True-Up Shock: Owing Thousands After Solar Reconciliation
Tackles the common true-up shock where solar homeowners receive a massive annual bill from their utility, explaining how to verify the charges and dispute them.
True-Up Shock: What to Do When Your Annual Reconciliation Leaves You Owing Thousands
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Utility billing disputes involve state-specific regulations and utility tariffs. Consult an attorney if you are facing a substantial true-up balance.
Overview
You have had solar panels for a year. Your monthly bills have been small — sometimes zero. You assumed the system was covering your usage. Then the annual true-up statement arrives, and you owe your utility thousands of dollars.
This is true-up shock, and it is one of the most common — and financially devastating — post-installation surprises in residential solar. The true-up is the annual reconciliation between the electricity you consumed, the electricity your panels produced, and the credits you received for exports. When the math does not work in your favor, the utility demands payment — often in a single lump sum.
This guide explains what a true-up is, why it can produce unexpectedly large bills, how to verify the utility's calculations, and how to dispute inaccurate charges with the utility or your state's Public Utilities Commission.
How Annual True-Up Works
Under most net metering arrangements, your utility does not settle your account month-by-month. Instead, it tracks your net consumption (usage minus solar production credits) over a 12-month period. At the end of that period — the "true-up" — the utility calculates whether you owe anything beyond the minimum charges you have been paying monthly.
If your cumulative credits exceed your cumulative consumption, you typically owe nothing beyond the basic monthly connection fees. But if your cumulative consumption exceeds your cumulative credits — or if the credits are valued at a lower rate than your consumption — a true-up balance results.
Why True-Up Shock Happens
Several factors commonly produce unexpected true-up balances:
1. The system is underproducing. The panels are generating less electricity than the sales estimate projected. Common causes: improper sizing, shading not disclosed during the sales process, equipment malfunction, or degradation faster than expected.
2. Consumption increased. The homeowner added an EV, a pool heater, or additional occupants after the system was sized — and the solar production was not sufficient to cover the new load.
3. Export credits are worth less than retail consumption. Under NEM 3.0 in California, export credits were cut by approximately 75%. A kilowatt-hour exported at noon may earn a credit of $0.05 to $0.08 — while a kilowatt-hour consumed at 7 PM costs $0.35 to $0.45. Even if the system produces enough total kilowatt-hours, the mismatch between low-value export credits and high-cost peak consumption creates a true-up deficit.
4. Time-of-Use rate mismatch. The homeowner was placed on a TOU rate plan where peak rates (typically 4 PM to 9 PM) are 2 to 3 times off-peak rates. Solar production peaks at midday — off-peak — while household consumption peaks in the evening, during the highest-rate period.
5. Meter or billing errors. A malfunctioning meter, misconfigured net metering settings, or a utility billing system error. One California homeowner reported being billed for 2,500 kWh in a month — an amount that was "impossible, since almost half of my electricity consumption is being met by solar production." The solar company checked the system and meter — everything appeared fine — but the grid meter showed consumption far higher than actual.
6. The system was not active for the full year. Interconnection delays or PTO (Permission to Operate) delays meant the system was not generating for part of the billing period, while the homeowner was consuming at full retail rates.
How to Verify Your True-Up Bill
Before paying — or disputing — a large true-up bill, take these steps:
Compare Production to the Original Estimate
Pull your solar production data from the monitoring portal (Enphase, SolarEdge, etc.). Compare actual annual production to the annual production estimate provided by the installer at the time of sale. If actual production is more than 5% to 10% below the estimate, the system may be underperforming — and the sales estimate may have been inflated.
Compare Consumption to Pre-Solar Baseline
Review your utility bills for the 12 months before solar installation and compare to the 12 months after. If consumption increased significantly — and that increase was not anticipated — the system may have been undersized for your actual usage.
Check the Export Credit Valuation
Confirm what rate your utility applied to your exported kilowatt-hours. Under NEM 2.0, export credits were approximately retail rate. Under NEM 3.0, they are the avoided-cost rate. If your utility applied NEM 3.0 rates to a NEM 2.0-grandfathered system, a billing error exists.
Verify the True-Up Period
Confirm that the 12-month true-up period matches the date your system was activated. If the utility included months before your system was operational, the true-up will be inflated.
How to Dispute an Inaccurate True-Up Bill
If your analysis identifies an error, follow this escalation path:
Step 1: Contact your utility. Call customer service. Document the call: date, time, representative name, case number. Explain the specific error you identified. If the representative cannot resolve it, escalate to a supervisor. Request a written explanation of how the true-up was calculated.
Step 2: Send a formal dispute letter. By certified mail, state the specific billing errors. Attach your production data, the original sales estimate, copies of prior bills showing the correct rate, and any other supporting documentation. Set a deadline for correction.
Step 3: File a complaint with your state PUC. If the utility does not correct the error within a reasonable time, file a formal complaint with your state's Public Utilities Commission. Include the utility's response (or lack thereof), your analysis, and all supporting documentation.
Step 4: File a complaint against the solar company. If the true-up shock resulted from a system that was undersized based on inflated production estimates — and the installer knew or should have known the estimates were unrealistic — a misrepresentation claim against the installer may be viable. File complaints with the state Attorney General, the FTC, and the state contractor licensing board.
FAQ
Is a true-up bill the same as a regular monthly utility bill?
No. The true-up is the annual reconciliation, separate from the monthly minimum charges you pay throughout the year. It reflects the net balance after credits are applied.
What is considered a normal true-up?
Ideally, zero or a small credit. A true-up bill of a few hundred dollars may reflect minor mismatches between production and consumption. A true-up of several thousand dollars indicates a significant issue — sizing, equipment failure, or billing error.
Can I dispute a true-up bill if my system is underproducing?
Yes — but the dispute may be with the solar company (for inflated estimates or defective installation) rather than the utility. If the utility correctly applied the tariff and the meter is accurate, the utility is not at fault for the installer's inflated promises.
How do I prevent true-up shock in future years?
Monitor production monthly. Compare to the original estimate. If production is consistently below projections, have the system inspected. Consider adding battery storage to shift consumption away from peak-rate periods.
Got blindsided by a solar deal that did not deliver?
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