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California gives door-to-door solar buyers extended cancellation rights and Spanish-language disclosure requirements. Here's what it covers.
State laws · 8 min read · Updated May 5, 2026
California’s Home Solicitation Sales Act (Civil Code §§ 1689.5–1689.15) gives California consumers some of the strongest cancellation rights in the country for door-to-door sales — including most residential solar transactions.
The Act applies when:
Most residential solar sales fit this definition.
The buyer has the right to cancel the contract until midnight of the third business day after signing. The seller must provide:
For door-to-door home-improvement contracts where the buyer is 65 or older, California extends the cancellation period to five business days (Bus. & Prof. Code § 7159).
If the sale was negotiated primarily in Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, or Korean, the seller must deliver a translated copy of the contract before the buyer signs (Civ. Code § 1632). Failure to comply can render the contract rescindable.
This is one of the most powerful provisions for California homeowners — many solar sales to non-English-speaking households were closed in the buyer’s home language but executed in English-only paperwork.
If the seller never provided a proper Notice of Cancellation, the cancellation period does not begin to run. The buyer’s right to cancel persists until the notice is properly delivered.
Within 10 days of receiving cancellation notice, the seller must:
The seller must also remove any goods left at the buyer’s premises within 20 days, at the seller’s expense.
This is California law as a general overview, not legal advice. Other states have similar (and sometimes broader) statutes. Free state-specific review →
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