Solar contract red flag checker

A solar contract red flag checker helps homeowners spot risky e-signature, tax-credit, loan, PTO, lien, title, and roof language before the dispute gets buried under sales excuses.

Updated: June 18, 2026. Informational only. A high score does not prove fraud or guarantee any result.

Contract red flag map

solar contract tablet signature scam

Tablet signature pressure

Warning: The salesperson rushed a tablet or phone signature before the homeowner could read the full agreement.

Documents to pull: Signed contract, e-signature audit trail, envelope history, timestamps, IP records, and first complete copy received.

solar contract sent after signing

Late or missing documents

Warning: The contract, loan, or cancellation notice arrived after the signature was already captured.

Documents to pull: Delivery email, cancellation notice, signed PDF metadata, text messages, and proof of when documents were received.

free solar contract red flags

Free-solar payment math

Warning: The pitch used free solar, no bill, government program, or guaranteed savings language while the contract still creates payments.

Documents to pull: Proposal, final contract, financing disclosure, rebate language, tax-credit assumptions, and utility-bill history.

solar tax credit payment scam

Tax-credit payment jump

Warning: The monthly payment changes after a promo window if the homeowner does not apply a lump-sum tax credit to the loan.

Documents to pull: Loan agreement, payment schedule, tax-credit disclaimer, APR disclosure, and lender communications.

solar loan dealer fee contract

Dealer-fee loan inflation

Warning: The financed price is higher than the cash price or the low APR hides a larger principal balance.

Documents to pull: Cash quote, financed quote, itemized price sheet, APR disclosure, dealer-fee language, and payment schedule.

solar loan payments before permission to operate

Payments before PTO

Warning: Loan, lease, or PPA payments begin before the utility grants permission to operate.

Documents to pull: Lender statements, PTO records, inspection notes, utility emails, installer messages, and monitoring screenshots.

solar UCC lien title problem

UCC or PACE title trap

Warning: The agreement allows UCC filings, PACE assessments, transfer fees, payoff surprises, or title friction during sale or refinance.

Documents to pull: Title report, county recorder result, payoff demand, PACE disclosure, financing agreement, and escrow notes.

solar contract roof damage permit red flags

Roof and permit dodge

Warning: The contract is vague about roof repairs, permits, inspections, leaks, or who fixes defective installation work.

Documents to pull: Permit portal records, inspection cards, roof photos, repair estimates, warranty language, and service tickets.

Main solar panel scams guide

Route broad contract questions back to the homepage authority target.

Evidence checklist

Turn red flags into a document list before contacting a lender, regulator, or attorney.

Pattern database

Compare contract issues against repeat solar scam complaint patterns.

Contract-specific guides

If one of these red flags hits, do not stay on the generic solar scam page. Move into the exact contract, e-signature, loan, or lien guide that matches the paper trail.

FAQ

What is a solar contract red flag checker?

A solar contract red flag checker is a paper-trail stress test. It flags risky sales, financing, e-signature, utility, lien, and title language before the dispute gets reduced to phone-call noise.

Does this checker prove my solar contract is fraudulent?

No. The checker shows where the contract story may break. Fraud, deceptive sales, lending violations, or breach of contract still depend on the documents, deadlines, state law, and evidence.

Which solar contract red flag matters most?

The most urgent red flags are deadline and money issues: missing cancellation notices, payment jumps, tax-credit assumptions, loan payments before permission to operate, and liens or title filings that affect sale or refinance.

Solar Panel Scams Resource Center

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.