%*!#&%!381th Official Hard At Work Thread!%&#!*%
#1321
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tacocat (04-14-2017)
#1323
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tacocat (04-14-2017)
#1324
I am wondering if it is time for Bobbie and I to do something like this. We have a part of our roof that is in the sun 365 days a year. I imagine it would be about perfect (not that I understand all the requirements, mind you) or at least looking into.
Did they talk at all about how it adds to home/resale value, Zeke?
Did they talk at all about how it adds to home/resale value, Zeke?
1. Your power company will continue to increase their rates (BGE has been increasing about 5% annually over the past 15 years).
2. Vivint is capped with their rate increase to 2.9% annually.
What you are looking for is the gap between what you pay Vivint and what BGE is charging to get as big as possible. If you sell the house 10 years from now, that gap should be pretty good, so it is an asset to sell. Right now, Liz and I are paying about 14.3 per KwH delivered to the house. Vivint is charging 11.9. First year savings won't be astronomical. It should get better as time goes on. But, even if BGE says, "Hey, we are charging our customers too much, lets put a freeze in place" it would still take 8 years for Vivint to catch up to the current BGE prices at 2.9% per year.
We got in with Vivint because there is no up front cost to us. We didn't have 20k laying around to buy the panels outright--even then it would have been about a 12 year breakeven point, so we leased. Vivint is responsible for the maintenance, monitoring and production of the units. 20 years from now, we are all done and they take the panels off the house. And we are in our 60's.
#1325
#1326
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With Vivint, you are on for a 20 year ride. That is the scary part. If you sell, you can transfer the deal over to the new people, get new panels on the house you are moving to (with a new 20 year agreement), or pay for the system outright. Most people will opt for the first option. Here is how that works: This whole lease thing is based on 2 things:
1. Your power company will continue to increase their rates (BGE has been increasing about 5% annually over the past 15 years).
2. Vivint is capped with their rate increase to 2.9% annually.
What you are looking for is the gap between what you pay Vivint and what BGE is charging to get as big as possible. If you sell the house 10 years from now, that gap should be pretty good, so it is an asset to sell. Right now, Liz and I are paying about 14.3 per KwH delivered to the house. Vivint is charging 11.9. First year savings won't be astronomical. It should get better as time goes on. But, even if BGE says, "Hey, we are charging our customers too much, lets put a freeze in place" it would still take 8 years for Vivint to catch up to the current BGE prices at 2.9% per year.
We got in with Vivint because there is no up front cost to us. We didn't have 20k laying around to buy the panels outright--even then it would have been about a 12 year breakeven point, so we leased. Vivint is responsible for the maintenance, monitoring and production of the units. 20 years from now, we are all done and they take the panels off the house. And we are in our 60's.
1. Your power company will continue to increase their rates (BGE has been increasing about 5% annually over the past 15 years).
2. Vivint is capped with their rate increase to 2.9% annually.
What you are looking for is the gap between what you pay Vivint and what BGE is charging to get as big as possible. If you sell the house 10 years from now, that gap should be pretty good, so it is an asset to sell. Right now, Liz and I are paying about 14.3 per KwH delivered to the house. Vivint is charging 11.9. First year savings won't be astronomical. It should get better as time goes on. But, even if BGE says, "Hey, we are charging our customers too much, lets put a freeze in place" it would still take 8 years for Vivint to catch up to the current BGE prices at 2.9% per year.
We got in with Vivint because there is no up front cost to us. We didn't have 20k laying around to buy the panels outright--even then it would have been about a 12 year breakeven point, so we leased. Vivint is responsible for the maintenance, monitoring and production of the units. 20 years from now, we are all done and they take the panels off the house. And we are in our 60's.
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tacocat (04-14-2017)
#1327
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tacocat (04-14-2017)
#1328
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With Vivint, you are on for a 20 year ride. That is the scary part. If you sell, you can transfer the deal over to the new people, get new panels on the house you are moving to (with a new 20 year agreement), or pay for the system outright. Most people will opt for the first option. Here is how that works: This whole lease thing is based on 2 things:
1. Your power company will continue to increase their rates (BGE has been increasing about 5% annually over the past 15 years).
2. Vivint is capped with their rate increase to 2.9% annually.
What you are looking for is the gap between what you pay Vivint and what BGE is charging to get as big as possible. If you sell the house 10 years from now, that gap should be pretty good, so it is an asset to sell. Right now, Liz and I are paying about 14.3 per KwH delivered to the house. Vivint is charging 11.9. First year savings won't be astronomical. It should get better as time goes on. But, even if BGE says, "Hey, we are charging our customers too much, lets put a freeze in place" it would still take 8 years for Vivint to catch up to the current BGE prices at 2.9% per year.
We got in with Vivint because there is no up front cost to us. We didn't have 20k laying around to buy the panels outright--even then it would have been about a 12 year breakeven point, so we leased. Vivint is responsible for the maintenance, monitoring and production of the units. 20 years from now, we are all done and they take the panels off the house. And we are in our 60's.
1. Your power company will continue to increase their rates (BGE has been increasing about 5% annually over the past 15 years).
2. Vivint is capped with their rate increase to 2.9% annually.
What you are looking for is the gap between what you pay Vivint and what BGE is charging to get as big as possible. If you sell the house 10 years from now, that gap should be pretty good, so it is an asset to sell. Right now, Liz and I are paying about 14.3 per KwH delivered to the house. Vivint is charging 11.9. First year savings won't be astronomical. It should get better as time goes on. But, even if BGE says, "Hey, we are charging our customers too much, lets put a freeze in place" it would still take 8 years for Vivint to catch up to the current BGE prices at 2.9% per year.
We got in with Vivint because there is no up front cost to us. We didn't have 20k laying around to buy the panels outright--even then it would have been about a 12 year breakeven point, so we leased. Vivint is responsible for the maintenance, monitoring and production of the units. 20 years from now, we are all done and they take the panels off the house. And we are in our 60's.
#1329
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tacocat (04-14-2017)
#1330
The important word is delivered. The power company loves showing you what they charge you for the power, then they add it transfer fees, the CEO-needs-a-new-boat fee, etc. What you have to do is take your total power bill, divide it by KwH and boomderyago, that is what you are paying per KwH. If you're still at 9.7, that is awesome.