Private Equity in Solar 2026: Active Platforms, the Post-ITC Shakeout, and Who Survives

Utility-scale solar farm at golden hour representing the 2026 solar EPC consolidation landscape

Methodology and data sources

This tracker follows CT Acquisitions’ 5-tier source hierarchy: T1 press releases (sponsor and platform), T2 SEC filings (SOLV Energy’s Nasdaq registration; public solar comps), T3 sponsor portfolio pages, T4 trade press (PV Tech, pv magazine USA, Solar Power World, Wood Mackenzie), T5 M&A and bankruptcy-court coverage (Latitude Media, elevenflo, AltAssets).

Industry-data tier (multiples, market size, policy): Solar Power World Top Solar EPCs, Wood Mackenzie US solar market outlook, Phoenix Strategy Group renewable-energy valuation multiples, plus solar EPC market-sizing publishers. NAICS classification primarily 237130 (Power and Communication Line and Related Structures Construction) and 238210 (Electrical Contractors) for installation.

Verification window: All sponsor attributions, bankruptcy filings, and scale figures verified May 2026. The solar sector is in an unusually fast-moving distress / consolidation cycle; multiple Chapter 11 filings and credit-bid sales occurred between November 2025 and April 2026. Status is current as of late May 2026 but is changing month-to-month.

Inclusion criteria: (a) a verifiable current institutional sponsor, lender-controlled post-bankruptcy ownership, or publicly traded ultimate parent; (b) material U.S. scale (utility: 1+ GW built; C&I / residential: top-tier installer or developer ranking); (c) verified 2025-2026 transaction, bankruptcy, or active-acquirer status.

The 2026 solar PE landscape: a tale of two markets

Solar in 2026 cannot be read as a single roll-up thesis. The sector splits along two lines:

Active platforms and the 2025-2026 distress map

Utility-scale EPC tier (consolidating from strength)

SOLV Energy (formerly Swinerton Renewable Energy) — Sponsor: American Securities (acquired for $2B in 2021 from Swinerton Incorporated; merged with CS Energy in 2024). Scale: 500+ power plants representing 20+ GW of generating capacity built; ranked the top solar EPC company in the U.S. by several industry leaders. 2025 revenue projected $2.46B-$2.50B (up 33-35% YoY) with net income projected $148M-$156M (versus $10M in 2024). Filed toward a Nasdaq listing (ticker MWH) in 2025 via an UP-C structure. 2025 add-ons include Spartan Infrastructure (transmission & distribution, June 2025) and Sacramento Drilling Inc (January 2025). SOLV is the clearest “consolidating from strength” platform in U.S. solar. Sources: American Securities: completion of SOLV Energy acquisition | SOLV Energy press release.

Utility / developer tier (in distress / lender-controlled)

Pine Gate Renewables / Blue Ridge PowerIn bankruptcy. One of the largest utility-scale solar developers in the U.S. (30+ GW development pipeline, $7B+ funded capital), Pine Gate filed Chapter 11 on November 6, 2025. Its in-house EPC arm Blue Ridge Power (established 2021, 700+ employees at peak) announced 517 layoffs in September 2025 and wound down by October 2025. A compressed 43-day sale process produced a December 19, 2025 sale order with credit-bid stalking-horse bids of approximately $1.4-1.5B from existing secured lenders Brookfield Asset Management, Carlyle Group, and Fundamental / FP Solar. Source: Latitude Media: What happened to Pine Gate Renewables.

Residential / distributed tier (distressed consolidation)

PosiGenBankruptcy, acquired out of distress. A residential solar and energy-efficiency installer (New Orleans), formerly a Brookfield Asset Management portfolio company. Missed an interest payment on a credit facility in August 2025 after over-expanding earlier in the year, laid off hundreds, and filed for bankruptcy in December 2025. Acquired February 23, 2026 by Renewbrook Energy and SunStrong Management. Sources: pv magazine USA: PosiGen files for bankruptcy | Solar Power World: Renewbrook acquires PosiGen projects.

Freedom ForeverIn bankruptcy. The second-largest U.S. residential solar installer by 2025 Wood Mackenzie share (6.1% national share). Filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition in the District of Delaware on April 15, 2026, listing estimated assets of $100M-$500M against estimated liabilities of $500M-$1B. A cautionary case study in the dealer / lead-aggregator model under ITC compression. Source: Wood Mackenzie: US distributed solar 2025.

Momentum SolarGoing concern, PE-backed. One of the largest privately-owned residential solar firms (South Plainfield, NJ; founded 2009), 2,500+ employees, revenue between $500M and $1B, turnkey residential and commercial. Received an early Advantage Capital investment (2018). Among the residential players that have not (as of May 2026) filed for bankruptcy, positioning it as a potential consolidator or consolidation target in the distressed tier. Source: PV Tech: Advantage Capital invests in Momentum Solar.

Distress and consolidation velocity: 2025-2026

Note on solar M&A disclosure: Bankruptcy-court credit-bid figures (Pine Gate ~$1.4-1.5B) are disclosed in court filings and trade-press coverage. The American Securities / SOLV $2B is the 2021 acquisition value. Most distressed-asset transactions (PosiGen → Renewbrook) do not disclose price. Multiples cited reflect industry-data-tier ranges, not specific transactions.

Multiples and deal structure: what solar owners should expect

Solar valuation in 2026 is unusually dispersed because the sector spans healthy utility EPC and distressed residential installation. The right comparable depends entirely on which tier an operator sits in.

Distressed residential / distributed installer tier

Multiple range: distressed to low-single-digit EBITDA, often asset-/pipeline-value rather than EBITDA-multiple.

For installers caught in the post-ITC compression, buyers are often valuing the safe-harbored, tax-credit-eligible project pipeline and the installation workforce / dealer network, not a clean EBITDA multiple. Distressed and bankruptcy-driven transactions (PosiGen, Pine Gate) clear at lender-recovery and credit-bid values rather than going-concern EBITDA multiples. Owner-operators in this tier should set realistic expectations: a going-concern multiple is available only to operators with positive EBITDA, clean balance sheets, and durable post-ITC unit economics.

Healthy C&I / mid-market EPC tier

Multiple range: mid-single-digit to low-double-digit EV/EBITDA for profitable, recurring-O&M-weighted operators.

Commercial & industrial (C&I) solar EPCs and developers with profitable project economics, recurring operations-and-maintenance (O&M) revenue, and software-enabled project delivery trade at healthier multiples than pure-install residential. The renewable-energy / environmental-services median EV/EBITDA was approximately 12.8x in 2025 (Phoenix Strategy Group), though that blends asset owners and service providers; pure EPC contracting trades below that. O&M recurring revenue is the single largest multiple-driver in solar services, mirroring the recurring-revenue premium seen across CT’s other service-vertical trackers.

Utility-scale EPC platform tier

Multiple range: platform-tier, valued on scale, backlog, and O&M annuity.

Scaled utility-scale EPC platforms (SOLV Energy is the reference) are valued on a combination of construction backlog, O&M-managed-asset annuity revenue, and growth trajectory. SOLV’s projected jump from $10M net income (2024) to $148M-$156M (2025) on $2.46B-$2.50B revenue, plus its move toward a public listing, illustrates how the strongest platform is monetizing through public markets rather than a private sale. Operators in this tier are the buyers and the IPO candidates, not typical sale targets.

Why the O&M annuity matters most

Across all three tiers, the operations-and-maintenance (O&M) book is the recurring-revenue asset that survives the ITC-driven new-installation cyclicality. An EPC or installer with a large managed-asset O&M annuity is valued more like a recurring-services business and less like a project-contracting business. Owners considering a sale should understand how a given buyer separates the project-EPC value from the O&M-annuity value.

Acquisition criteria: what survives the shakeout

What this means for solar owners considering an exit

  1. If you are a residential / distributed installer, the honest 2026 reality is that the going-concern buyer pool has thinned and distressed-asset dynamics dominate. If your balance sheet is clean and your post-ITC unit economics work, you can still achieve a going-concern sale, but you should move while you are a going concern rather than waiting. If your model depended on the prior ITC structure, you are likely a distressed-asset or pipeline / workforce acquisition rather than an EBITDA-multiple sale.
  2. If you are a profitable C&I EPC / developer with recurring O&M and durable project economics, you are in the healthiest sellable tier of solar in 2026. The key levers are O&M-annuity size, safe-harbored pipeline, and demonstrated post-ITC profitability. Build a sell-side process with a real M&A advisor and a QofE that separates project-EPC value from O&M-annuity value.
  3. If you are a scaled utility-scale EPC platform, your monetization path in 2026 looks more like SOLV Energy’s (public-market listing or large-sponsor recapitalization) than a typical private sale, and you are more likely a consolidator of distressed talent and pipeline than a seller.

CT Acquisitions runs a buy-side advisory; we represent acquirers across the energy-services landscape. See the How to Sell a Solar Installation Business guide for the sell-side process detail, the Electrical Contractor Valuation guide for the adjacent electrical-services valuation framework, and the Owner’s Exit Checklist for pre-sale preparation.

Limitations of this analysis

Future updates and methodology notes

Refresh cadence: quarterly (faster if a major filing occurs). Next scheduled refresh August 29, 2026. Triggers we are watching:

How to flag corrections: Every named platform, sponsor, and filing on this page is sourced to a primary press release, SEC filing, bankruptcy-court coverage, or industry-research publisher. If you believe an attribution, figure, or status is wrong, email hello@ctacquisitions.com with the primary source that contradicts what we have published. We re-verify and patch within 5 business days.

Sources and references

Every named platform, sponsor, transaction, and bankruptcy filing on this page is sourced to a primary press release, SEC filing, bankruptcy-court coverage, or industry-research publisher.

Last verified: May 29, 2026. Next refresh: quarterly (target 2026-08-29).

Disclaimer: This tracker is general market intelligence, not investment, legal, or tax advice. The solar sector is in an active distress / policy-driven transition; multiples and outcomes vary sharply by tier, balance sheet, and policy exposure. CT Acquisitions is a buy-side advisor.


Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm in Sheridan, Wyoming. He is a published researcher in lower middle market M&A on Zenodo, Academia.edu, and ORCID, and an active contributor on LinkedIn on M&A, private equity, and business sales. CT Acquisitions works directly with 100+ buyers including PE platforms, family offices, search funders, and strategic consolidators. Buyers pay our fee, never sellers. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close.