Sponsored

Ford….. Get Rid of your Deal with SunRun

sotek2345

Well-known member
First Name
Tom
Joined
Jun 7, 2021
Threads
30
Messages
3,677
Reaction score
4,312
Location
Upstate NY
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat ER, 2021 Mach-e GT
Occupation
Engineering Manager
sunRun updated their quote to me;
From $9,400 for the whole HIS installation
To
Free?

if I install 9 solar panels on my roof, which they then say allows them to eliminate the cost of the HIS altogether.
I would pay $35 a month for the lease arrangement of their panels on my roof,
But my electric bill would go down by more than $35,
So it’s essentially “free”.

it sounds too good to be true, but if it is,
It’s sounds like an offer I can’t refuse.

anyone have experience with leased solar systems?

it would be great to get the full soup to nuts potential of the truck with the whole HIS system,
And suddenly it went from a $9,400 proposition to
FREE !?

love to hear anyone’s opinion on this offer. They said “this is the way Ford intended this to work”. Integration with solar, and HIS cost goes away.
We are on a leased solar panel agreement (was solar city / now Tesla). It has worked out pretty well for us so far, but a few things to note:

1) Sunrun would keep any tax credits for the solar install

2) With my agreement the monthly cost goes up every 2 years, not sure if yours is the same or not.

3) I would be very skeptical if 9 panels would generate $35 worth of electricity per month, though that depends on your local utility rates. We have the same sized system in NY and it makes an average of $25/mo. (averaged across the year).
Sponsored

 

Pjlightning

Well-known member
First Name
PJ
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
236
Reaction score
222
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
F 150
We are on a leased solar panel agreement (was solar city / now Tesla). It has worked out pretty well for us so far, but a few things to note:

1) Sunrun would keep any tax credits for the solar install

2) With my agreement the monthly cost goes up every 2 years, not sure if yours is the same or not.

3) I would be very skeptical if 9 panels would generate $35 worth of electricity per month, though that depends on your local utility rates. We have the same sized system in NY and it makes an average of $25/mo. (averaged across the year).
Thanks for the feedback. I have a friend who has the Tesla leasing solar deal too, and he’s been totally happy with it. Like Tesla, SunRun takes care of the upkeep, and the homeowner doesn’t have to do anything at all.
The amount that the 9 panels generate is guaranteed by SunRun, so if they produce less than expected, it doesn’t change the economics in the leasing deal. I’m locking in electrical prices on that $35/ month from SunRun , with an inflation factor that is also locked, so if Eversource raises electrical rates higher than the inflation rate, I’ve at least got SunRun locked at a known future rate schedule.
But the big deal to me is, this makes the $9,400 cost of HIS go away. That’s a huge savings. So even if the solar isn’t a big generator of energy, at least I saved the $9,400 on upfront costs.
I just have to live with a $35/month bill from SunRun, which seems like peanuts compared to what I am getting from them with the HIS and the solar panels.

am I missing something?
 

VTbuckeye

Well-known member
First Name
Joseph
Joined
Jan 15, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
909
Reaction score
874
Location
Vermont
Vehicles
22 Lightning Lariat ER max tow built Aug 22, 16 XC90T8, 22 XC40 P8 Recharge
Thanks for the feedback. I have a friend who has the Tesla leasing solar deal too, and he’s been totally happy with it. Like Tesla, SunRun takes care of the upkeep, and the homeowner doesn’t have to do anything at all.
The amount that the 9 panels generate is guaranteed by SunRun, so if they produce less than expected, it doesn’t change the economics in the leasing deal. I’m locking in electrical prices on that $35/ month from SunRun , with an inflation factor that is also locked, so if Eversource raises electrical rates higher than the inflation rate, I’ve at least got SunRun locked at a known future rate schedule.
But the big deal to me is, this makes the $9,400 cost of HIS go away. That’s a huge savings. So even if the solar isn’t a big generator of energy, at least I saved the $9,400 on upfront costs.
I just have to live with a $35/month bill from SunRun, which seems like peanuts compared to what I am getting from them with the HIS and the solar panels.

am I missing something?
9400/$35= 268 months. It looks like either you get a free his or free solar...even if the solar brings in no actual power.
 

Pjlightning

Well-known member
First Name
PJ
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
236
Reaction score
222
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
F 150
9400/$35= 268 months. It looks like either you get a free his or free solar...even if the solar brings in no actual power.
right! And even if you planned to buy the equipment from SunRun and install it yourself, to do it at less than $9,400 price from SunRun,
if SunRun will do this deal, with Solar involved, (if you don’t already have solar)
why bother trying to install HIS yourself with the upfront cost.

seems like a no brainer?

as much as I don’t love the way Ford has left us in the lurch on these chargers not coming in time for delivery of the truck, and forcing us to deal with a third party at all,
If someone doesn’t yet have Solar, this SunRun deal gives us a great way to get the HIS features of the truck, at no upfront costs.
I don’t see the downside.
 

Ken

Well-known member
First Name
Ken
Joined
Dec 29, 2021
Threads
9
Messages
273
Reaction score
241
Location
Monterey
Vehicles
Lightning Lariat ER
ask them what happens when you decide to sell the house, I think the new owner has to agree to the solar agreement, it can cause issues there. Leases are a middle ground method to get solar, it's better than nothing, but owning the panels is much better. You will pay more than the cost of the panels over the lifetime with a lease.
 

Sponsored

Pjlightning

Well-known member
First Name
PJ
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
236
Reaction score
222
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
F 150
ask them what happens when you decide to sell the house, I think the new owner has to agree to the solar agreement, it can cause issues there. Leases are a middle ground method to get solar, it's better than nothing, but owning the panels is much better. You will pay more than the cost of the panels over the lifetime with a lease.
I follow you on the advantages of owning your own panels, with the tax credits,etc,
But when a Ford Lightning owner is getting a free HIS out of the deal, it seems that trumps any cost difference you might otherwise benefit from in ownership of the solar panels.

on the sale of the house question, my friend with the Tesla leased panels is selling his house right now, and his realtor has said it won’t be an issue.
 

merek

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2022
Threads
22
Messages
249
Reaction score
239
Location
Buffalo, NY
Vehicles
F150 Lightning Lariat ER [6/20]
That sounds too good to be true.

The entire solar industry has been known to be almost predatory in some of their business practices, especially leasing. I would be very very careful with what they are trying to sell you.

Also, it becomes a more difficult issue when you sell your house, as well as things like removal of panels at the end of the lease.


I honestly don't trust any of them, and that turned me off of entertaining Sunrun -- the entire industry is pretty crooked sleazy.

Also, aprox 25% of all solar costs goes to advertising and customer acquisition costs. That's why they hard sell so much, have door to door salesmen, etc. Sunrun pays about $1 per kw of capacity for customer acquisition. Might not sound like a big deal, but ultimately, you're paying for it in their pricing structure.
 

PV2EV

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 17, 2022
Threads
52
Messages
682
Reaction score
471
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2015 Chevy Volt, 2006 Kubota L39, 2006 Suzuki Eige
There are local and regional outfits that are straightforward. An easy way to sort them out is to find one that does not lease. The larger companies have issues. All of them oversell the tax advantage.
 

Pjlightning

Well-known member
First Name
PJ
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
236
Reaction score
222
Location
Connecticut
Vehicles
F 150
That sounds too good to be true.

The entire solar industry has been known to be almost predatory in some of their business practices, especially leasing. I would be very very careful with what they are trying to sell you.

Also, it becomes a more difficult issue when you sell your house, as well as things like removal of panels at the end of the lease.


I honestly don't trust any of them, and that turned me off of entertaining Sunrun -- the entire industry is pretty crooked sleazy.

Also, aprox 25% of all solar costs goes to advertising and customer acquisition costs. That's why they hard sell so much, have door to door salesmen, etc. Sunrun pays about $1 per kw of capacity for customer acquisition. Might not sound like a big deal, but ultimately, you're paying for it in their pricing structure.
my gut instinct was the same. Very suspicious of any lease arrangements, especially for things bolted onto my roof.

but Ford has gotten into bed with SunRun pretty deeply, and it seems like it would be extremely embarrassing for Ford to have SunRun out there putting the screws to people with Ford’s blessing of sorts, having structured this whole thing as they launch the “most important vehicle since the Model T”.

Still, I’m cautious and looking for trip wires here. I’d love to hear from one person who has actually gone through with this lease arrangement with SunRun to get the free HIS deal.
So far it doesn’t seem there’s anyone on this site that has actually done this deal.
 

Amps

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 21, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
1,333
Reaction score
1,502
Location
Mid-Atlantic
Vehicles
Bolt
All of them oversell the tax advantage.
I suspect that this is somewhat the opposite. The tax credits go to the installer and the tax benefits are largely the margins that make the high commission leasing sales model profitable. This, along with the stable long-term income received from the homeowner. The panel owner/installer here is probably aggregating tax credits, leveraging Renewable Energy Credits, and including equipment in their capital costs that may not otherwise be available to homeowners to include in residential installation costs:

"I can get you a new roof for free...."
 
Last edited:

Sponsored

Labs4Lightning

Well-known member
First Name
C
Joined
Mar 30, 2022
Threads
22
Messages
775
Reaction score
688
Location
Maryland
Vehicles
19 150 lariat, 22 lightning lariat blend 4/18/22
ask them what happens when you decide to sell the house, I think the new owner has to agree to the solar agreement, it can cause issues there. Leases are a middle ground method to get solar, it's better than nothing, but owning the panels is much better. You will pay more than the cost of the panels over the lifetime with a lease.
Most realtor will tell you it’s a headache to sell house with a solar lease.

‘’as for the maintaining. - it just sits there and generates electricity. Down the road a panel or module or inverter May fai, but no big deal to call solar repair in the rare event of failure.
7 years, 19 panels - not a single problem..
 

metroshot

Well-known member
First Name
Pat
Joined
Aug 26, 2021
Threads
97
Messages
2,127
Reaction score
1,749
Location
Montclair, CA
Vehicles
2022 Lariat F150L + 2023 MME
Occupation
Networking Tech
Same here - I was promised a response from their escalations team by today at latest. Nothing. I'm taking delivery of my ER Lariet on Friday. This really sucks.
If I had an ER coming in and not knowing how long the wait will be while the 80A charger is going to be filled, I would have my electrician pre-wire it for 100A circuit now, put in a NEMA 14-50 outlet for the 32A charger that comes with the truck + 40A breaker.

Once you receive the 80A charger, have your electrician return and remove the outlet and hardwire it replacing it with 100A breaker.

Am I thinking this too much ??
 

PACSMAN

Well-known member
First Name
Fred
Joined
Feb 1, 2022
Threads
1
Messages
58
Reaction score
59
Location
Massachusetts
Vehicles
F150
No, you're not over thinking it. I contacted my electrician over the weekend and asked him to install the 14-50 outlet until the 80 AMP charger comes in.

Until then I'm charging off 110v which adds about 2 miles per hour.
 

Firestop

Well-known member
First Name
Firestop
Joined
May 6, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,033
Reaction score
997
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2022 F-150 L Lariat ER; Honda Accord Touring
If I had an ER coming in and not knowing how long the wait will be while the 80A charger is going to be filled, I would have my electrician pre-wire it for 100A circuit now, put in a NEMA 14-50 outlet for the 32A charger that comes with the truck + 40A breaker.

Once you receive the 80A charger, have your electrician return and remove the outlet and hardwire it replacing it with 100A breaker.

Am I thinking this too much ??
I agree with @PACSMAN. That’s what I’m going to do if the FCSP delay persists at the time my 6/10 Blend arrives…the question is….which delay is going to persist the longest🤔. The only downside is the $100/hr additional labor charge for the second visit, which is why, I guess, Ford is giving $500 to defray charger installation costs to those who receiv their trucks on or before 6/30/22……
 

TexasLightningOwner

New member
First Name
Joe
Joined
Jun 13, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Location
Texas
Vehicles
F150 Lightning
Has anyone received a FCSP without using Sunrun as the installer? I just need the charger, no install required. My wiring is ready to go. I reached out to Sunrun, but like most others, I have heard nothing.
Sponsored

 
 





Top