Solar Website Design

Solar Websites Built to Book the Consult

A homeowner who's been researching solar for three months doesn't need more information. They need a reason to pick you over the three other tabs they have open. Our website design for solar companies — and web design for solar installers selling residential and commercial systems — is built around that moment, not around what looks good in a portfolio screenshot.

Solar Websites Built to Book the Consult
The Problem

Your Site Gets Traffic. Homeowners Still Call Someone Else.

Solar buyers spend months deciding before they fill out a single form. They've watched YouTube, run four savings calculators, and read 20 reviews before they ever click your ad. By the time they land on your site, they're not shopping. They're picking.

Most solar websites aren't built for that moment.

There's No Answer to "How Much Will This Cost Me?"

Every homeowner runs the math before calling. If your site can't show estimated savings, financing options, or a rough payback period, they'll find a site that can. That's usually a competitor's site.

Your Trust Signals Don't Match the Stakes

Reviews matter. So do manufacturer certifications, financing partner logos, warranty terms, and photos of actual installs you've completed nearby. Generic contractor credibility doesn't close a $25,000 conversation. Solar-specific credibility does.

The Form Is at the Bottom. The Decision Happens Halfway Up.

Solar buyers make up their minds mid-scroll. A contact form buried in the footer misses the moment entirely. Your CTA needs to be where the homeowner is when they decide, not where it looked good in the mockup.

Slow Load on Mobile Kills Your Map Pack Traffic

Most homeowners click from a Google Maps result on their phone. A site that takes four seconds to load has already lost them. Speed isn't a nice-to-have. It's the difference between a booked consult and a bounce.

You Can't Tell Which Pages Produce Signed Contracts

Traffic isn't revenue. Without attribution tied to booked consults and signed installs, you're guessing which pages to improve, which campaigns to scale, and whether the site is actually doing its job.

Our Service

What Goes Into a Solar Website That Closes Installs

A solar installer website isn't a brochure with a contact form. It's the last stop before a homeowner decides whether to book a consult with you or keep looking. Every decision we make as a solar web design company — from solar landing page design to full builds — reflects that.

01

Conversion Architecture

We structure every page around the four questions that move a homeowner toward a signed contract: How much? How long? Will it work on my roof? Can I finance it? Navigation, layout, and content placement all serve the consult, not the designer's portfolio.

02

Solar-Specific Trust Signals

Manufacturer certifications, financing partner logos, installer badges, warranty language, and project photos from real installs near the homeowner. Positioned where they matter most: at the point in the page where a visitor is deciding whether to trust you with a 25-year commitment.

03

Savings and Financing Tools

Calculators, ITC eligibility context, financing widget integration, and utility-rate comparison content. These aren't features we add to impress prospects. They're the tools that answer the math question before the homeowner finds a competitor who does.

04

Mobile-First Performance

Built for the homeowner who clicked your Google Business Profile listing from a phone at 9pm. Fast load times, tap-to-call, thumb-friendly forms, and a consult path that doesn't require pinching and scrolling to find your number.

05

SEO Foundation

Page architecture, URL structure, schema markup, and copy written for both the homeowner deciding to call and the algorithm deciding whether to rank you. We build the SEO in from the start. Retrofitting it later costs more and produces less.

06

Attribution and Reporting

Call tracking, form tracking, and CRM integration wired in on day one. You'll know which pages produce booked consults, which campaigns drive qualified traffic, and what the site is generating in revenue. Not impressions. Revenue.

Ready to See What Your Solar Website Should Be Doing?

We'll review your current site against the best solar websites in your market and show you exactly what's blocking consults — and where a solar website design company can move the conversion math.
Results

Real Solar Companies. Real Installs.

What to look for

Four Things Most
Solar Websites Get Wrong

The Buyer Cycle Is Months, Not Minutes

Solar buyers research for 60 to 120 days before booking a consult. They visit your site, leave, check three competitors, come back, and call when they're ready.

Your site has to hold trust across multiple visits and give them a reason to book with you specifically when that moment arrives.

The Math Has to Be Visible

Savings calculators, financing options, ITC eligibility language, and utility-rate context aren't decorative features.

They're the answer to the question every homeowner runs in their head before calling. A site that can't show the math sends them somewhere that can.

Trust Signals Are Industry-Specific

Solar has a real trust problem. Bankruptcies, warranty failures, door-knockers making promises that don't hold. A homeowner signing a 25-year contract needs more than a five-star average.

They need manufacturer certifications, real project photos from your service area, transparent warranty terms, and financing partners they can look up. That's what closes a $25,000 conversation.

Every Page Needs Attribution Back to Installs

A solar website isn't finished when it launches. It needs call tracking, form tracking, and reporting tied to booked consults and signed contracts.

That's what tells you which pages are earning their place and which ones are just taking up real estate.

Inside a solar website build

How We Build a Solar Website That Earns the Consult

Most web design agencies think in pages. We think in decisions. Here's how we approach a solar website build from the first conversation to launch day.
01

Start With the Questions Homeowners Actually Ask

Before we write a word or place a single element, we map the questions a homeowner carries through the research process. How much will I save? How do I know you'll still be around in year 15? What happens if my roof needs work later? The answers to those questions are the content architecture for the site.
02

Design the Consult Path Before You Design the Pages

The path from landing to booked consult gets designed first. Everything else supports it. That means knowing where CTAs live, how the form is structured, where the phone number appears on mobile, and what happens when someone fills out a form at 11pm on a Sunday. We settle all of that before the first design comp.

03

Build Trust for a 25-Year Commitment

A homeowner signing a solar contract is betting that your company will be around to service their system for the next quarter century. The trust bar for that decision is higher than almost any other home services purchase. We build it with manufacturer certifications, real project photos from your service area, verified reviews on every major platform, and warranty language that answers the "what if" questions before they're asked.
04

Integrate Savings and Financing Tools That Convert

The calculator on your site isn't a gimmick. It's what keeps a homeowner on your page instead of going back to Google. We integrate savings estimators, ITC eligibility context, and financing options from your actual lending partners so the math lives on your site, not on a competitor's.
05

Wire Attribution From Day One

Call tracking, form tracking, and CRM integration go in before the site goes live. Not afterward. From the moment traffic hits your new site, you know which channels are sending qualified visitors, which pages are producing consult requests, and which ones aren't pulling their weight. Your second month is better than your first because we know what to fix.
06

Optimize for the Long Consideration Cycle

Solar buyers visit your site, leave, come back, visit again, and then call. We set up retargeting signals, track return visitors, and build content that serves people at every stage of that cycle, from the homeowner who just started researching to the one who's ready to compare quotes. The site works the whole window, not just the first click.
Solar website questions

What Solar Installers Ask Before Rebuilding Their Website

Because they'll build you a website optimized for a buyer who makes a fast decision. Solar buyers don't. They research for three to six months, vet multiple installers, read 20-plus reviews, run savings calculations, and think carefully about financing before signing a $25,000 contract. A generic agency builds a site with a contact form and a services page. That's not what earns a solar consult. You need a site that answers the math question, builds trust across multiple visits, and routes a buyer who's done their homework toward booking with you specifically.

Yes. The first question every solar homeowner asks is whether the numbers make sense for their house and their utility bill. If your site can't give them a starting point on savings and payback period, they'll go find a site that can. A calculator doesn't replace your sales conversation. It gets the homeowner to the conversation in the first place.

The number that matters is return, not cost. We start with your average install value and close rate, calculate what a booked consult is worth to your business, and build a site investment that makes sense against those numbers. We won't quote a price before that math is on the table.

Most builds run eight to twelve weeks from the first strategy session to launch. That covers discovery, architecture, design, content, development, and testing. Clients who come in with clear information about their service areas, financing partners, and install data tend to move through the process faster.

Done right, a redesign strengthens your rankings. Done carelessly, it can drop them. We carry over all existing URLs, set up proper redirects where structure changes, and improve page architecture and content along the way. We've never launched a site that hurt a client's organic visibility.

We monitor performance from day one. We track which pages produce consults, which ones have high bounce rates, and where homeowners are dropping off before they reach your contact form. We make improvements based on that data on an ongoing basis. The site you have six months after launch is better than the one that went live.

Yes, and we build it that way from the start. Landing pages for paid search campaigns, LSA-aligned conversion flows, and tracking that separates organic from paid traffic all go into the build. A site designed for SEO but not for paid campaigns forces you to retrofit later. We build it to work across all your channels from day one.

SOLAR COMPANY WEBSITE DESIGN

What Every Solar Company Website Has to Get Right

A well-designed solar website and a solar website that actually books consults are two different things. Here's what separates them.

01

Solar Company Website Design Starts With the Decision, Not the Homepage +

Most solar company website design starts in the wrong place. Designers open a blank canvas and ask what looks good. The right question is: what does a homeowner need to see to go from curious to committed?
That answer changes depending on where they are in the research cycle. A homeowner in month one needs educational content, savings context, and a reason to come back. A homeowner in month four needs proof you're the right installer, a clear path to a consult, and a financing option that works for their situation. Good solar website design builds for both without making either feel like an afterthought. The homepage is the least important page to optimize first. The pages homeowners land on from Google, from a map pack click, or from a retargeting ad are where the decision gets made. We start there and work outward.
02

Website Design for Solar Installers: What Your Buyers Actually Need +

Solar buyers carry a specific set of questions into every website they visit. How much will I actually save? Is this company going to be around in year 15? What happens if my roof needs work after the panels go up? Can I finance this in a way that makes the monthly math work? A website that doesn't answer those questions in the first two scrolls loses the visitor.

The trust challenge in solar is also specific to the industry. Buyers have heard enough stories about installers who went bankrupt mid-warranty, door-knockers who oversold savings, and companies that disappeared after the install. They arrive on your site with skepticism already in place. The design has to dismantle that skepticism with real evidence: manufacturer certifications they can verify, project photos from your actual service area, financing terms from lenders they can look up, and warranty language that doesn't require a lawyer to interpret.

Website design for solar installers also has to account for the financial complexity of the decision. Most homeowners are evaluating solar alongside utility rates, ITC eligibility, NEM rules in their state, and at least two financing options. Your site should make that complexity easier to navigate, not ignore it. Savings calculators, ITC context, and transparent financing terms aren't extras. They're the reason a homeowner stays on your site instead of going back to Google.

03

When a Solar Website Redesign Makes Sense +

Not every underperforming solar website needs to be rebuilt from scratch. Sometimes the problem is a CTA buried too far down the page, a contact form that's broken on mobile, or a savings calculator that hasn't been updated since the ITC rate changed. Those are fixable without a full solar website redesign.

A redesign makes sense when the site's architecture is working against you. If your service area pages are thin templates with the city name swapped in, Google isn't ranking them and homeowners aren't trusting them. If your site was built before mobile-first indexing was a factor, the underlying structure is probably costing you rankings you can't recover through content alone. If you've added services, expanded markets, or taken on commercial work since the last build, the site probably doesn't reflect what your company actually does.

The clearest signal that a solar website redesign is the right call: you're getting traffic but not consults. That's a conversion problem, not a traffic problem, and conversion problems are almost always structural. You can't solve them by writing better headlines on a site that's routing homeowners the wrong direction.

We audit your current site before recommending a rebuild. If we can fix what's broken without starting over, we'll say so.

04

How Solar Energy Website Design Affects Your Search Rankings +

Solar energy website design and solar SEO aren't separate conversations. Every structural decision made during the design process affects how Google reads and ranks the site.

Page load time is a ranking factor. A solar energy website built without performance optimization baked into the development process will load slower than one where image compression, caching, and hosting decisions were made with speed in mind from day one. Retrofitting performance after a site is live produces improvements, but it doesn't fully close the gap.

Page architecture matters just as much. A solar website that rolls all services into one page is telling Google there's one topic here. A site with dedicated pages for residential solar installation, commercial solar, battery storage, and service area locations is telling Google there are multiple specific topics it can rank for independently. More targeted pages means more opportunities to show up for the searches homeowners are actually running.

Schema markup, internal linking, and URL structure are all design and development decisions that most web design agencies treat as optional. They're not optional for a solar company trying to rank in competitive markets where national installers and review aggregators are competing for the same positions.