Arkansas businesses pay an average of $0.09 to $0.12 per kWh for commercial electricity, and those rates have increased an average of 2.5% per year over the past decade. For a manufacturing facility spending $10,000 or more per month on electricity, that means costs will exceed $150,000 annually within five years at current trends. Solar energy fixes your electricity cost at today's rate for the next 25 to 30 years, providing budget certainty that no utility company can match.
Powerful Tax Benefits Accelerate ROI
The federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) currently allows businesses to deduct 26% of total solar installation costs from their federal tax liability. For a $300,000 commercial system, that is a direct $78,000 reduction in taxes owed. Combined with MACRS accelerated depreciation, which allows you to depreciate the entire system value over just five years, the effective cost of a commercial solar system can be reduced by 45% to 55% in the first year alone. These are dollar-for-dollar tax reductions, not deductions, making commercial solar one of the most powerful tax strategies available to Arkansas businesses.
Enhanced Brand Image and Customer Loyalty
Consumers increasingly prefer businesses that demonstrate environmental responsibility. A visible rooftop or carport solar array communicates your commitment to sustainability without a single word of marketing copy. Businesses across Arkansas report that their solar installations generate positive customer feedback, media coverage, and employee pride. For companies competing for talent in a tight labor market, a commitment to clean energy can be a meaningful differentiator.
Protection Against Utility Rate Increases
Every kilowatt-hour your solar system produces is one you do not buy from the utility. With Arkansas net metering policies, excess solar production during peak daylight hours offsets your consumption during evenings and cloudy periods. This rate hedge becomes more valuable with each utility rate increase over the system's 25 to 30 year lifespan.