pay the connection fee.
Yes, utilities typically adjust connection fees every few years based on infrastructure costs. However, these increases are much smaller than the 5-8% annual rate hikes applied to electricity usage charges. Over 25 years, your connection fee might increase from $17 to $30-$35, while grid electricity costs will more than double.
If you're researching solar but aren't sure about your specific situation, start by learning about things you must know before going solar. This includes HOA restrictions, roof condition requirements, and whether your electrical panel can support a solar system.
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