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MarketMay 8, 2026·6 min read

The US Solar Workforce in 2026: Why Install Capacity Is the New Bottleneck

Modules are cheap. Capital is available. Labor is the constraint. Here's how the workforce shortage shapes your project timeline.

The numbers

The US solar workforce hit ~330,000 in 2025, up ~11% year over year. IREC projects the industry needs 420,000+ workers by 2028 to hit deployment targets. The gap shows up first in states with the fastest permit throughput — TX, FL, AZ.

The read-through for owners

  • Book install slots earlier. Q1 fills up by November.
  • Prefer installers with in-house crews over sub-contracted labor — turnover in sub'd crews is running above 30%.
  • Expect labor cost to rise 4–7% in 2026, partially offset by continued module cost declines.

What's helping

Trade schools, IBEW training programs, and SolarAPP+ (which reduces per-project labor hours ~15%) are closing the gap slowly. Doesn't change your 2026 timeline — plan around it.


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