Titan Solar Power Has Closed: What Utah Homeowners Need to Do Immediately
Titan Solar Power has ceased operations, joining a growing list of residential solar companies that have shut down or filed for bankruptcy in 2024 and 2025. For Utah homeowners with active Titan Solar leases, PPAs, or incomplete installations, this creates an urgent situation that requires prompt action.
This article explains what Titan's closure means for your contract, what is likely happening to your agreement right now, and what legal options may be available.
What Happened to Titan Solar Power?
Titan Solar Power was one of the larger regional solar installers operating in the Western United States. The company's closure followed a broader pattern of contraction in the residential solar industry driven by rising interest rates, the expiration of certain federal incentives, and the collapse of the third-party solar financing model that many installers relied on.
Titan is listed among documented solar company closures and bankruptcies, though the specific structure of its wind-down — whether through formal bankruptcy proceedings or voluntary dissolution — affects what happens to your contract in specific ways. Regardless of the mechanism, the practical reality for Titan customers is the same: there is no functioning company to call, maintain your system, or honor warranty claims.
What Happens to Your Titan Solar Contract
When a solar company closes, its leases and PPAs are financial assets — they represent streams of future monthly payments. These assets are typically sold to another entity through the wind-down or bankruptcy process. The acquiring entity then becomes your new servicer and is generally bound by the terms of your original agreement.
However, several complications arise:
- You may not have been notified: Many homeowners learn their contract was transferred only when they receive a bill from an unfamiliar company, or when they try to contact Titan and get no response.
- The new servicer may not know your history: Complaint records, unresolved warranty claims, and service commitments made by Titan may not have transferred cleanly to the new entity.
- The new servicer is different from Titan: Any specific promises Titan made — verbally or in writing beyond the standard contract — may be contested by the new servicer.
- Some contracts may still be unresolved: Depending on the structure of Titan's wind-down, some agreements may remain in legal limbo without a clear new owner.
Incomplete Installations: A Special Concern
One of the most urgent situations involves homeowners whose Titan Solar installation was started but not completed. Panels may be on the roof but the system may not have received permission to operate (PTO) from the utility. In some cases, equipment was delivered but never installed.
These homeowners face a particularly strong argument for contract cancellation: if you never received a functioning system, you received no benefit from the agreement. This situation — receiving no consideration for a financial obligation — is a fundamental basis for contract rescission under general contract principles, in addition to any consumer protection claims.
Grounds for Legal Cancellation of a Titan Solar Contract
- Loss of warranty and maintenance coverage: With Titan no longer operational, your system has no functional warranty. If maintenance obligations were a material term of your agreement, their absence may constitute breach.
- Incomplete installation: As described above, a system that was never completed or activated creates strong rescission grounds.
- Original misrepresentation claims: Inflated savings projections, undisclosed escalators, or verbal promises made by Titan at signing remain actionable against Titan's bankruptcy estate or its successors.
- Improper or undisclosed contract transfer: If your contract was transferred to a new servicer and you were not properly notified, or if the transfer did not comply with your original agreement's terms, that may create additional exit grounds.
The UCC Lien Problem After Titan's Closure
Titan filed UCC-1 financing statements against property titles for all of its leased systems. These liens survived the company's closure. The lien may now be held by Titan's bankruptcy estate, a secured lender, or a new servicer who acquired the contract portfolio. Whatever entity holds it, the lien will appear in your title search and must be formally released before you can sell or refinance your home.
Clearing a UCC lien from a closed company's estate is more complex than a standard lien release — which is why legal representation is particularly important for Titan Solar cases.
Should You Stop Making Titan Payments?
Do not stop making payments without legal guidance, even if Titan itself is closed. Your payment obligation may have been transferred to a new entity, and missed payments can trigger default, damage your credit, and complicate your legal position. The first step is a legal review to determine who holds your contract and what your specific situation looks like.
What to Do Right Now
- Gather all original contract documents — the signed agreement, any addenda, and communications from Titan about your installation.
- Document the current state of your system — is it operational? Was it fully installed? What's the permission-to-operate status?
- Do not sign anything from a new servicer without legal review — including acknowledgment letters or new service agreements.
- Contact Solar Exit Utah for a free consultation — Titan cases often have strong exit grounds, and acting before your contract is transferred may expand your options.
Next Steps
Call (385) 490-8606 or submit your information online. Our team specializes in exactly these situations — closed companies, transferred contracts, and incomplete installations. Free consultation, no obligation. Mon–Sat, 8AM–7PM MT.
