Rules • HI

Plug-In Solar in Hawaii

Hawaii closed traditional net metering in 2015 and now uses Customer Self-Supply, Customer Grid-Supply Plus, and Smart Export tariffs. Every interconnection has to be approved by Hawaiian Electric (or KIUC on Kauai), and saturated circuits can be denied.

Depends on your utility
Disclaimer: This page is educational and not legal or electrical advice. Policies change frequently — verify every detail with your utility, state public utility commission, energy office, local building department, and a licensed electrician before purchasing or installing any plug-in solar equipment.

Net metering & export compensation

No new NEM. Active programs: CSS (no export), CGS+ (limited export at set price), Smart Export (export only at night). PUC reviews tariffs continuously.

Interconnection process

Hawaiian Electric Rule 14H; KIUC has its own. Some circuits are at hosting-capacity limits and may require studies.

Permitting & inspection

County building departments (Honolulu, Hawaii, Maui, Kauai) enforce permits and the state electrical code.

Utilities operating in this state

Hawaiian Electric (Oahu, Maui County, Hawaii Island), KIUC (Kauai).

Electrical code (NEC) considerations

The U.S. National Electrical Code (NEC) does not have a listed pathway for backfeeding a standard 120 V receptacle from a solar inverter. Article 705 covers interconnected power production sources and generally expects a dedicated, breakered, labeled circuit. Many AHJs that follow NEC 2017/2020/2023 will not approve a cord-and-plug PV connection on that basis, regardless of state policy.

HOA, landlord & solar access

Check your lease, HOA covenants, and condo rules. Many states have a 'solar access' or 'solar rights' law that limits HOA restrictions on rooftop PV, but those statutes were written for permanent installations and rarely mention plug-in or balcony kits explicitly. Renters almost always need written landlord permission.

Official sources to consult

Bottom line for plug-in solar buyers in Hawaii

Even where state policy is favorable, U.S. utilities and inspectors generally do not recognize a cord-and-plug PV connection. If you want to be fully code-compliant and earn export credits, plan on a permitted, hard-wired install by a licensed electrician with a signed interconnection agreement. Off-grid uses (running a single appliance, charging a battery, RV/shed power) avoid most of these rules but still need to follow product instructions and basic electrical safety.

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