Heavy manufacturing base drives demand response value. Duke Energy Indiana efficiency programs growing. Net metering reforms in 2025 shifted commercial solar economics.
Indiana businesses: Section 179D deduction expires June 30, 2026 — up to $5.94/sqft in tax deductions on the table.
Based on Indiana market characteristics: rate structure, climate, regulatory environment, and utility program availability.
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Answer 4 questions about your building and see all federal and Indiana state programs that apply — Section 179D eligibility, IRA ITC, utility rebates, and C-PACE financing options.
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The average commercial electricity rate in Indiana is approximately 9.2¢ per kWh as of 2025–2026, which is 34.8% below national avg. Actual rates vary by utility, rate class, demand charges, and consumption level. Indiana has a regulated utility market — rates are set by the state public utilities commission.
Indiana businesses can access a combination of federal and state programs: (1) Federal ITC 48E — 30% tax credit for commercial solar and battery storage, applicable to all Indiana businesses; (2) 179D commercial buildings deduction — up to $5.94/sqft for qualifying energy efficiency improvements; (3) (4) Utility rebate programs from Duke Energy Indiana and other providers. Visit our State Incentives Guide for the full Indiana program list.
Based on Indiana's electricity rate (9.2¢/kWh), climate characteristics, and available incentives, the highest-ROI commercial energy projects are: LED Lighting, HVAC Optimization, Demand Response. While base rates are below the national average, utility rebates and federal tax credits (ITC, 179D, MACRS) still drive compelling project economics.
Yes — Indiana has moderate solar potential and commercial solar economics are strong in 2026. The federal ITC 48E provides a 30% tax credit, MACRS allows accelerated 5-year depreciation (plus 40% bonus depreciation), and the 179D deduction may stack if the system is part of a broader energy efficiency package. Typical commercial solar payback in Indiana ranges from 4–9 years depending on project size, financing, and utility rate class.
In Indiana's regulated utility market, bill reduction strategies include: (1) Demand charge management — reducing peak demand with automation, storage, or process scheduling; (2) Time-of-use optimization — shifting load to off-peak hours; (3) Participation in demand response programs through Duke Energy Indiana; (4) Capital projects — solar, LED, HVAC, and building automation that reduce consumption; (5) Rate schedule review — many commercial accounts qualify for lower rate classes with a tariff analysis.
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