
Loading map...
Green Day Power is not worth the risk. We analyzed hundreds of reviews and found a company that has effectively abandoned its customers. One homeowner paid for a solar system in September 2023 but couldn't get the company to finish permits or inspections for a full year, forcing them to hire another contractor and spend thousands to complete the work themselves. Another went three months with dead panels, paying both a solar loan and electric bills, while the company dodged calls and left repair work half‑done. The pattern is clear: once installation wraps, support vanishes. Post‑sale support scored 2.7 out of 10, with 86 negative mentions centered on unanswered calls, ignored emails, and systems that stop working with no one to fix them. We found 59 reviews describing incomplete or abandoned work. The company's phone number is now disconnected and their office is permanently closed, leaving existing customers stranded mid‑contract. Even the rare positive reviews date from 2023 or earlier, before the collapse became obvious. (One reviewer wondered aloud if they'd been sold to a fraud company. That's not a question you want to be asking about the people who wired your roof.)
If you're shopping for solar, cross Green Day Power off your list immediately. The company has closed and cannot honor warranties, finish repairs, or provide any support. You'll be paying someone else to fix their mistakes.
Alisha B. bought an all-in-one package for her home — a new roof, solar, HVAC, windows and doors — with additional warranties stacked on top of the manufacturers’ coverage. About 18 months later, at the start of summer, her HVAC failed and the company gave her the runaround for two months before telling her to contact the manufacturer because they were undergoing restructuring. She ended up paying out of pocket for the repair after discovering the installer had never registered the unit with the manufacturer, so warranty coverage never existed. She asked the company for all account documents to confirm who the manufacturers were and never got a response. When she tried to follow up in person, their listed office had a sign directing people to call the same number that now goes straight to “not in service,” and the office doors were locked. The detail that sticks: the promised extra warranties meant nothing without registration and paperwork, and the company’s disappearance left her holding the bill.
Adam B Stein signed a contract in September 2023 for a residential solar install that included batteries and an inverter. He ran into scheduling hiccups in December but crews finally mounted the panels the first week of 2024—only to discover the plans weren’t up to code, so the rest of the system couldn’t be completed then. The company returned in February and installed the batteries, inverter and remaining hardware, but it took four months just to get an inspection on the calendar. When the inspector flagged corrections, communication collapsed and the installer went largely silent. Frustrated, he hired another crew to finish the job and took over all permitting and PG&E paperwork himself—work that cost him a few thousand dollars and about 20 hours so far. The system finally received PTO roughly a year after the original contract was signed, largely because he pushed the finishing work, not because of the original installer. He believes the company stopped operating around that time and warns others to be cautious if they engage with them.
Nusrat hired Green Day Power to install solar panels that went up in July 2022 and quickly discovered the system wasn’t cutting her electricity bills. After the first month she saw high bills with no increase in household usage, and the panel manufacturer confirmed the array was underperforming and told her to contact the installer. She spent months — through late 2022 into early January 2023 — calling many different Green Day Power numbers with no reliable support, emailing a support address that never replied, and getting attention only after she escalated the issue to the sales rep on January 3, 2023. The lack of a functioning customer-support line became a pattern: calls often went unanswered, and she believes staff would avoid picking up when the caller ID showed her number. That breakdown in accountability led to a larger problem in mid-2023. On June 28, 2023, the manufacturer reported the panels were producing no power and sent a replacement inverter for Green Day Power to install. Nusrat made repeated calls and sent emails but received no confirmation of a repair date; for roughly three months her panels sat offline while she continued paying the solar company and paying a
Passed screening
Passed screening
Poor BBB standing. Significant complaints.
Reviews were posted naturally over time.
A valid contractor license is on record.
Alisha B. bought an all-in-one package for her home — a new roof, solar, HVAC, windows and doors — with additional warranties stacked on top of the manufacturers’ coverage. About 18 months later, at the start of summer, her HVAC failed and the company gave her the runaround for two months before telling her to contact the manufacturer because they were undergoing restructuring. She ended up paying out of pocket for the repair after discovering the installer had never registered the unit with the manufacturer, so warranty coverage never existed. She asked the company for all account documents to confirm who the manufacturers were and never got a response. When she tried to follow up in person, their listed office had a sign directing people to call the same number that now goes straight to “not in service,” and the office doors were locked. The detail that sticks: the promised extra warranties meant nothing without registration and paperwork, and the company’s disappearance left her holding the bill.
Michele M had solar panels installed on her ranch-style home in fall 2022 and expected them to start shaving her PG&E bills. Instead, the following January she was hit with a $7,400 true-up charge. After she called PG&E she learned the utility was seeing no exports from the system; a Green Day technician who came out confirmed the panels had never been activated after installation. She then made repeated calls and left several messages seeking restitution for that oversight, but got no answer and no response from the company. The image that sticks is clear: a huge true-up bill for panels that were never turned on, and unanswered calls when she tried to get the problem fixed.
Kri T. discovered a roof leak at the end of January and traced it back to the solar array Green Day had installed in 2021. She called the company on January 26; Chantel Fields answered quickly and the team sent someone to inspect the problem on January 31. The inspector walked the roof, located the leak and told her husband the office would follow up. Nearly four weeks have passed since that visit and she has heard nothing. She tried calling Chantel and the main number multiple times, but the calls just kept ringing. Growing more stressed as the water damage continues, she needs the roof fixed and the installation mistake corrected. Her most memorable detail: the company began well with a prompt response and an on-site check, then fell silent for weeks while a leaking roof remained unresolved.