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TILA requires specific disclosures on financed solar systems. Missing or inaccurate disclosures may give you legal grounds to challenge the loan.
Federal protections · 10 min read · Updated May 5, 2026
If you financed your solar system with a loan, federal law requires the lender to give you a specific set of disclosures before you sign. The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) — implemented by Regulation Z — exists to make sure consumers understand what they’re signing.
For consumer credit transactions secured by a dwelling (which includes most solar loans), the lender must disclose in writing, before consummation:
Most solar loans include a hidden dealer fee — a percentage (often 20–30%) of the loan principal that goes to the installer/dealer as a kickback. This fee inflates the amount financed without giving the borrower additional value.
If the dealer fee is rolled into the principal but not disclosed as a finance charge, that may be a TILA violation. Several federal cases have addressed this directly. The CFPB has also issued guidance on solar dealer fees and disclosure obligations.
For loans secured by your principal dwelling, you have a 3-business-day right to rescind after consummation, after delivery of the TILA disclosures, or after delivery of the rescission notice — whichever is later.
If the lender failed to deliver proper TILA disclosures, the rescission window can extend up to 3 years in some circumstances.
TILA violations are not minor — they can entitle you to actual damages, statutory damages, attorneys’ fees, and in rescission cases, the return of all finance charges paid. Submit your loan documents for a free review if any of these appear missing or wrong.
This article is general information, not legal advice. TILA case law is fact-specific and continues to evolve.
An independent attorney review is free. Find out if your contract may have legal issues.