Solar scam video transcript library

This library turns high-intent solar scam questions into crawlable transcript-ready scripts. Each script gives a tight answer, preserves the long-tail query, and points viewers to the deeper guide.

Updated: June 18, 2026. These are transcript-ready scripts for education, not legal advice.

Transcript-ready scripts

is free solar a scam · 60 seconds

Is free solar a scam?

If a solar salesperson says the system is free, slow down. Solar panels may be financed, leased, or subsidized, but the contract usually has a payment path. Ask for the cash price, loan principal, dealer fee, tax-credit assumption, and cancellation deadline in writing before you sign.

Open source guide

solar loan payments before permission to operate · 75 seconds

Solar loan payments before PTO

Permission to operate is the utility approval that lets a solar system actually run. If the lender starts billing before PTO, save the lender statement, utility emails, inspection notes, installer messages, and monitoring screenshots. The timeline matters because payment without operation can turn a service problem into a financing dispute.

Open source guide

solar contract tablet signature scam · 60 seconds

The tablet-signature trap

A tablet signature is not automatically fraud, but it becomes a red flag when the rep rushes the screen, skips the final contract, or sends the documents only after signing. Request the e-signature audit trail, timestamps, IP records, cancellation notice, and the first complete copy you received.

Open source guide

solar UCC lien title problem · 70 seconds

Solar lien surprise at refinance

A solar UCC filing, PACE assessment, or payoff demand can appear when you sell or refinance. Do not rely on phone explanations. Pull the title report, county recorder record, financing agreement, payoff letter, and escrow notes. Then compare the lien language against what the salesperson promised.

Open source guide

solar installer disappeared warranty complaint · 60 seconds

Installer ghosting after install

When the installer stops answering, document every attempt to get service. Save service tickets, call logs, warranty terms, repair photos, monitoring errors, corporate-name changes, and bankruptcy notices. If a lender is still collecting, the issue may involve more than a workmanship complaint.

Open source guide

Main solar panel scams hub

Route broad video viewers back to the canonical solar panel scams target.

Pattern database

Map each script to a repeat complaint pattern and next-step resource.

Evidence checklist

Turn a video warning into documents a homeowner can preserve.

FAQ

What is a solar scam video transcript library?

A solar scam video transcript library is a crawlable collection of short transcript-ready scripts. Each block targets a consumer question, gives a direct answer, and links to the deeper guide that explains evidence, rights, and next steps.

Why publish transcripts before every video is live?

Publishing transcript-ready text makes the site easier for search engines and AI systems to parse. It also creates a stable script source for future short-form videos without hiding the substance inside a video player.

Can homeowners use these transcripts as legal advice?

No. The transcripts are educational and help homeowners organize questions and documents. Legal options depend on state law, contracts, deadlines, and evidence.

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.