U.S. solar module prices held steady at $0.30 per watt in the second quarter of 2026. The market saw a wave of corporate divestitures driven by federal trade rules. A new tariff petition against South Korean imports also impacted the industry.

Data released by supply chain platform Anza on July 9, 2026, shows that median pricing for U.S.-assembled solar modules stabilized at $0.30 per watt.

The platform aggregates data across 55 modules from 19 suppliers. It reported an interquartile range of $0.280/W to $0.325/W for the segment. Median pricing dipped by $0.015/W between March and April 2026. However, it recovered by $0.005/W in May. Prices held flat through June and into early July.

The price data is driven by enforcement of the Foreign Entity of Concern (FEOC) framework and a new tariff petition targeting South Korean manufacturing.

Chinese divestitures