Is Plug-In Solar Legal in Kansas? (2026)
— Not yet. Kansas has no dedicated plug-in solar law as of mid-2026. That doesn’t automatically make a plug-in kit illegal, but without a specific law your utility’s standard interconnection rules (written for rooftop systems) technically apply. Over 30 states considered plug-in solar bills in 2025–2026, so this may change — check back or see the states that already passed laws.
The rules at a glance
| Status | No dedicated law yet |
|---|---|
| Law / bill | None as of mid-2026 |
| Timeline | — |
| Wattage limit | Not defined |
| Avg. electricity rate | 14.0¢/kWh (EIA estimate) |
| Peak sun hours | ~4.8 h/day |
What an 800W kit would do in Kansas
Assuming ~4.8 peak sun hours per day and typical system losses, a standard two-panel 800W plug-in kit in Kansas produces about 1079 kWh per year. At the state’s average residential rate of 14.0¢/kWh, that’s roughly $128 per year off your electric bill if you self-consume most of it. A typical 800W kit costs $500–$1,200, so simple payback lands in the 5–9 year range. Run your own numbers →
What this means for renters and condo owners
If you rent or own a condo in Kansas, plug-in solar is the only realistic way to generate your own power — no roof required. Because the state hasn’t passed a dedicated law yet, a technically-compliant route is to keep the system portable, check your utility’s tariff rules, and watch this page: when a bill passes, we update it.
FAQ
Is plug-in (balcony) solar legal in Kansas in 2026?
Kansas has no dedicated plug-in solar law as of mid-2026, so standard utility interconnection rules technically apply. More than 30 states considered such bills in 2025–2026.
How much can an 800W plug-in solar kit save in Kansas?
With about 4.8 peak sun hours per day and residential electricity at roughly 14.0¢/kWh, an 800W kit produces around 1079 kWh per year — worth approximately $128 per year if you use most of that power yourself.
Do renters in Kansas need an electrician to install plug-in solar?
Plug-in kits are designed for outlet installation without an electrician. However, since Kansas has no dedicated law yet, check your utility’s rules and your lease before installing.
Does Kansas pay for extra electricity a plug-in system exports?
Generally no — plug-in solar laws are built around self-consumption, not net metering. Any power you don’t use typically flows to the grid uncompensated, which is why sizing the system to your daytime usage matters.
Sources & further reading
States with laws already passed: Colorado · Maine · Maryland · Utah · Virginia
Last reviewed: July 2, 2026