Rebate & deadline watch

What's real, what's expired, and what's block-based

Most rebate and tax-credit conversations for WNY homeowners are confused by sales scripts that are either out of date or were never right. This page tries to say clearly, for each major federal and New York program that affects WNY homes, what's true right now and where to verify it yourself. No sales hype, no invented urgency.

Last reviewed: April 2026. Programs change. If you see this page more than a quarter after that date, click through to each source before trusting a specific number.

How to use this page

Every status below links to the official source so you can verify the current state yourself. GridReady does not administer any of these programs and does not process applications. If an installer cites a rebate or a credit in a quote, match their number against the sourced pages here — not against what the salesperson remembers.

Federal Residential Solar Tax Credit (Section 25D)

Last checked: April 2026

Expired

The 30% federal tax credit that covered direct-ownership residential solar ended on December 31, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed July 4, 2025. This was an early termination of the long-term Inflation Reduction Act extension, which had been scheduled to run through 2032. If you did not have a system physically installed and operational by the end of 2025, the 25D credit is no longer available to you.

Key facts

  • Hard deadline: December 31, 2025. Already passed.
  • Signing a contract or paying a deposit in 2025 was not enough — the IRS required the physical installation to be complete.
  • Third-party ownership (solar leases, PPAs, prepaid products) is still eligible under the 48E business investment credit through end of 2027 — but that is a different credit, claimed by the installer, not the homeowner.
  • If you are being pitched on 'the federal credit' for a new direct-ownership project in 2026, ask the installer to point to the specific IRS guidance. There is not one.

NY-Sun (NYSERDA Solar Incentive)

Last checked: April 2026

Block-based

NY-Sun is not a date-based deadline program. It allocates megawatts of incentive in blocks across upstate, downstate, and Long Island regions. As blocks fill up, the per-watt incentive steps down. When all blocks in your region are subscribed, the incentive stops for that sector. There is no single end date to watch — you watch the dashboard.

Key facts

  • Check the Upstate Dashboard for the current block status in WNY territory before you sign.
  • Incentive is per watt, applied at the installer level, not a check to the homeowner.
  • A quoted incentive amount from an installer should match the current dashboard block. If it does not, ask why.
  • 'Last block' or 'running out' urgency is sometimes real and sometimes a sales tactic — the dashboard is the truth.

NYSERDA Residential Energy Storage Incentive

Last checked: April 2026

Block-based

Battery storage incentives are also block-based through NYSERDA's Residential Energy Storage program. Same mechanic as NY-Sun: capacity allocated in blocks by region, incentive steps down as blocks fill. Check the dashboard for current availability before scoping a battery into your project.

Key facts

  • First-come, first-served by contractor submission.
  • Incentive is based on kWh of storage capacity.
  • Residential program is distinct from the retail (commercial) program — make sure quotes reference the right one.
  • Eligibility includes behind-the-meter residential systems on new or existing homes.

NYS Clean Heat Rebate (Heat Pumps)

Last checked: April 2026

Policy change

The NYS Clean Heat Rebate — administered through your utility for heat pump installs — had a meaningful eligibility change on January 1, 2026. As of that date, residential rebates are available only for homes with one to four units, natural-gas-only customers are no longer eligible, and projects replacing an existing full-load heat pump with another full-load heat pump no longer qualify. If your last read on this program was before 2026, the rules you remember may no longer apply to your house.

Key facts

  • Effective January 1, 2026: natural gas-only customers excluded.
  • Effective January 1, 2026: full-load-to-full-load heat pump replacements no longer eligible.
  • Residential 1-4 unit homes only.
  • Heat pump water heater: $900 rebate for qualifying equipment.
  • NYSEG, National Grid, and other NY utilities each administer their own version — check the specific utility page for your territory.

NYSERDA EmPower+ (Income-Eligible Home Energy Upgrades)

Last checked: April 2026

Active

EmPower+ is the income-eligible home energy retrofit program — it covers things like insulation, air sealing, heat pump water heaters, and in some cases full heat pump installs at no cost (low-income) or 50% cost share (moderate-income). It is a rolling-availability program with no specific calendar deadline, and NYSERDA allocated $120 million to it for 2026, up from $110 million in 2025.

Key facts

  • Low-income tier: at or below 60% of State Median Income. Caps at $12,000 per project upstate.
  • Moderate-income tier: 60% to 80% of SMI or AMI. 50% cost share, capped at $6,000 upstate.
  • Automatic qualification if you receive HEAP, SNAP, TANF, or SSI.
  • 2026 funding: $120 million (NYSERDA allocation).
  • No specific application deadline — it runs until funds are exhausted.

National Grid Upstate NY — EV Programs

Last checked: April 2026

Active

National Grid's EV programs in upstate NY include Charge Smart NY (operational incentives for charging behavior) and the Make-Ready program (infrastructure funding for installing Level 2 and DCFC chargers). The Make-Ready program is primarily oriented toward multi-unit, commercial, and workplace charging, not single-family residential installs. For a home EV charger, the most useful thing National Grid offers a residential customer is the planning tools and rate information — not a direct charger rebate.

Key facts

  • Make-Ready program covers electric infrastructure costs for qualifying sites (primarily commercial, workplace, multi-family).
  • Charge Smart NY is a behavioral/operational incentive for managing when you charge.
  • Single-family residential installs are generally not eligible for make-ready infrastructure funding.
  • If you are being told 'National Grid will pay for your home charger install,' verify directly against National Grid's EV hub — it is usually a misstatement.

What this page is not

  • Not an application portal. GridReady does not administer any of these programs. Applications go through NYSERDA, your utility, or the IRS directly — usually with your installer as the filer.
  • Not legal or tax advice. Tax credit eligibility depends on your specific filing situation. Confirm with a qualified tax professional.
  • Not complete. WNY homeowners may be eligible for additional local, county, or program-specific incentives that are not tracked here. If your installer cites one, ask them to link you to the administering agency's current page — same rule as the ones above.

Next: New York solar incentives — plain English or how grid interconnection actually works in WNY.