44
Trust
Score
WattBot

Klick Solar reviews

NATIONAL
Klick Solar
74 Reviews • 4 Locations 9,842 Data Points Processed

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The Verdict

Klick Solar operates like two different companies, and you'll only find out which one you get after you've signed. We found a dozen horror stories describing promised battery systems that never materialized, electrical panels left dangling wires that failed inspection, and liens slapped on brand-new homes because Klick didn't pay its own subcontractors. One couple paid $50,000 for panels that sat idle for six months while producing zero energy, forcing them to cover both their utility bill and the solar loan simultaneously. Reviews show 36 mentions of smooth sales interactions, yet post-installation the pattern flips. Seven reviewers describe the company ghosting warranty requests entirely, with one household spending weeks chasing answers about non-functional panels before threatening legal action. The kindest thing we can say is that individual reps like Trevor and Andrew clearly know solar and explain it well. But a knowledgeable pitch means nothing when the wiring hangs loose and no one returns your calls. (One reviewer discovered Klick's Denver office sat completely empty, all staff working remotely, which explains a lot.)

If you want someone who'll actually show up when things go wrong, keep looking. The gap between Klick's sales promises and post-install reality is too wide and too consistent to gamble your roof on.

3 Stories That Stood Out

1. Kenneth C.
Yelp | May 31, 2025 |

Kenneth C. hired Klick Solar to put a $50,000 system on his brand-new home after a polished sales pitch that promised panels, a battery, drastically lower bills and “real numbers” shown on a laptop. He signed quickly—and then began to discover gap after gap between the promise and the installation. The battery never arrived, no formal contract paperwork materialized beyond the sales demo, and customer service turned into evasive, outsourced calls. An inspector found wires hanging and failed the job for safety reasons, and Permission to Operate stalled for another five months. The situation took a worse turn when Klick failed to pay its subcontractor, Greentect Renewable, and a lien landed on his new house; Klick eventually set up a payment plan after hundreds of calls and emails, but the lien stayed in place. Six months after the sale the panels sit “on” but producing no energy, leaving him paying both the utility bill and the solar loan while holes remain in the roof. The clearest, lasting damage: a lien on a new home combined with nonworking panels and dual bills — the concrete costs Kenneth is still dealing with.

2. Cassandra G
BBB | Oct 7, 2025 |

Cassandra G signed a contract with Klick Solar in October 2021 for a residential system that was supposed to be installed within two months. She waited through December with no contact; follow-up calls produced a promised February 2022 install that never came, and Klick rarely answered phone calls or messages. In June 2022 installers showed up unannounced and put the panels on the roof. Her contract included a main electrical panel upgrade, but she later discovered Klick had altered the permit to remove that upgrade without telling her — despite having paid for it. Two weeks after the utility connected the meter, Klick still hadn’t reached out. When she finally pushed them, they blamed waiting on Xcel even though she had already confirmed that step was complete; only after she insisted did a representative walk her through connecting the system herself. The array became operational about ten months after signing, with the paid-for panel upgrade still unfinished; the upgrade arrived months later, but the whole process left her exhausted. In summer 2025 she needed a roof replacement. At signing Klick had promised to remove and store the panels during reroofing, so she submitted a

3. Katie C.
Yelp | Sep 24, 2025 |

Katie C. had solar panels installed on her home in April 2025, but by the end of September the system still hadn't been activated. She spent months calling and emailing the company, only to find them unresponsive for weeks at a time. She wanted the problem fixed and the system made right, yet couldn't reach anyone to move things forward. The standout detail: the panels sit in place but never produced power, and repeated attempts to get help went unanswered as of late September 2025.

Platforms Monitored

Google
39 Reviews · 1 Location
4.6/5
BBB
26 Reviews · 2 Locations
2.5/5
Yelp
9 Reviews · 3 Locations
1.9/5
SolarReviews
Tracking
N/A
EnergySage
Tracking
N/A

Performance by Work Type

SOLAR
SOLAR
Installation, permitting, and grid connection.
3.2/5
ROOFING
ROOFING
Repair or replacement, before or after solar installation.
1.1/5
SERVICE
SERVICE
Repairs, maintenance, and ongoing system support.
1.0/5
BATTERY
BATTERY
Energy storage for backup savings and independence.
N/A
ELECTRICAL
ELECTRICAL
Panel upgrades and wiring for system readiness.
N/A
COMPLEX PROJECTS
COMPLEX PROJECTS
Multi-trade installations requiring co-ordination.
N/A

How We Got To Trust Score 44

No Red Flags

Unauthorized Activities

Passed screening

We checked for:
Unauthorized charges
Undisclosed loans
Identity theft
Forged signatures
Fake contracts
Falsified permits

Misleading Claims

Passed screening

We checked for:
Bait & switch
Overstated savings
Hidden fees
Misrepresented specs
False performance
Misleading warranty

Background Check

Serving customers for 6 years

BBB Rating

Not BBB rated.

Natural Review Patterns

Reviews were posted naturally over time.

What You Can Expect

01

1. Abigail B
BBB | Apr 1, 2024 |

After a long search through multiple installers, Abigail chose Klick Solar to put panels on her home; the system went up in January, and she has loved the results ever since. The utility bill took a couple of months to catch up with the solar production—exactly what she had been warned to expect—so the savings didn’t appear instantly. She found the sales rep and installation crew thoroughly professional, and the project coordinator kept her updated at every step, from paperwork to activation. She would hire Klick again, and what stuck with her most was the steady communication and clear expectations about timing—practical details future buyers should know.

2. Ann M
BBB | Jun 22, 2023 |

Ann M met with several door-to-door solar companies before she landed on Klick. She found the sales representative refreshingly straightforward, the installation finished quickly, and customer service stayed excellent from start to finish. What really stood out to her was the company's honesty and reputation compared with the others that knocked on her door — that integrity, paired with a fast, well-handled installation, made the decision clear.

3. Cassandra G
BBB | Oct 7, 2025 |

Cassandra G signed a contract with Klick Solar in October 2021 for a residential system that was supposed to be installed within two months. She waited through December with no contact; follow-up calls produced a promised February 2022 install that never came, and Klick rarely answered phone calls or messages. In June 2022 installers showed up unannounced and put the panels on the roof. Her contract included a main electrical panel upgrade, but she later discovered Klick had altered the permit to remove that upgrade without telling her — despite having paid for it. Two weeks after the utility connected the meter, Klick still hadn’t reached out. When she finally pushed them, they blamed waiting on Xcel even though she had already confirmed that step was complete; only after she insisted did a representative walk her through connecting the system herself. The array became operational about ten months after signing, with the paid-for panel upgrade still unfinished; the upgrade arrived months later, but the whole process left her exhausted. In summer 2025 she needed a roof replacement. At signing Klick had promised to remove and store the panels during reroofing, so she submitted a

02

1. Mike G
BBB | Apr 4, 2023 |

Mike G discovered a way to redirect the money he would have sent to Xcel into something he actually owns: Klick installed a solar system that boosts his home’s value and shields him from future rate hikes — all with no out-of-pocket cost. He found the whole process refreshingly simple: Klick handled the paperwork, permits and installation, kept him informed, and the array was installed and energized right on schedule. He ended up with a working system that immediately replaced anticipated utility payments with owned generation — the no-upfront-cost switch from paying Xcel to owning panels is the detail that stuck with him.

2. sherry J
BBB | Apr 4, 2023 |

Sherry applied for solar for her home in January and ended up with the system installed today — much faster than she expected. She received regular email updates throughout the process and discovered that Klick is handling the paperwork so she’ll be getting a Military incentive check soon. The crew treated her family kindly and stayed on top of the project from start to finish. Her biggest takeaway: a local company that moves quickly, keeps you informed by email, and makes sure incentives are processed.

3. Katie C.
Yelp | Sep 24, 2025 |

Katie C. had solar panels installed on her home in April 2025, but by the end of September the system still hadn't been activated. She spent months calling and emailing the company, only to find them unresponsive for weeks at a time. She wanted the problem fixed and the system made right, yet couldn't reach anyone to move things forward. The standout detail: the panels sit in place but never produced power, and repeated attempts to get help went unanswered as of late September 2025.

03

1. Donna S.
Yelp | Aug 15, 2022 |

Donna signed her contract last week for a home solar system and was most struck by how clearly the project was laid out. Trevor walked her through the whole picture with simple graphics that explained how the panels work, what the install would look like, the expected financial savings, and the realistic permit timeline in Bend — about 4–6 months — which directly eased her biggest doubts. He answered her questions patiently and removed a lot of uncertainty. The loan felt expensive at first, but with energy rates climbing she discovered the monthly payment more or less matches what she typically pays the utility over a year, and the rebate sweetens the deal. The contracting team followed up immediately and appears ready to keep her updated through the permit and installation process. She plans to post another review once the panels are installed and producing power.

2. Kenneth C.
Yelp | May 31, 2025 |

Kenneth C. hired Klick Solar to put a $50,000 system on his brand-new home after a polished sales pitch that promised panels, a battery, drastically lower bills and “real numbers” shown on a laptop. He signed quickly—and then began to discover gap after gap between the promise and the installation. The battery never arrived, no formal contract paperwork materialized beyond the sales demo, and customer service turned into evasive, outsourced calls. An inspector found wires hanging and failed the job for safety reasons, and Permission to Operate stalled for another five months. The situation took a worse turn when Klick failed to pay its subcontractor, Greentect Renewable, and a lien landed on his new house; Klick eventually set up a payment plan after hundreds of calls and emails, but the lien stayed in place. Six months after the sale the panels sit “on” but producing no energy, leaving him paying both the utility bill and the solar loan while holes remain in the roof. The clearest, lasting damage: a lien on a new home combined with nonworking panels and dual bills — the concrete costs Kenneth is still dealing with.

3. Denny W.
Yelp | Nov 29, 2024 |

After installing solar panels and being happy with the equipment and Klick Solar’s service, Denny W. discovered a financing landmine that sank a home sale. Klick Solar funnels customers through Sunlight Financial, and Denny learned only when the buyers and lender began the assumption process that Sunlight won’t allow a loan to be assumed once the balance falls below $15,000. He had a sales contract at full list price and buyers who agreed to assume the roughly $14,000 remaining solar loan, but the lender’s cutoff made the assumption impossible. Not willing to walk away from $14,000, the deal collapsed — and he ended up facing the prospect of paying off the loan at closing or absorbing that loss. His realtor had never encountered a non-assumable solar loan before, so the restriction came as a surprise. The clearest takeaway: confirm Sunlight Financial’s $15,000 assumption cutoff (or choose a different financing route) before relying on loan assumption when you sell.

Long-term Satisfaction

Recent customers rate Klick Solar 3.4 ★

Long-term reviews carry the most weight in our methodology because they are most representative of what you should be paying for: a system that will perform for years.

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