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If you are comparing NuWatt Propel against a traditional solar loan in New Hampshire, the real question is not just price. It is timing, ownership, and whether you want to move now or wait for a launch window of April 2026 or later.
Eversource, Unitil, Liberty Utilities, and Community Power NH towns all create slightly different economics, but the central NH search intent is the same: how do I go solar without the old tax-credit math?

Quick answer
If you need solar now, compare loans and third-party options today. If you specifically want a lower-payment path that can still end in ownership, stay on the Propel waitlist while you compare.
Because New Hampshire has no major state rebate replacing the homeowner credit, the practical near-term choice is often between a loan, a lease/PPA, or doing nothing. If your electric bills or oil bills are already painful, waiting can be expensive.
New Hampshire is a strong Propel waitlist market because the state has no state solar rebate and no homeowner ITC to soften loan payments. If launch timing lines up for you, Propel could become one of the cleaner ownership-focused paths here.
What matters right now
Loans are available now, but monthly payments are heavier without Section 25D.
Lease/PPA math can still make sense because Section 48 is still active for third-party structures.
The waitlist is best for homeowners who want a future ownership-transfer option instead of a standard lease.
Head-to-head
The choice is mostly about timing, tax-credit structure, and when you want ownership to start.
Can you start the project now?
Solar loan now
Yes. Loans are available today through installers, local lenders, or state financing programs.
Propel waitlist
Not yet. New Hampshire is still waitlist-only with launch timing listed as April 2026 or later.
Upfront cost
Solar loan now
$0 down is possible, but you still finance the full post-ITC system cost.
Propel waitlist
Expected to remain $0 down if launch follows the current Propel structure.
Federal tax credit path
Solar loan now
None for the homeowner. Section 25D is gone.
Propel waitlist
Expected to rely on third-party Section 48 / 48E capture if the rollout launches as planned.
Ownership timeline
Solar loan now
You own the system at installation.
Propel waitlist
Expected ownership transfer around year 5 if the launch mirrors current Propel markets.
Maintenance during early years
Solar loan now
Primarily on you after installation unless specific services are bundled.
Propel waitlist
Expected to be handled during the managed period before ownership transfer.
Who is this best for?
Solar loan now
Homeowners who want solar now and value immediate ownership more than waiting for launch timing.
Propel waitlist
Homeowners who can wait and want a lower-payment ownership-focused path if the rollout lands.
What to do next
The smartest move is usually to join the waitlist and read the strongest current-state guides in parallel.
Open next
Get launch timing, pricing, and eligibility updates automatically.
Open guideOpen next
Post-25D reality check for New Hampshire homeowners.
Open guideOpen next
Best side-by-side financing comparison while Propel is still pending.
Open guideOpen next
Why TPO still matters in a no-ITC, no-state-rebate market.
Open guideOpen next
Decision page for homeowners deciding whether to wait for Propel or move now.
Open guideWe’ll keep you updated on launch timing, pricing, and eligibility while you compare current loan and lease options.
FAQ
Because New Hampshire has no major state rebate replacing the homeowner credit, the practical near-term choice is often between a loan, a lease/PPA, or doing nothing. If your electric bills or oil bills are already painful, waiting can be expensive. New Hampshire is a strong Propel waitlist market because the state has no state solar rebate and no homeowner ITC to soften loan payments. If launch timing lines up for you, Propel could become one of the cleaner ownership-focused paths here.
Not yet. The New Hampshire waitlist is open now, and the current launch window is April 2026 or later.
The main tradeoff is timing. A loan can move your project now, but you finance the full post-ITC system cost. Waiting could preserve a lower-payment ownership path if Propel launches, but you have to tolerate launch uncertainty.
Join the New Hampshire waitlist and compare the live state alternatives right away. That way you can move now if your roof and utility math already work, while still getting automatic rollout updates from NuWatt.

Join the New Hampshire Propel waitlist now, then use the state guides above to decide whether a loan, lease, or PPA makes more sense while launch timing firms up.