Tesla Solar Roof is on life support as it pivot to panels

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Tesla Solar Roof

Tesla Solar Roof is on life support as it pivot to panels

Fred Lambert | May 14 2026 - 2:37 pm PT

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Tesla’s Solar Roof was supposed to revolutionize residential solar. Elon Musk unveiled the product in 2016 with the promise of beautiful solar tiles that would replace your entire roof — and he set a target of 1,000 new Solar Roofs per week by the end of 2019. Nearly a decade later, Tesla has installed roughly 3,000 Solar Roof systems total, stopped reporting deployment numbers, and is now quietly pivoting to conventional solar panels.

The gap between Tesla’s Solar Roof promise and reality is one of the most stark examples of unfulfilled ambitions in the company’s history — and it has left thousands of customers stuck with an expensive product that Tesla appears to have deprioritized.

The promise vs. the numbers

When Musk first presented the Solar Roof in October 2016, he positioned it as a cornerstone of Tesla’s energy future. The pitch was compelling: solar tiles indistinguishable from premium roofing materials, integrated with Powerwalls for whole-home energy independence. Musk claimed it would cost less than a conventional roof plus traditional solar panels. Tesla acquired SolarCity for $2.6 billion partly on the strength of this vision, and Musk even said at the time that SolarCity’s Gigafactory would produce up to 10 GW/year.

None of that materialized.<br>Advertisement - scroll for more content

Tesla didn’t reach even small-scale volume production until 2020 — three years behind schedule. At its peak in Q2 2022, Tesla deployed approximately 2.5 MW of Solar Roofs per quarter, equivalent to about 23 roofs per week. That’s 97.7% short of the 1,000-per-week target.

According to Wood Mackenzie, Tesla installed roughly 3,000 Solar Roof systems in the US through early 2023. Tesla disputed the figure but never provided its own number — a telling response.

Then came the quiet retreat. Tesla’s solar deployments across all products (panels and Solar Roof combined) declined for at least four consecutive quarters after Q4 2022. In Q1 2024, Tesla stopped reporting solar deployment figures entirely, simply removing the line item from its quarterly report. The company acknowledged energy generation and storage revenues were up, driven by Megapack deployments, “partially offset by a decrease in solar deployments.”

Since then, Tesla has virtually stopped even mentioning the solar roof tiles.

The customer experience

For existing Solar Roof owners, the situation is arguably worse than the deployment numbers suggest.

Tesla has largely exited direct Solar Roof installation. The company no longer provides online quotes for Solar Roof and instead directs customers to third-party certified installers — a small network of regional roofing contractors. In Florida, Tesla has canceled solar projects entirely, and field workers report that all available crews are devoted to repairs, leaving no resources for new installations.

The third-party installer model creates a structural problem for consumers: when something goes wrong, the installer blames Tesla’s design, Tesla blames the installer, and the customer is stuck in the middle.

Customer service complaints are pervasive and consistent. Tesla Energy has a 2.6 out of 5 rating on SolarReviews, and forums including Reddit’s r/TeslaSolar, Tesla Motors Club, and Bogleheads are filled with reports of months-long service waits, no-show appointments, and unreachable support teams. One Bogleheads user described Tesla having only one authorized third-party installer in all of Los Angeles.

The 2024 company-wide layoffs hit the solar division hard. Tesla laid off 285 employees at the Buffalo factory as part of a 14% workforce reduction, and service and support functions were clearly gutted — explaining the collapse in customer service responsiveness.

There are also unresolved product issues. Tesla’s Solar Roof uses string inverters rather than micro-inverters or power optimizers, which means that partial shading on any section of the roof can shut down production for that entire string. This is a significant design limitation that competing solar installers address with panel-level optimization technology from companies like Enphase and SolarEdge. Solar Roof owners have reported systems underperforming contracted estimates by 20% or more, and Tesla has reportedly declined some service requests, attributing underperformance to “low usage and weather conditions.”

The economics never worked either. An average Tesla Solar Roof costs approximately $106,000 before incentives, compared to roughly $60,000 for a traditional roof replacement plus conventional solar panels — a $46,000 premium. The payback period stretches to 15-25 years, compared to 7-12 years for...

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