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Titan Solar Power has shut down, leaving thousands of customers with broken systems and no recourse. We analyzed hundreds of reviews and found a company that routinely misled homeowners on savings, botched installations that failed city inspection multiple times, and ghosted customers when panels stopped working. In one case, a system sat idle for over two years while the owner paid both their electric bill and a $230 monthly loan. Another homeowner discovered roof leaks in 2024 and called for the promised 25-year warranty, only to learn Titan had closed. The pattern is unmistakable: 567 reviewers flagged deceptive value claims, 582 described total silence after problems surfaced, and 302 reported shoddy workmanship ranging from holes drilled through ceilings to wiring that failed inspection four times. Sales reps promised $20 electric bills; customers ended up paying $144 per month between panels and utility charges. One 70-year-old was sold a system that never heated his pool as promised and stuck with a fixture filing and a 25-year loan on equipment that stopped producing after 18 months.
Titan Solar Power is out of business. If you're researching them because a third party is servicing your existing system, document every interaction and assume you'll need to hire an independent contractor for repairs. If you're considering solar and stumbled on this name, cross it off immediately.
In 2021, eilynlicon had Titan Solar Power install solar panels on her home at 4735 Lombardy Fire Trail in Katy, Texas (Project # TSP94905). Although the physical installation finished, activation dragged on for so long that she ended up paying both the financier for the system and her regular electricity provider. Then, on June 19, 2024, heavy rains led to a roof leak directly beneath the array. She reached out to Titan’s service and maintenance team for help and discovered the company had shut its doors, leaving her — and, she says, many others — with water damage and no contractor to turn to. Now she’s left asking what steps she can take and who can defend her rights.
In May 2022 CD signed a $23,000 rooftop solar contract sold by a Vivant Solar representative and expected a straightforward installation on a typical suburban home. Instead, the project repeatedly stumbled: an installation set for July never showed up and gave no notice, and when a crew finally completed the physical install on August 19, the bank had already paid the contractor a day earlier for that rescheduled appointment even though the crew hadn’t arrived. After the panels went up, Xcel Energy couldn’t hook up the system because Titan had installed the wrong electrical box. That kicked off weeks of daily phone calls and back-and-forth coordination with Xcel; a replacement box was installed with Xcel’s help but wired incorrectly at first, causing a second delay. The system only reached grid connection by the end of September 2022. Once live, CD discovered uneven production from one panel and suspected a failing optimizer. Rather than getting proactive service, CD ended up doing most of the legwork: researching the equipment, spending two to six hours a day on calls, and filing the paperwork for the 10% New Mexico rebate and the 30% federal tax credit personally. SolarEdge (by
Pam was approached at her home in March 2022 by a young Titan Solar representative, Jacob Shreeve, while she and her husband were already thinking about going solar. He convinced her they would have daytime solar power, backup electricity during outages, and unusually low nighttime rates — he promised grid electricity after 9 PM at $0.05 per kWh and an SRP access fee cut to $16 a month — and he projected federal and state rebates of $8,693 and $1,000. He also guaranteed a 25‑year warranty covering the roof, panels, inverter and production, and put her in touch with a CPA, Stetson Kizzar, who was supposed to provide the rebate paperwork. She gave contact details and waited. She was told installation would take 45 days from signing; instead she spent eight months dealing with delays and broken promises. When she started asking questions she discovered the rates and backup claims were false: peak rates run about $8.18 per kWh (not $0.05) and the SRP access fee remained $32.99 (not $16), and the array would not power the house during outages — it only exported daytime generation to SRP. An SRP representative confirmed similar misleading sales tactics directed at others. When the屋
7 reports
28 reports
Operating longer than most installers in the market.
Poor BBB standing. Significant complaints.
Reviews were posted naturally over time.
License information could not be confirmed.
Tonya C. felt misled from day one. She went through an installation that looked complete, but the solar system didn’t actually start producing for a full year after it was put on her roof. By the time it finally worked, she discovered the overall cost left her paying far more than her previous electric bill — a long delay paired with a higher-than-expected cost was the outcome she ended up with.
Bjs had Titan Solar install panels on their home two years ago, expecting long-term savings — but they now doubt they’ll ever recoup the cost. They discovered the solar credits were badly explained up front, and the monthly math hasn’t worked out: before solar their electric bills never topped about $230 even in summer, yet after installation they’re stuck with a roughly $183 monthly solar payment plus about $200 in electricity, with totals frequently ending up over $250. They also learned a new roof will mean extra charges to remove and reinstall the array. Everything about the financing and installation turned out different from what the finance company and installer had promised. To make matters worse, Titan Solar went bankrupt and stopped taking service calls; when the panels recently stopped producing, they were told the company was out of business. They now face a GoodLeap loan despite having no installer to call for repairs. SolarEdge has agreed to replace the inverter, but they still must find a contractor to install it, leaving them with a nonworking system, an outstanding debt, and no clear service path.
Horace I hired Titan Solar for a home solar installation and quickly discovered the sales pitch overpromised on energy savings and the crew installed fewer panels than the original quote suggested. He pushed the company and the finance provider to verify that the system he ended up paying for matched what was actually delivered; both confirmed it, even though it differed from the initial proposal. Over time he experienced repeated outages, the most serious in May 2024 when grid power went out and the transfer switch failed to move the load to solar backup and the stored battery. The home breaker tripped and the whole system shut down; when grid power returned he reset the breaker and restarted the system as he had been instructed, and it resumed running. When he tried to get help, he discovered Titan Solar had gone bankrupt. The finance company proved little help and told him he would need to hire another contractor for service. That development worries him most: a 25-year maintenance contract and the system warranty now sit in limbo with no clear path to enforcement or support. He has reached out to the BBB and is seeking guidance from the energy commission, particularly on—