Originally Posted by
endurance
When I first moved into my house my average electrical consumption was 240-310kwh/month. Through the conversion to CFL lightbulbs throughout the house, going to extremes to have only one light on at a time in the room that I'm in, going from a desktop to laptop computer, and using a bread machine rather than the oven to bake bread, I've cut that down to 140-210kwh/month. This year I bought a Sundanzer freezer that will run on a single 75w solar panel and a deep cycle battery (runs on 12 or 24vdc).
My point being is if you wanted to supply power to your current needs without conservation and more efficient appliances, you'd spend $15-45k. If you conserve and use the best appliances you can have a much smaller system that may only cost $7-12k. While a $1000 freezer may seem expensive, the solar panels needed to run a typical freezer would cost roughly the same amount. As appliances wear out, replace them with the very most efficient and they'll pay for themselves. Buy or borrow a Kill-a-watt meter and find the appliances that are really costing you and focus on them first. I'll tell you straight away, your refrigerator is probably 20-30% of your electricity bill.
Ultimately, there's a number of inexpensive suppliers if you want to do it yourself and be off grid. If you want grid-tied, you'll need a professional installer to at least inspect and wire (but you my be able to mount the panels yourself with some installers to save money). One place to start is your local utility supplier. They may have a rebate program that will pay for up to 50% of your system if you're going grid-tied. If you're going off-grid, you have a lot more flexibility, but nobody is going to give you a tax credit or rebate... but then again, when the lines go down in the middle of the night, you'll still have power...