New Jersey Solar Permit Overview
New Jersey has one of the most favorable solar policy environments in the Northeast. The state's TREC (Transition Renewable Energy Certificate) program and earlier SREC program created strong financial incentives. The 45-day HOA deemed-approved rule is unique nationally โ document your submission date carefully. NJ BPU (Board of Public Utilities) regulates interconnection. The Successor Solar Incentive (SuSI) program replaced SREC2 โ verify current program status at njcleanenergy.com.
New Jersey Solar โ Key Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| HOA Solar Law | N.J.S.A. 45:22A-48.2 |
| HOA Protection | 45-day deemed-approved rule if HOA doesn't respond |
| Net Metering | Net metering at retail rate; transitioning to Successor Tariff program |
| Major Utilities | PSE&G, JCP&L, Atlantic City Electric, Rockland Electric |
New Jersey County Solar Permit Guides
| County | AHJ | Phone | Utility | Est. Fee | Approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bergen County | Bergen County Building | (201) 336-6000 | PSE&G or JCP&L | $250โ$600 | 10โ20 days |
| Monmouth County | Monmouth County Planning | (732) 431-7460 | JCP&L | $200โ$500 | 7โ15 days |
| Burlington County | Burlington County Dev. | (609) 265-5000 | PSE&G or JCP&L | $200โ$500 | 7โ15 days |
HOA Solar Rights in New Jersey
New Jersey homeowners are protected by N.J.S.A. 45:22A-48.2. 45-day deemed-approved rule if HOA doesn't respond. For the full breakdown of what your HOA can and cannot do โ including a template approval request letter โ see our HOA Solar Rights by State guide.
Utility Interconnection in New Jersey
The following utilities serve New Jersey residents. Submit your interconnection application as soon as your county permit is submitted โ parallel processing cuts total timeline by 3โ6 weeks.
Major utilities: PSE&G, JCP&L, Atlantic City Electric, Rockland Electric.
Full step-by-step interconnection guide: Solar Interconnection Application Steps.
Net metering at retail rate; transitioning to Successor Tariff program
Frequently Asked Questions โ New Jersey
Yes. All grid-tied residential solar installations in New Jersey require a building permit (filed with your local AHJ) and a utility interconnection application (filed with your electric utility). Both must be completed before your system can legally export power. Your installer handles most of this, but understanding the process helps you track progress and verify it's happening correctly.
In New Jersey, HOA solar rights are governed by N.J.S.A. 45:22A-48.2. 45-day deemed-approved rule if HOA doesn't respond. Review your CC&Rs and the applicable state statute before submitting your HOA application. Full guide and template letter: HOA Solar Rights by State.
Total timeline from permit submission to Permission to Operate (PTO) typically runs 8โ14 weeks in New Jersey for a standard residential installation. Permit approval takes 7โ20 business days depending on county. Inspections are typically scheduled within 1โ5 business days. Utility interconnection adds 15โ45 business days after the county final inspection. Submitting interconnection simultaneously with the permit application is the most effective way to compress this timeline. Full breakdown: Solar Permit Timeline Guide.