98
Trust
Score
WattBot

Supreme Solar & Electric reviews

CALIFORNIA / COACHELLA VALLEY
Supreme Solar & Electric
302 Reviews • 2 Locations 40,166 Data Points Processed

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The Verdict

Supreme Solar & Electric does what few installers manage: stay around to fix things years later. We analyzed their work and found a standout pattern. 188 reviews mention their project management holding up across every stage, but what caught our attention is that 155 customers went out of their way to praise follow-up support, and not a single one complained about being ghosted after installation. One customer's inverter failed a year in, and the company tracked down the original manufacturer for a warranty replacement without hassle. Another homeowner installed panels in 2015 and just left a review in 2025, still delighted the system is producing more energy than promised a decade ago. Their installations consistently beat production estimates. One system was projected to generate 17,000 kWh annually but delivered 18,300, even with a Tesla adding 30,000 miles of charging load. Their pricing sits in the middle of the market, not the cheapest quote you'll get, but 45 reviews note it felt fair given what they delivered. The owner, Mohamed, apparently repeats the same presentation as many times as you need without pressuring you to sign, which is either admirably patient or a sign he's heard every possible homeowner question at least twice.

If you want the lowest possible quote and plan to move in five years, you may find a cheaper installer. But if you want a company that'll still answer your texts when a panel underperforms three years from now, the premium is worth it.

3 Stories That Stood Out

1. Mike
Google | Mar 11, 2024 |

Mike waited a year after having a 12 kWh system installed on his roof before posting this: the install delivered more than promised. The company estimated about 17,000 kWh for the year and he ended up producing 18,300 kWh—roughly 7.6% above projection. He still faced a little over $400 in a true-up, but that came from putting 30,000 miles a year on a Tesla rather than system shortfall. Early on one panel underproduced, and the crew swapped it out under warranty without a fuss. He knows NEM 3 has squeezed both buyers and installers, and he hopes the firm sticks around—what lingered for him was not just the extra output but the fact they stood behind the work when a panel failed.

2. Dominique Fruchtman
Google | Jun 25, 2025 |

Dominique Fruchtman decided to install a rooftop solar system in 2015 with Mohamed’s help — a roughly $30,000 setup that ended up packing 49 panels and leaving no more room on the roof. They had been paying SCE about $500–$600 a month before the switch, and nearly a decade later the utility bill has vanished: they haven’t paid SCE in years and now accumulate roughly $500 a year in excess production credits. Doing the math, the panels have cut about $50,000–$60,000 from their power costs so far, effectively delivering about a 2:1 return on the original outlay. Dominique once hesitated, tempted to wait for “better” tech, until Mohamed pointed out that a paid‑off system beats a lifetime of rising utility bills — a point that proved true as rates climbed. Supreme handled the installation and the array keeps performing strongly; the most memorable detail is that nearly ten years on the system still produces enough to leave them with annual credits and no electric bill.

3. Bradley M.
Yelp | Feb 21, 2025 |

Bradley M. decided to revisit solar after watching his electric bill climb to nearly a car payment as IID rates kept rising. He had been told back in 2018 that, given IID’s policies and equipment costs, solar didn’t pencil out — but after calling several companies he found Supreme Solar stood out. He worked with Mohamed, who patiently walked him through the basics, repeated financial presentations when needed, and designed a system that met today’s needs while leaving room to expand. There was no high-pressure sales pitch; Mohamed simply laid out options and timelines so Bradley could choose with confidence. Pricing felt fair, and the company offered a financing route completed entirely via DocuSign, which Bradley found very easy; Mohamed also guided him on when to give the go-ahead for billing as the install date approached. The standout detail was a program other installers couldn’t match: Bradley ended up with a 32-panel array paired with three batteries. Installation happened on schedule — the crew arrived on time, completed the install in two days, cleaned up, painted where needed, and the system passed inspection without issues. Samantha handled the HOA and city permitting, a

Platforms Monitored

Google
255 Reviews · 2 Locations
4.9/5
Yelp
47 Reviews · 2 Locations
5.0/5
SolarReviews
Tracking
N/A
EnergySage
Tracking
N/A
BBB
Tracking
N/A

Performance by Work Type

SOLAR
SOLAR
Installation, permitting, and grid connection.
5.0/5
SERVICE
SERVICE
Repairs, maintenance, and ongoing system support.
5.0/5
BATTERY
BATTERY
Energy storage for backup savings and independence.
5.0/5
ELECTRICAL
ELECTRICAL
Panel upgrades and wiring for system readiness.
5.0/5
ROOFING
ROOFING
Repair or replacement, before or after solar installation.
4.7/5
COMPLEX PROJECTS
COMPLEX PROJECTS
Multi-trade installations requiring co-ordination.
N/A

How We Got To Trust Score 98

Clean Record

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. Dominique Fruchtman
Google | Jun 25, 2025 |

Dominique Fruchtman decided to install a rooftop solar system in 2015 with Mohamed’s help — a roughly $30,000 setup that ended up packing 49 panels and leaving no more room on the roof. They had been paying SCE about $500–$600 a month before the switch, and nearly a decade later the utility bill has vanished: they haven’t paid SCE in years and now accumulate roughly $500 a year in excess production credits. Doing the math, the panels have cut about $50,000–$60,000 from their power costs so far, effectively delivering about a 2:1 return on the original outlay. Dominique once hesitated, tempted to wait for “better” tech, until Mohamed pointed out that a paid‑off system beats a lifetime of rising utility bills — a point that proved true as rates climbed. Supreme handled the installation and the array keeps performing strongly; the most memorable detail is that nearly ten years on the system still produces enough to leave them with annual credits and no electric bill.

2. Bradley Milligan
Google | Feb 21, 2025 |

Bradley noticed his power bill climbing to nearly the level of a car payment and, with IID rates rising, decided to revisit solar after being told in 2018 it wasn’t financially viable. He called several companies and found Supreme Solar markedly different — especially because of Mohamed’s approach. Mohamed spent a lot of time walking him through the options, repeating the presentation as needed, and building a system that met today’s needs while leaving room for growth. There was no pressure, just clear financial comparisons that ultimately made the project make sense. Pricing landed fair to Bradley, and Supreme Solar offered flexible options — including a program other installers couldn’t match that enabled him to install a 32-panel array with three batteries. Financing moved quickly through DocuSign with no issues; Bradley only needed to coordinate the company’s billing start as Mohamed advised. Installation unfolded exactly on the timeline Mohamed had set. Installers arrived on time, finished the rooftop work in two days, cleaned up, painted where needed, and passed inspection without problems. Samantha handled the HOA and city paperwork, staying organized and responsive so—

3. Bradley M.
Yelp | Feb 21, 2025 |

Bradley M. decided to revisit solar after watching his electric bill climb to nearly a car payment as IID rates kept rising. He had been told back in 2018 that, given IID’s policies and equipment costs, solar didn’t pencil out — but after calling several companies he found Supreme Solar stood out. He worked with Mohamed, who patiently walked him through the basics, repeated financial presentations when needed, and designed a system that met today’s needs while leaving room to expand. There was no high-pressure sales pitch; Mohamed simply laid out options and timelines so Bradley could choose with confidence. Pricing felt fair, and the company offered a financing route completed entirely via DocuSign, which Bradley found very easy; Mohamed also guided him on when to give the go-ahead for billing as the install date approached. The standout detail was a program other installers couldn’t match: Bradley ended up with a 32-panel array paired with three batteries. Installation happened on schedule — the crew arrived on time, completed the install in two days, cleaned up, painted where needed, and the system passed inspection without issues. Samantha handled the HOA and city permitting, a

02

1. Lody Q
Google | Jan 31, 2025 |

Lody started shopping for solar two years ago for his first house and ran into inconsistent pricing from several big-name companies. He stumbled into a conversation with Mohamed and locked the deal in a single meeting — the system matched his needs, used strong panels, and arrived on the roof within a few weeks. Supreme Solar moved quickly during that first install and kept communication tight, and when Lody was buying a second home they deliberately paused activation until his loan and escrow closed so nothing got ahead of the paperwork. About 1.5 years later they returned to outfit the new property: this job demanded home batteries and an elevated ground mount because of the site, and initial quotes ranged in the “90s to over 100s.” Lody chose Supreme Solar again based on the earlier smooth process, and the team — Mohamed, Michael and the crew — delivered once more. What stuck with him most was their willingness to time the work around his escrow and loan rather than rush the activation.

2. Marissa D.
Yelp | Aug 9, 2024 |

Marissa D. ended up paying about $20 a month for electricity instead of roughly $800 after installing a Supreme Solar system on her home. After researching multiple providers, she picked Supreme Solar for being local, professional, and offering high-quality panels at an affordable price — plus they walked her through exactly which system would fit her needs. Mohamed handled her project: he walked her through the monitoring app, untangled her Edison bills so she could understand true-up timing, and even connected her with a CPA who specializes in green-energy tax credits. The crew completed the install in 2–3 days without damaging the roof, and someone from the company called a year later to check that everything was still working. Because the system was sized correctly, she expects her true-up bill to be negligible. The lasting image she keeps: a rapid installation, a helpful point person in Mohamed, and a near-elimination of that formerly massive utility bill.

3. Stephanie German
Google | Apr 8, 2024 |

Stephanie had put solar on her house years earlier but discovered her usage outpaced the original array. Michael and his team came out, proposed adding more panels, and got the extra units installed quickly. After the upgrade she saw a large jump in electricity production and stopped paying PGE bills — a relief as those rates kept climbing. The standout for her was the fast, effective follow-up: a targeted panel expansion that fixed the shortfall and removed her reliance on PGE.

03

1. Dominique F.
Yelp | Jun 25, 2025 |

Dominique installed a 49-panel Sunrun system in 2015 — a rooftop array that cost about $30,000. Before going solar, the household faced Southern California Edison bills around $500–$600 a month; nearly ten years later they no longer pay SCE and now bank roughly $500 a year in excess production credits (not cash, but no bill either). When they add it up, avoided utility costs total roughly $50,000–$60,000, against the $30,000 investment — about a 2:1 return — and the system keeps performing. Dominique had hesitated at first, tempted to wait for “better” tech, but realized utility bills would keep rising; the panels instead insulated them from that inflation. The detail that sticks: a decade after installation the rooftop still overproduces the home’s needs and continues to generate surplus credit.

2. Mike
Google | Mar 11, 2024 |

Mike waited a year after having a 12 kWh system installed on his roof before posting this: the install delivered more than promised. The company estimated about 17,000 kWh for the year and he ended up producing 18,300 kWh—roughly 7.6% above projection. He still faced a little over $400 in a true-up, but that came from putting 30,000 miles a year on a Tesla rather than system shortfall. Early on one panel underproduced, and the crew swapped it out under warranty without a fuss. He knows NEM 3 has squeezed both buyers and installers, and he hopes the firm sticks around—what lingered for him was not just the extra output but the fact they stood behind the work when a panel failed.

3. M B
Google | Aug 18, 2023 |

M had a 43-panel solar system put on their ranch-style home nearly two years ago and later added an EV charger. They ended up with a system and price that matched their expectations, but what really stuck with them was the follow-through: the installation quality held up, and the team — Matt, Josh and Trevor — stayed engaged, answering questions promptly and even helping schedule cleanings. The most memorable part of the experience was the ongoing, hands-on support from those technicians long after the install.

Long-term Satisfaction

Long-term satisfaction for Supreme Solar & Electric holds steady at 5.0 ★. This is better than 81% of installers we looked at.

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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