Every week, Florida homeowners pull permits for solar installations, battery storage, and system expansions. Most solar contractors rely on door knocking or bought leads. PermitMap sends you every solar permit in your county the Monday after it clears.
See which neighborhoods are adopting solar, track competitor installs, and find battery storage opportunities before anyone else. No shared leads. Just public permit data, delivered first.
14-day free trial
Real permit data from the past week. Updated every Monday.
Identify neighborhoods with solar adoption to target neighbors who see the social proof.
Track battery storage permits to find homeowners adding to existing solar systems.
See commercial solar permits for larger installation opportunities.
Start with a 14-day free trial. Credit card required; billing starts after your trial.
An Orlando-area solar installer starts the week in PermitMap's Orange County feed. Nine residential solar permits posted, two paired with 200-amp panel upgrades that signal larger systems. The installer flags the two high-output jobs, notes a cluster of permits in a single subdivision where one install often sparks neighbor interest, and exports the list.
Tuesday, the team calls the panel-upgrade homeowners first — they've committed and financed, but the panels aren't up, so there's room to win the job or add battery storage. The subdivision cluster becomes a door-knocking route built around the visible installs. Because each permit means the decision is already made, the installer spends the week talking to buyers, not quote-form tire-kickers. By the time a competitor hears about these projects through a referral, this installer has signed two and quoted the rest. Over a month, that weekly rhythm builds a steady backlog of installs without a dollar of ad spend, and the team layers battery-storage and EV-charger upsells onto the projects the permit data surfaces.
We include all residential and commercial solar permits: rooftop installations, ground mount systems, battery storage, solar pool heaters, and commercial arrays. Each permit includes the address, system size when available, and estimated value.
Most solar contractors use the data to identify neighborhoods with solar adoption (social proof for neighbors), track competitor activity, and find homeowners who may want to expand existing systems. New construction permits also help you reach homeowners before they finalize solar plans.
Yes. Battery storage permits appear in your report whether they are part of a new solar install or a standalone addition to an existing system. This helps you identify retrofit opportunities.
Join Florida solar contractors who get permit data delivered every Monday.
Start Free Trial14-day free trial