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SolarPanelExit Editorial Team
Reviewed by licensed consumer protection attorneys · Updated March 2026

SOLAR EXIT GUIDE

Solar Company Threatening Collections? Here's What to Do

Receiving collections threats from your solar company can be stressful and intimidating. This guide explains your rights under federal law, how to respond strategically, and the steps you can take to protect your credit and financial well-being.

Published March 28, 2026 · Not legal advice · Our methodology

If a solar company is threatening to send your account to collections, don't panic. Based on our research, this is one of the most common pressure tactics used when homeowners dispute their solar contracts. You have significant legal protections under federal and state debt collection laws — and understanding those rights is the first step toward resolving the situation on your terms.

Why Solar Companies Threaten Collections

Solar companies may threaten collections for several reasons, and understanding their motivations can help you respond more effectively. In our research, we've found that collections threats typically arise in these scenarios:

  • Disputed monthly payments. You've stopped making lease or PPA payments due to system problems, billing disputes, or dissatisfaction with the service.
  • Failed loan payments. If you financed your solar system with a loan, missed payments may trigger the lender's collections process — which may be separate from the solar installer.
  • Early termination disputes. You've attempted to cancel your contract, the company has refused, and they're now claiming you owe fees or the remaining contract balance.
  • Post-cancellation charges. Even after you believed the contract was canceled, the company claims an outstanding balance for equipment, installation, or early termination fees.
  • System removal costs. Some companies threaten collections for the cost of removing solar equipment if you want out of the contract.

It's important to distinguish between a threat of collections and an actual collections referral. Many solar companies use collections language as a negotiating tactic to encourage payment. However, some will follow through, which is why taking prompt, documented action is critical.

The Difference Between Internal and Third-Party Collections

When a solar company threatens collections, they may be referring to their own internal collections department or a third-party debt collector. The distinction matters because third-party debt collectors are subject to stricter regulations under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). Internal collections by the original creditor may have fewer restrictions, though state laws often provide additional protections.

Your Rights Under the FDCPA

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) is a federal law that provides significant protections for consumers dealing with third-party debt collectors. Understanding these rights is essential when facing solar collections threats.

Key FDCPA Protections

  • Right to debt validation. Within 5 days of first contacting you, the collector must provide a written notice with the amount of the debt, the name of the creditor, and a statement of your right to dispute the debt.
  • 30-day dispute window. You have 30 days from receiving the initial notice to dispute the debt in writing. Once disputed, the collector must stop collection efforts until they verify the debt.
  • Restrictions on contact. Collectors generally cannot call before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m., contact you at work if told not to, use abusive or threatening language, or misrepresent themselves.
  • Cease communication requests. You can send a written request that the collector stop contacting you. They must comply, though they can still send a final notice about any intended legal action.
  • No false threats. Collectors cannot threaten legal action they don't intend to take, claim you'll be arrested, or misrepresent the amount owed.
  • Privacy protections. Collectors generally cannot discuss your debt with third parties (with limited exceptions for spouses, parents of minors, and attorneys).

Important: The FDCPA applies to third-party debt collectors, not necessarily to original creditors collecting their own debts. However, many states have their own debt collection laws that apply to original creditors as well. Check your state's consumer protection statutes for additional rights.

Immediate Steps to Take

When you receive a collections threat from a solar company, here's what we generally recommend based on our research:

Step 1: Don't Ignore It

Ignoring collections threats rarely makes them go away. Even if you believe the debt is invalid, failing to respond can result in a default judgment if the matter goes to court. Take every communication seriously and respond in writing.

Step 2: Document Everything

Start a file with every communication — letters, emails, text messages, call logs. If you receive phone calls, note the date, time, caller's name, company name, and what was said. This documentation may be critical if you need to file complaints or pursue legal action.

Step 3: Review Your Original Contract

Pull out your solar contract and review the payment terms, early termination provisions, and dispute resolution clauses. Understanding exactly what you agreed to — and what the company promised — is essential for building your response.

Step 4: Send a Debt Validation Letter

If a third-party collector contacts you, send a debt validation letter within 30 days. This is one of the most powerful tools available to you and forces the collector to prove the debt is valid before continuing collection efforts.

Step 5: Check Your Credit Report

Pull your credit reports from all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) at AnnualCreditReport.com. Check whether any collections accounts have already been reported. If you find inaccurate information, you may have grounds for a dispute under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

We do not advise homeowners to stop making payments or breach contractual obligations. Even when facing a collections dispute, continuing to make at least the minimum payments on undisputed amounts may help protect your credit score and legal position. Consult an attorney before changing your payment behavior.

Facing collections threats from your solar company? Get a free preliminary contract review to understand your options.

How to Request Debt Validation

A debt validation letter is your most important first response to a collections notice. Here's how to use it effectively.

What to Include in Your Validation Request

Your debt validation letter should generally include:

  • Your name and address (you don't need to provide your Social Security number)
  • The account number or reference number from the collection notice
  • A statement that you dispute the debt
  • A request for the name and address of the original creditor
  • A request for a copy of the original signed contract
  • A request for a complete payment history
  • A request for proof that the collector is licensed to collect in your state
  • A statement that they must cease collection until the debt is verified

How to Send It

Send your debt validation letter via certified mail with return receipt requested. This creates a legal record proving the collector received your dispute. Keep a copy of the letter and the certified mail receipt in your file.

What Happens After You Send It

Once a collector receives your written dispute, they must generally:

  1. Stop all collection activity until they verify the debt
  2. Provide written verification of the debt amount
  3. Provide the name and address of the original creditor
  4. Provide documentation supporting the debt (typically the signed contract)

If the collector cannot verify the debt, they must stop collection attempts and may need to remove any negative credit reporting.

Pro Tip: If the collector continues to contact you after receiving your validation request and before verifying the debt, they may be violating the FDCPA. Document each violation — you may be entitled to statutory damages of up to $1,000 per lawsuit, plus actual damages and attorney fees.

How Collections Affects Your Credit

Understanding the potential credit impact of solar collections can help you make informed decisions about how to respond.

Credit Score Impact

A collections account on your credit report can typically lower your score by 50 to 100+ points, depending on your starting score and credit history. The higher your current score, the more dramatic the drop may be.

How Long Collections Stays on Your Report

Under federal law, collections accounts can generally remain on your credit report for up to 7 years from the date of the original delinquency. However, the impact on your score typically decreases over time, particularly if your other accounts remain in good standing.

Newer Scoring Models

Some newer credit scoring models (FICO 9, VantageScore 3.0 and 4.0) treat paid collections differently:

  • FICO 9: Ignores paid collections accounts entirely
  • VantageScore 3.0+: Also ignores paid collections
  • FICO 8 (still widely used): Still counts paid collections, though with less weight

This means that even if a collections account is reported, paying or settling it may reduce the impact under newer scoring models.

Medical Debt vs. Solar Debt

Note that recent changes to credit reporting rules primarily affect medical debt. Solar panel debt is generally treated as a standard consumer debt, so these special medical debt protections typically do not apply.

Negotiating with Collectors

If the debt is verified and you determine that you do owe some amount, negotiation is often a practical path forward. Based on our research, here are the most common negotiation strategies:

Lump-Sum Settlement

Third-party collectors often purchase debts for a fraction of the face value — sometimes as little as 5 to 20 cents on the dollar. This means they may accept a settlement significantly below the full amount. A reasonable starting offer is typically 25-40% of the total claimed debt, though results vary by situation.

Payment Plan

If you can't afford a lump sum, many collectors will agree to a structured payment plan. Try to negotiate terms that work within your budget while getting the account resolved as quickly as possible.

Pay-for-Delete

A pay-for-delete arrangement means the collector agrees to remove the collections account from your credit report in exchange for payment. While not all collectors agree to this, it's generally worth asking. Get any pay-for-delete agreement in writing before making payment.

Settlement Best Practices

  • Get everything in writing before making any payment
  • Never give electronic access to your bank account
  • Pay by cashier's check or money order — not personal check
  • Confirm the settlement covers the full debt with no remaining balance
  • Request a paid-in-full letter after payment clears
  • Keep all documentation for at least 7 years

Tax Warning: If you settle a debt for less than the full amount and the forgiven portion exceeds $600, the creditor may issue a 1099-C form, and the forgiven amount may be treated as taxable income. Consult a tax professional about potential tax implications before settling.

Legitimate Grounds to Dispute the Debt

You may have legitimate grounds to dispute the solar debt entirely. Common dispute grounds include:

Misrepresentation by the Solar Company

If the solar company or its salespeople made false promises about savings, system performance, contract terms, or costs, the underlying contract may be voidable due to misrepresentation. If the contract itself is invalid, the debt derived from it may also be challengeable. Learn more about solar company misrepresentation →

Contract Violations by the Company

If the solar company breached its obligations — failed to install the system as promised, didn't meet performance guarantees, or violated other contract terms — you may have a valid counterclaim that offsets or eliminates the debt.

Improper Cancellation Handling

If you properly canceled within the cooling-off period but the company refused to honor your cancellation, the debt may be invalid. This is particularly common with door-to-door solar sales where the 3-day right of rescission applies. How to cancel a solar contract →

Billing Errors

Review the claimed amount carefully. Errors in billing calculations, incorrectly applied payments, or unauthorized charges may mean the actual amount owed differs from what the collector claims.

Identity Issues

In some cases, solar companies have been known to add people to contracts who didn't actually agree to them — a co-signer who wasn't present, a spouse who didn't consent, or even cases of forged signatures. If you didn't agree to the contract, you generally don't owe the debt.

Statute of Limitations on Solar Debt

Every state has a statute of limitations on debt collection — the period within which a creditor can sue you to collect. Once this period expires, the debt becomes "time-barred," and you may have a complete defense against any lawsuit.

StateWritten ContractsOral Contracts
California4 years2 years
Texas4 years4 years
Florida5 years4 years
New York6 years6 years
Arizona6 years3 years
New Jersey6 years6 years
Georgia6 years4 years
North Carolina3 years3 years

Important: Making a payment or even acknowledging the debt in writing can restart the statute of limitations in some states. Before responding to any collections attempt, consult an attorney to understand whether the debt may be time-barred in your jurisdiction.

What NOT to Do

When dealing with solar collections threats, certain actions can make your situation significantly worse:

  • Don't ignore the communications. Ignoring collections doesn't make the debt go away. It may lead to a default judgment in court.
  • Don't admit to owing the debt without verifying the amount and validity first. Even a casual acknowledgment can be used against you.
  • Don't give personal financial information to a collector over the phone. Verify their identity and legitimacy first.
  • Don't agree to a payment plan over the phone without getting terms in writing first.
  • Don't let emotions drive your responses. Stay calm and factual in all communications. Angry letters or confrontational phone calls rarely help your position.
  • Don't post about the specific debt on social media. Anything you share publicly could potentially be used in legal proceedings.

We do not advise homeowners to stop making payments or breach contractual obligations. If you're making payments and considering stopping due to a dispute, consult an attorney first. Stopping payments may accelerate collections activity and damage your credit. Find a solar panel lawyer →

Need help understanding your options when facing solar collections? Get a free contract review.

When to Get Legal Help

Based on our research, consulting a qualified attorney is generally advisable when:

  • You're being sued or have received a summons related to solar debt
  • The collector is violating the FDCPA (harassing calls, false threats, contacting third parties)
  • You believe the underlying solar contract was based on misrepresentation or fraud
  • The debt amount is significant (most solar contracts range from $20,000 to $60,000+)
  • You need help negotiating a settlement
  • You want to file a counterclaim against the solar company
  • The collections activity is inaccurately reported on your credit

Many consumer protection attorneys offer free initial consultations and some work on contingency for FDCPA violation cases. Our guide to finding a solar panel lawyer →

Filing Regulatory Complaints

In addition to legal help, consider filing complaints with these agencies:

  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — for debt collection and financing complaints
  • Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — for deceptive practices
  • State Attorney General — for consumer protection violations
  • Better Business Bureau (BBB) — for business practice complaints

About Solar Cancellation Companies

Some companies specialize in helping homeowners resolve solar contract disputes, including collections situations. Research any company thoroughly before engaging them. See our review of the best solar cancellation companies →

Ownership Disclosure: SolarPanelExit.com and TRU Solar Cancellation share common ownership. TRU Solar Cancellation offers a Solar Exit Document Package for a one-time $450 fee. TRU is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. See our full ownership disclosure for details.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, solar companies can generally refer unpaid accounts to collections agencies or sell the debt to third-party collectors. This applies to solar loans, leases, and PPAs. However, they must follow proper procedures, and you have rights under federal and state debt collection laws. Always request debt validation within 30 days of receiving a collections notice.

Collections accounts can significantly impact your credit score, potentially dropping it by 50 to 100+ points. However, under newer FICO scoring models (FICO 9), paid collections may have less impact or be ignored entirely. The collections account can remain on your credit report for up to 7 years from the date of the original delinquency. Results vary by individual situation.

Send a written debt validation letter within 30 days of receiving the initial collections notice. The collector must then verify the debt before continuing collection efforts. Include your account information, state that you dispute the debt, and request full documentation of the original contract and payment history. Send via certified mail with return receipt.

Yes, debt collectors often purchase debts for pennies on the dollar, which means they may accept a settlement for less than the full amount owed. You may be able to negotiate a lump-sum settlement, a payment plan, or even a pay-for-delete arrangement where the collections account is removed from your credit report upon payment. Always get any agreement in writing before making payment.

The statute of limitations for debt collection varies by state, typically ranging from 3 to 10 years for written contracts. Once the statute of limitations expires, the collector generally can no longer sue you to collect the debt. However, the debt doesn't disappear — they can still attempt to collect, and it may still appear on your credit report. Consult an attorney about your state's specific timeline.

We do not advise homeowners to stop making payments or breach contractual obligations. Stopping payments could accelerate collections activity and credit damage. Instead, continue payments while disputing the charges through proper legal channels and consulting with a qualified attorney about your options. Find a solar panel lawyer →

Dealing with Solar Collections Threats?

Get a free contract review to understand your rights and options for resolving solar debt disputes.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Debt collection laws and consumer protections vary by state. Results vary by individual situation. We do not advise homeowners to stop making payments or breach contractual obligations. SolarPanelExit.com and TRU Solar Cancellation share common ownership. Consult a qualified attorney before taking action regarding your solar contract or debt dispute. See our Ownership Disclosure, Advertiser Disclosure, and Methodology.

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