Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Based on the crawled content, Pick My Solar appears to be an online solar comparison and consulting platform for U.S. homeowners, with Solar.com branding also appearing on the page. Users can enter a valid ZIP code to view solar costs in their area, compare options online, and communicate with a dedicated energy advisor. It is not a traditional physical e-commerce platform, but is closer to a “local energy service matching + decision-support content” tool.
The platform focuses on rooftop solar installation decisions: cost calculators, installer matching, solar panel education, inverters, batteries, financing, incentives, net metering policies, and more. The content emphasizes that the process can be completed remotely and online, allowing users to shop, compare, and discuss plans from home. Actual installation fulfillment should be handled by local solar installers and involve system design, permitting, roof-condition assessment, and construction, but the text does not disclose installer admission standards or detailed fulfillment guarantees.
The platform does not state whether it charges users, nor does it disclose commissions or lead-generation fees charged to installers. The content provides many reference figures for solar system costs: in 2026, the average pre-incentive cost of residential solar in the U.S. is about USD 15,000-25,000, or roughly USD 2.50-3.50 per watt; a 4kW system is about USD 12,000, a 7.5kW system about USD 22,500, and a 10kW system about USD 30,000. For payment and financing, it mentions cash purchase, loans, leases, PPAs, and prepaid products, but does not specify concrete payment channels.
Its strengths are a comprehensive content framework that helps consumers understand key concepts such as price per watt, cost per kilowatt-hour, incentives, loans, and payback periods. The online comparison and energy-advisor model can also help reduce information asymmetry. Its weaknesses are that the service is highly dependent on U.S. local ZIP codes and policies, while quote accuracy is significantly affected by roof conditions, sunlight exposure, permitting, and state-level policies. The platform’s fee model, partner screening process, and post-sale responsibility boundaries are not transparent.
It is suitable for U.S. homeowners evaluating solar installation, as well as U.S. solar installers or energy service providers looking for potential customers. For Chinese sellers, unless they are involved in overseas solar installation services, energy storage equipment, or U.S. local channel partnerships, its direct conversion value is limited. The text does not make it possible to determine access status from China. Because it requires a valid U.S. ZIP code and local fulfillment, Chinese users may only be able to use the website for market research even if they can open it. Alternative platforms to reference include EnergySage, Solar.com, Sunrun, and Tesla Solar.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on pickmysolar.com official site.
pickmysolar.com is an United States E-commerce provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach pickmysolar.com directly.