If you're building or permitting an ADU in South Lake Tahoe, California's Title 24 Building Energy Efficiency Standards almost certainly require a solar PV system. South Lake Tahoe sits in climate zone 12, which determines exactly how many kilowatts your project needs to install for code compliance.
Yes. Under the 2022 California Energy Code, all newly constructed low-rise residential buildings — including most accessory dwelling units in South Lake Tahoe, El Dorado County — must include a Title 24 compliant solar photovoltaic system. This applies whether you're building a detached backyard cottage, a junior ADU, or a standalone guest house.
The South Lake Tahoe building department reviews ADU plans for Title 24 compliance during permit submittal. Plans that omit a properly sized solar system are rejected unless a documented exemption applies (more on that below).
Title 24 uses a simple formula to calculate your minimum PV size: it multiplies your ADU's conditioned floor area by a climate-zone-specific kW factor. Climate zone 12 (South Lake Tahoe) has its own factor based on local solar resource and heating/cooling loads.
For most ADUs in South Lake Tahoe, this works out to a system between 1.6 kW and 4.0 kW — typically 4 to 10 modern solar panels. Larger ADUs (over 1,000 sq ft) often land closer to the upper end of that range.
A handful of ADU configurations may qualify for a Title 24 PV exemption in South Lake Tahoe. The most common exemptions are based on roof area, shading, or attached construction sharing the main home's existing solar system.
Exemptions are not automatic — your designer or installer must document them on the CF1R compliance form submitted with the permit. Garage conversions and ADUs attached to existing dwellings are the most common exemption candidates.
A Title 24 compliant ADU solar system in South Lake Tahoe typically costs $4,000 to $9,000 turnkey when paid in cash. With HDM financing — which passes through the commercial Investment Tax Credit — the effective net cost can be reduced by roughly 40%.
That pricing includes panels, inverter, racking, permits, engineering, PG&E interconnection paperwork, and installation by a licensed C-46 partner installer.
Once your Title 24 ADU solar system is installed, PG&E performs the final interconnection and Permission to Operate (PTO) under NEM 3.0 net billing rules. Interconnection in South Lake Tahoe typically takes 2–6 weeks after installation, depending on current PG&E backlogs.
For new detached ADU construction in South Lake Tahoe, yes — Title 24 PV is mandatory unless a specific code exemption applies. Garage conversions and attached ADUs may qualify for exemptions documented on the CF1R form.
An 800 sq ft ADU in South Lake Tahoe (climate zone 12) typically requires a 2.4–3.2 kW PV system — about 6 to 8 modern panels. Final size is calculated on the CF1R compliance form.
Sometimes. Attached ADUs can sometimes share the main home's qualifying PV system if total system size meets combined requirements. This is the most common Title 24 exemption pathway in South Lake Tahoe.