
Plug-in solar in Georgia
Georgia's HB 1304 was introduced in February 2026 but died in the House Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee on April 2, 2026, when the 2026 General Assembly adjourned sine die without a committee vote; no enacted statewide framework is in place.

Get notified when this bill passes
We track Georgia's plug-in solar bill. We'll alert you the moment it clears the legislature.
Recent updates
Apr
2
2026
The Georgia General Assembly adjourned sine die, and HB 1304 died in committee without receiving a vote, having been held by the Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee since February.
Feb
25
2026
The Georgia House Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee held a hearing on HB 1304, but Chairman Don Parsons declined to call a vote, effectively blocking the bill's advancement.
Feb
13
2026
State Rep. Imani Barnes introduced HB 1304, a bipartisan bill that would exempt portable plug-in solar devices up to 1,200 watts from interconnection requirements imposed on rooftop solar installations.
What you could save once plug-in solar is legal in Georgia
Estimate assumes current electricity rates once legislation passes.
Monthly savings
$14
Annual savings
$171
Payback period
~7 yrs
Based on 14.86¢/kWh avg rate · 800W system · 4.8 peak sun hours/day
Products Available in Georgia
Since plug-in solar isn't yet regulated in Georgia, your best option for getting started with solar power are these portable power stations. These systems do not connect to your home's wall outlets — instead, you plug your devices directly into the power station.
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