Major Residential Solar Installer Freedom Forever Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in Delaware -- BIG Questions Follow. . . .

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Mike Mullett

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Apr 16, 2026, 9:49:14 AM (12 days ago) Apr 16
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SOLAR
POWER WORLD
 

Residential solar installer Freedom Forever files bankruptcy

By Kelly Pickerel | 

National residential solar installer Freedom Forever has filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware. The company was the top residential contractor on the 2025 Top Solar Contractors List, based on kilowatts installed.

Freedom Forever listed its estimated assets between $100 million and $500 million. The company’s estimated liabilities are between $500 million and $1 billion. Mosaic Funding is Freedom Forever’s largest creditor claim with nearly $120 million owed.

Freedom Forever started in 2011 and had installed nearly 2 GW of residential solar across 35 states, Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C. The contractor has over 3,600 employees.

The company operated in a dealership model, similar to other major residential brands that have recently exited the market — Sunnova, the original SunPower and PosiGen. These contractors largely offer solar and storage to homeowners through third-party ownership (TPO) contracts — either leases or PPAs. Now that the homeowner tax credit for solar (25D) has expired, TPO projects are increasing in the residential market, as they still have access to the commercial investment tax credit (48E).

Freedom Forever was active in workforce development and was the first residential solar company to achieve certification from the Dept. of Labor for its electrical apprenticeship program. The company aimed to engage over 200 apprenticeships by 2028, to help Freedom Forever and the solar industry meet the increasing demand for clean energy professionals.

 

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  1. George

    Important Considerations for Homeowners
    Manufacturer Claims: If a panel or inverter fails, you should contact the equipment manufacturer directly (e.g., JA Solar, Trina Solar, SolarEdge or Enphase). They may require you to find a new certified local installer to perform the labor.

    Labor Costs: Even if parts are covered by a manufacturer, the labor costs for replacing equipment were previously covered by Freedom Forever. Under bankruptcy, you may now have to pay a third-party contractor out-of-pocket for these repairs.

    Leases and PPAs: If you have a lease or Power Purchase Agreement (PPA), your contract is an asset that will likely be sold to a new service provider. These new owners typically maintain and repair the systems to ensure you continue making monthly payments.

    FTC Holder Rule: For those with solar loans (such as through Solar Mosaic), you may have legal protections under the FTC Holder Rule, which allows consumers to assert claims against their lender if the seller (Freedom Forever) fails to fulfill contractual promises like maintenance.

  2. Joe

    We had a roof redone as part of the lease. The system has not been turned on yet. The roofing company has already contacted me. How do I seperqte them from the freedom contract as I don’t want a lien on my house?

  3. Sam

    I did install last year and the system still not running waiting to be activated is that mean its will not work and what should I do

  4. Ty

    They were paying for a roof repair for me. The roofing company they contacted just called letting me know that Freedom Forever won’t be showing up but I still owe them for the roof. This is messed up.

  5. Investment protect

    Product warranty good as long as continuews to stay in business . Your labor to inspect issues, install defective product . Most likely kaput ! Always always go with a company that knows how to run a business. Pay more for sound business structure, , discipline , strong minded business people. Legacy built. For the long-term. Tough to find but tougher for customers to understand.

  6. Brandon

    They just screwed us. We’ve had a claim with them for 2 months for a leaking roof due to shoddy work that has collapsed a ceiling in our house and they have been pushing and pushing it with excuses. Turns out this is why. Now we’re screwed. They have been a terrible company the entire process. Worst decision we ever made was trusting Freedom Forever.

  7. Brenda

    What does this mean for homeowners who just got solar with freedom forever? Will we still be covered with their protection of taking care of the solar panels. We are renting for 15 years.

      • Brad

        How long will that take? The company isn’t taking any phone calls or providing any information. They say that have stopped all work and people’s homes are damaged! What are we supposed to do in the mean time?

      • DeWitt Sagastume

        I need the name and contact info for their bankruptcy attorney. Can you obtain that for us??? I too am affected with a promised check to be cut 16 business days ago! No help or info from the upper management contact I’ve had in the project spanning months too!!!

    • John

      You will have a manufacturers warranty so you can file a claim to the manufacturer. Think of it this way. Your solar panel glass is a product sort of like a car like Ford. Ford manufacturer will honor your warranty. The dealership closed down so in this case freedom forever but your warranty is still intact. You just have to contact manufacturer directly and see if they have technicians in the area that can service your system. If and only if there’s an issue with your solar system. Hope that helps

    • Luke

      Reach out to your finance company. The agreement was with them.(Goodleap, enfin sunrun etc.)

Michael A. Mullett
723 Lafayette Avenue
Columbus, IN 47201
 

ruth...@aol.com

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Apr 21, 2026, 9:19:30 PM (7 days ago) Apr 21
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This is a shame, and I cannot help but think that solar installation companies are suffering from tax credits and government rebates ending, tariffs on Chinese imports, and the general lack of government support.  

Maybe this can be significant in the future.  Can anyone explain to me how these small plug-in solar panels work?  To my mind, when I plug something in, it draws electricity, it doesn't push electricity. And there is no battery to store it in my house.  I don't get it.  Also, I don't see why it has to be legislated as something legal, if it doesn't do any harm.  I mean, plenty of people use gasoline generators, etc.  to power their homes.


Thanks,
Sharon

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Mike Mullett

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Apr 22, 2026, 8:01:49 AM (6 days ago) Apr 22
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Sharon, All -
 
    The truth is that legislation is NOT required.  However, the IURC would need to adopt an interconnection rule for the Plug-In Solar device which satisfies UL requirements for customer and utility employee safety.  See, esp.
 
 
    The IURC does this regularly and routinely and they should do so expeditiously with respect to plug-in solar. . . .
 
    Mike

Michael A. Mullett, Director
Energy Matters Community Coalition, Inc.
723 Lafayette Avenue
Columbus, IN 47201
 
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