Buying and Selling a Home with Solar Panels | Riki McBride
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Buying and Selling a Home with Solar Panels

Buying and Selling a Home with Solar Panels

Solar panels are a great way to build an environmentally-friendly home while saving on your energy bills, with some homeowners generating enough electricity to sell it back to their power company. 

 

Solar panels can be fully-owned, financed, leased, or subject to a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA), making it important to recognize that a solar panel system can create some unexpected obstacles if you’re looking to buy or sell a home with the feature.

 

Buying a Home with Fully-Owned Solar Panels

If you’re looking for a home with solar panels, you’ll need to be sure that the panels are included with the sale. Many lease agreements allow current owners to remove the panels and install them at a new property, so buying a home with a fully-owned system is the simplest circumstance. 

 

If the solar panels are owned outright and there is no loan, they are treated as a fixture of the property and are sold as part of the real estate. 

 

Solar panels, however, cannot be the only source of electricity on the property. All major mortgage investors, including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the VA, and the FHA, require the property to have another source of electricity in case the solar panel system fails. 

 

Your lender may require a copy of the paid-in-full contract and a satisfactory borrower or attorney confirming the contract. Property Appraisals will reference the existence of solar panels, but cannot give a specific value to the panels until it is proven that the panels are owned.

 

How Leases, Loans, and Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) Affect Homes with Solar Panels

If you are buying a home with solar panels that are not fully owned, a copy of the lease, loan, or PPA must be provided to your lender. 

 

For purchase transactions, the lease, loan agreement, or PPA needs to be transferred to the borrower with a fully-signed Transfer Agreement. Signing by the solar company can be a closing condition. If there is a loan for solar panels associated with a home, the loan itself goes with the property as a lien, and must be transferable to the new buyer. 

 

Solar loans, leases, or PPA’s are traditionally submitted as a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) filing. The UCC filing serves as an official public notice stating a creditor’s interest in a piece of property, such as the solar panels, as collateral for a debt.

 

Once a UCC has been filed, it must be cleared by the title company to ensure the mortgage’s first lien status. Unless the title company confirms that the UCC is for fixtures only and can remain on the title, it must be terminated. 

 

Prepare for Liens if Solar Panels Aren’t Fully Owned 

If you’re not paying for your solar panels outright with cash, the manufacturer may have placed a lien on the property to ensure that you continue paying for them. 

 

Any lien that has been filed in connection with the panels must be subordinated to the mortgage at closing, or it must be removed of record and can be re-filed after closing. While some manufacturers will temporarily remove the lien in the case of a sale, if there is still a balance on the solar panels that needs to be paid-off, there could be a lien on the home.

 

Qualifying for a Mortgage with a Solar Panel Lease Payment

If you’re making a monthly lease payment for your solar panels, this payment is included in your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio during the mortgage qualification process. However, if your payments are subject to a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA), they do not have to be included in your DTI.

 

These monthly lease payments can be excluded from your DTI under very specific circumstances:

  • If the lease agreement guarantees a specific amount of energy over a given timeframe and the solar panels have failed to meet those goals, the lease payments may be excluded from your DTI.
  • If you pay a rate based on usage of your solar panels, much like other utilities, it may be excluded from your DTI. 

 If you’re currently financing your solar panels, any payments must be included in your debt-to-income ratio. These payments are accounted for like any other debt, so it’s important to recognize that larger loans (with larger payment amounts) can lower the size of mortgage you can qualify for. 

 

Closing Thoughts

Solar panels are an attractive addition for many homes and being an educated buyer means that you’re prepared for every circumstance. However, it’s important to weigh the pros and cons of a solar panel system, especially if it isn’t fully-owned. Check with your trusted LendGen mortgage professional to understand what needs to be provided, and how solar panels can affect your ability to qualify for a loan.