Oregon Energy Rebates — National Power Rebates
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Oregon Energy Rebates

Every federal, state, and utility rebate program available to Oregon homeowners — organized so you can stack the maximum.

Pacific & Alaska/Hawaii

Oregon energy rebate landscape

Oregon is a Tier A state — robust state-level energy programs layered on top of federal IRA rebates. Homeowners here can typically access the deepest rebate stack in the country.

Federal foundation (available in Oregon like every state)

  • IRA 25C tax credit — up to $3,200/year on heat pumps, HVAC, envelope, audit
  • IRA 25D tax credit — 30% uncapped on solar, geothermal, batteries through 2032
  • DOE HOMES rebate — performance-based, up to $8,000/home, administered by Energy Trust of Oregon
  • DOE HEAR rebate — income-capped (≤150% AMI), up to $14,000/home, administered by Energy Trust of Oregon

Oregon state energy office / lead administrator

Energy Trust of Oregon is the entity administering the federal HOMES and HEAR programs in Oregon. Visit their website for current program rollout status, contractor lists, and application portals.

State program highlights

Energy Trust of Oregon coordinates incentives across PGE, Pacific Power, NW Natural, and Cascade Natural Gas. Heat pump rebates are tiered by climate region (cold-climate spec required in eastern Oregon). Solar Within Reach offers low-income solar with no out-of-pocket cost. The Community Renewable Energy Grant Program funds local solar/storage projects.

Major utilities serving Oregon

  • PGE (Portland General)
  • Pacific Power
  • NW Natural
  • Cascade Natural Gas

Each utility runs its own efficiency rebate programs. Common rebates: smart thermostat ($25-$100), heat pump ($300-$3,000), insulation ($0.10-$0.50/sqft), HPWH ($300-$700). Rebate amounts vary by utility and current funding levels — always confirm before installing.

Climate-specific upgrade priorities for Oregon

Federal stack (25C, 25D, HOMES, HEAR) plus utility rebates form the rebate foundation. Climate-specific priorities depend on whether your home's primary load is heating, cooling, or balanced.

How to put together your Oregon rebate stack

  1. Identify your utility from the list above and visit their efficiency-program page for current rebate offerings.
  2. Check Energy Trust of Oregon's site for HOMES and HEAR rollout status (whether the program is live in your county and what contractors are approved).
  3. Confirm equipment eligibility — federal 25C requires CEE Tier 2 or ENERGY STAR Most Efficient depending on category; utility programs often require ENERGY STAR.
  4. Get pre-approval if your utility or HOMES requires it (many do — skipping pre-approval voids the rebate).
  5. Install via a licensed contractor; collect AHRI certificate, manufacturer's certification statement, and itemized invoice.
  6. Submit utility rebate within the post-install window (typically 30-90 days). File federal credits via IRS Form 5695 with your tax return for the year equipment was placed in service.
Need a Oregon-specific rebate map? Send us your ZIP, utility, and the upgrade you're considering — we'll send a one-page personalized rebate stack within one business day. Free.

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