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Qcells wants solar + storage built into every new home

Solar giant Qcells is making a play to get solar and battery storage built into new homes in the US from day one.

The company just launched Qcells New Homes, a division that bundles solar and battery systems directly into new construction across the US. The goal is to make clean energy a standard feature, not an add-on.

Qcells says the platform is a fully integrated package built for homebuilders, combining panels made at its Georgia factory with domestically produced batteries, financing, installation support, and long-term monitoring.

For builders, that means a single partner handling everything from equipment to long-term performance – no need to juggle multiple vendors.

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Qcells is also using this to lean into its US manufacturing footprint, positioning itself as a direct supplier at a time when electrification policies are tightening, and buyers expect lower energy costs built into new homes.

Why Qcells is targeting new homes

This is about locking in solar at the point of construction, before homeowners ever think about adding it later.

Qcells is pitching builders on three things that sell right now: lower upfront costs, easier buyer qualification, and predictable energy bills.

The “homebuyer-friendly operating lease with in-house financing” is designed to keep costs off the home price and out of the buyer’s debt-to-income ratio, helping more buyers qualify for a mortgage.

At the same time, monthly payments are set below average utility rates with no annual escalator, giving homeowners a clearer long-term cost picture as electricity prices fluctuate.

There’s also a grid play here. Pairing solar with batteries means homes can store power and, in states with clean energy programs like California’s NEM 3.0, send it back to the grid, while still keeping backup power on hand for outages.

A vertically integrated play

Qcells is trying to own more of the stack, from manufacturing to long-term system performance.

For builders, the appeal is simplicity: one contract, one partner, fewer moving parts during construction.

For Qcells, it means tighter control over costs, performance, and customer relationships as solar shifts from an aftermarket add-on to a built-in feature.

Backing of the Hanwha Group, Qcells’ parent company, also matters here, giving builders confidence that the systems and the financing behind them will be around for the long haul.

The bigger picture

This move fits into a broader shift: solar and storage are increasingly being built into homes from day one, rather than added later.

For builders, that can mean fewer headaches down the line. For buyers, it can mean lower and more predictable energy bills.

And for solar companies like Qcells, it’s a chance to lock in customers earlier, before the home is even finished.

Read more: US Customs delays force solar giant Qcells to furlough 1,000 workers [update]


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Avatar for Michelle Lewis Michelle Lewis

Michelle Lewis is a writer and editor on Electrek and an editor on DroneDJ, 9to5Mac, and 9to5Google. She lives in White River Junction, Vermont. She has previously worked for Fast Company, the Guardian, News Deeply, Time, and others. Message Michelle on Twitter or at michelle@9to5mac.com. Check out her personal blog.