Rules • NY

Plug-In Solar in New York

New York moved residential PV to Value of Distributed Energy Resources (VDER) and 'Phase One NEM' with a small Customer Benefit Contribution charge. Plug-in kits face the same interconnection paperwork as a rooftop array under SIR. New York is also a focus state for UL 3741 listed balcony solar advocacy, but no AHJ-blessed pathway exists yet.

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

PSC Case 15-E-0751. Residential ≤25 kW: monthly retail-rate netting + CBC charge on system size.

Interconnection process

NY Standardized Interconnection Requirements (SIR).

Permitting & inspection

Local AHJ; NYC and NYSERDA push the NY-Sun Unified Solar Permit. NYC Buildings is famously strict.

Utilities operating in this state

Con Edison, National Grid, NYSEG, RG&E, Orange & Rockland, Central Hudson, plus LIPA/PSEG-LI and municipal utilities.

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 New York

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.

Other states

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