This policy explains how Solar Panel Scam Center handles information submitted through this website, including case-evaluation forms, emails, and ordinary website usage data.
Solar Panel Scam Center is a marketing and consumer-education website, not a law firm. We may use submitted information to respond to inquiries, operate intake workflows, identify potentially relevant consumer-protection issues, prevent abuse, and refer qualifying inquiries to independent consumer-protection attorneys.
We may collect contact information, solar company names, lender names, state, zip code, contract details, payment history, complaint facts, uploaded documents, and routine technical information needed for website security and reliability.
For privacy questions, email [email protected].
Solar panel scams usually involve more than a single bad sales call. Homeowners often need to connect misleading savings promises, financing disclosures, installer performance, lien filings, warranty failures, and state complaint options before they know what happened. This resource center is organized so a visitor can move from symptom to evidence to next step without relying on JavaScript navigation.
Use the guides below to compare your situation against common solar fraud patterns, understand federal and state consumer-protection rights, prepare a complaint record, and decide whether a free eligibility screening makes sense. Keep copies of contracts, loan statements, utility bills, screenshots, emails, inspection notes, and any sales materials that promised tax credits, no electric bill, or guaranteed savings.