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HLPD has served the Town of Hudson since 1897 with competitive rates and a strong solar rebate program. This guide covers solar costs, incentives, net metering policies, and savings projections specifically for HLPD ratepayers in Hudson.

$0.24/kWh
Estimated residential rate. About 14% below the state IOU average of $0.28/kWh.
Available
Net metering with monthly bill credits for excess solar generation.
Hudson
Hudson Light and Power Department provides electricity to the town of Hudson in Massachusetts.
$1.20/watt
Max: $7,500. Per-watt solar rebate for residential installations.
(978) 568-9000
Official WebsiteContact Utility
Contact the utility to ask about energy audit services and efficiency programs.
Municipal utilities typically offer lower electricity rates because they operate as non-profit, community-owned entities. There are no shareholders to pay, and local governance keeps costs in check. Here is how HLPD’s estimated rates compare to Massachusetts’s investor-owned utility (IOU) average.
| Metric | HLPD | MA IOU Average |
|---|---|---|
| Residential Rate (est.) | $0.24/kWh | $0.28/kWh |
| Annual Cost (900 kWh/mo) | $2,592 | $3,024 |
| Ownership | Community-owned, non-profit | Shareholder-owned, for-profit |
| Rate Setting | Local board/town meeting | State PUC regulated |
| Savings vs. IOU | ~14% lower rate = ~$432/yr savings | |
Rates shown are estimates based on publicly available data. Municipal utility rates can change based on local board decisions. Even with lower rates, solar panels still provide significant savings by reducing or eliminating your electric bill. Contact HLPD for your exact current rate.
Understanding available incentives is key to maximizing your solar investment. Here is what HLPD customers can access in 2026.
The federal residential solar ITC expired on December 31, 2025. Homeowners who purchase solar panels with cash or a loan no longer receive a federal tax credit. However, third-party owned systems (solar leases and PPAs) may still qualify under Section 48/48E, with the financing company claiming the credit. This makes local utility rebates more valuable than ever.
HLPD
$1.20/watt
Max: $7,500
Per-watt solar rebate for residential installations.
Must be an HLPD electric customer.
Here is what a typical 8 kW residential solar installation looks like for HLPD customers, including available incentives and projected savings over 25 years.
Projection assumes $0.24/kWh rate with no annual increase (conservative estimate). Actual savings may be higher as rates typically increase 2-4% per year.
With a solar lease or power purchase agreement (PPA), a third-party company owns the system on your roof. The system owner can still claim the 30% federal ITC under Section 48/48E, which often results in lower monthly payments for you. You pay a fixed monthly rate or per-kWh price that is typically lower than your utility rate, with no upfront cost.
Customize your system size to see estimated costs and savings based on HLPD’s rates and available incentives.
Estimate your solar costs and savings with HLPD
19 panels at 430W each
Annual Production
10,000 kWh
Year 1 Savings
$2,400/yr
Payback Period
~7 years
25-Year Net Profit
$41,905
Estimates based on 1250 kWh/kW annual production, 0.24/kWh utility rate, and 0.5% annual panel degradation. Federal residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired Dec 31, 2025. Actual results vary by roof orientation, shading, and usage patterns.
Net metering with monthly bill credits for excess solar generation.
Net metering is the billing mechanism that makes rooftop solar financially attractive. When your solar panels produce more electricity than your home uses, the excess flows back to the grid and your meter effectively “runs backwards.” Here is the typical process with HLPD:
HLPD customers are NOT eligible for Mass Save programs.
Mass Save is funded by investor-owned utilities (Eversource, National Grid, Unitil, etc.) and their ratepayers. Municipal utilities operate independently and offer their own programs. This is a common point of confusion for homeowners in MLP towns.
The utility offers its own rebate programs for solar, heat pumps, and other efficiency upgrades (see incentives above).
Home Electrification and Appliance Rebates are federally funded and available regardless of utility type. Up to $8,000 for income-qualified households (subject to state program launch).
Municipal utilities typically charge lower rates than IOUs, partially offsetting the loss of Mass Save rebates.
Contact HLPD to inquire about home energy assessment options.
Hudson Light and Power Department is a municipal utility, also known as a publicly owned utility or municipal light plant (MLP). Unlike investor-owned utilities (IOUs) such as Eversource and National Grid, municipal utilities are owned and operated by the local community.
Hudson Light and Power Department customers pay approximately $0.24/kWh, which is roughly 14% less than the state average for investor-owned utilities ($0.28/kWh). As a municipal utility, HLPD sets rates locally, and revenue stays in the community rather than going to shareholders.
Yes. Hudson Light and Power Department offers a solar rebate of $1.20/watt (max $7,500). Per-watt solar rebate for residential installations. Note: The federal residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired on December 31, 2025, so this local rebate is now one of the most important incentives available to homeowners.
Yes. Hudson Light and Power Department offers net metering for solar customers. Net metering with monthly bill credits for excess solar generation.
No. Massachusetts municipal utilities (MLPs) are NOT eligible for Mass Save programs. Hudson Light and Power Department operates its own rebate and efficiency programs independently. HLPD customers are NOT eligible for Mass Save programs.
To install solar panels as a Hudson Light and Power Department customer: (1) Get a free solar estimate to determine your optimal system size. (2) Contact HLPD about interconnection requirements and any pre-approval needed. (3) Choose a NABCEP-certified installer. (4) After installation, apply for any available utility rebates. (5) Your system connects to the grid and you begin saving. The process typically takes 2-4 months from signing to activation.
Get a free, personalized solar estimate tailored to HLPD’s rates and incentives. Our NABCEP-certified team handles everything from design to permitting to interconnection.
Serving Hudson and all of Massachusetts. Free consultation, no obligation.