Research by Ivan Tchesnokov
Yes — Building + Electrical Permits Required
Solar requires building + electrical permits via BS&A or mail; permit pickup in person. Michigan LARA electrical contractor registration + Dearborn registration. DTE Energy for net metering interconnection (retail rate).
Economic Development Department, 16901 Michigan Ave. Ste. 7, Dearborn MI 48126. 311 or DBNinspections@dearborn.gov. Building + electrical permits via BS&A or mail; pickup in person. Michigan LARA master electrician registration + Dearborn registration. DTE Energy (dteenergy.com, 1-800-477-4747) for net metering interconnection. Michigan net metering at retail rate (up to 150% of annual consumption). DTE energy efficiency rebates may apply.

Dearborn MI solar permit rules — the basics

Solar photovoltaic installations in Dearborn require a building permit (structural roof mounting) and an electrical permit (PV system wiring per Michigan Electrical Code, NEC Article 690, and rapid shutdown per NEC §690.12). Apply via the BS&A portal at dearborn.gov/resources/forms-documents/permit-applications or by mail to 16901 Michigan Ave., Ste. 7. Building permits must be picked up in person at the Dearborn Administrative Center. Michigan LARA-licensed electrical contractors (master electrician backed) must also be registered with the City of Dearborn. Contact 311 or DBNinspections@dearborn.gov for application requirements.

DTE Energy (dteenergy.com, 1-800-477-4747) administers solar interconnection for Dearborn customers. Michigan's net energy metering law requires DTE to offer residential solar customers credits at the retail electricity rate for solar exports, for systems up to 150% of annual electricity consumption. This is more favorable than California's NEM 3.0 avoided-cost model. Submit the DTE interconnection application simultaneously with the city permit applications. DTE Energy also offers energy efficiency rebates that may complement solar installations — check dteenergy.com for current programs.

Dearborn's older housing stock presents specific solar assessment considerations. Roofs from the 1920s–1950s may have aged sheathing and rafters that need structural verification before solar loading is added. Electrical panels in older Dearborn homes are frequently under-capacity (60A or 100A services are common) and may need upgrading to 200A before solar can be added. These preparatory costs — roof structural assessment, panel upgrade — are common in Dearborn and should be budgeted as part of any solar project. Michigan averages approximately 4.0–4.5 peak sun hours per day — lower than the Sun Belt cities in this series, but still sufficient for economically viable residential solar given Michigan's retail electricity rates.

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Three Dearborn solar installation scenarios

Scenario A
6 kW solar on a 1940s Dearborn bungalow — roof assessment + panel upgrade first
Step 1: Roof structural assessment and electrical panel audit. 1940s roof sheathing may need reinforcement. 60A or 100A panel (common in 1940s homes) must be upgraded to 200A before solar. Step 2: Building + electrical permits via BS&A or mail; pickup in person. Michigan LARA electrician + Dearborn registration. DTE Energy net metering interconnection application. Michigan retail rate net metering. Project cost: $22,000–$38,000 before incentives (including roof prep and panel upgrade).
Roof structural assessment + panel upgrade first; building + electrical permits via BS&A, pickup in person; Michigan LARA electrician + Dearborn registration; DTE Energy net metering; project cost $22,000–$38,000 before incentives
Scenario B
Solar with battery storage in Dearborn — DTE interconnection check
Battery storage alters DTE Energy interconnection requirements. Contact DTE Energy (1-800-477-4747) about battery storage interconnection before designing. Building + electrical permits via BS&A pickup in person. Michigan LARA electrician + Dearborn registration. DTE net metering application with battery storage in the system design. Federal battery tax credit (verify 2026 eligibility). Michigan retail rate net metering. Project cost: $28,000–$48,000 before incentives.
Contact DTE Energy about battery storage interconnection first; building + electrical permits via BS&A, pickup in person; Michigan LARA electrician + Dearborn registration; DTE net metering; federal battery credit (verify 2026); project cost $28,000–$48,000 before incentives
Scenario C
Solar with panel upgrade — two permits, DTE coordination
Panel upgrade: separate electrical permit from solar. Both via BS&A or mail; pickup in person. Michigan LARA master electrician + Dearborn registration. DTE Energy (1-800-477-4747) for service drop upgrade coordination if going from 100A to 200A. DTE residential service upgrade: 2–4 week scheduling. Solar building + electrical permit after panel upgrade complete. DTE net metering interconnection application. Project cost: $24,000–$40,000 for solar + panel upgrade before incentives.
Separate electrical permit for panel upgrade; building + electrical permit for solar; both pickup in person; Michigan LARA electrician + Dearborn registration; DTE service upgrade coordination; DTE net metering; project cost $24,000–$40,000 before incentives

Every project is different.

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Solar variableHow it affects your Dearborn MI project
Building + electrical permitsBS&A or mail. Pickup in person at 16901 Michigan Ave. Michigan LARA + Dearborn registration.
DTE Energy net metering (retail rate)Michigan law: retail rate credits up to 150% of annual consumption. More favorable than CA NEM 3.0.
Older housing (panel upgrade likely)Many Dearborn homes have 60–100A panels. 200A upgrade common prerequisite for solar.
Roof structural assessment1920s–1950s roofs: verify sheathing and rafter capacity before adding solar loading.
~4.0–4.5 peak sun hours/day (Michigan)Lower than Sun Belt but viable for residential solar at Michigan retail electricity rates.
Michigan's retail-rate net metering is more favorable than California's NEM 3.0, but Dearborn's older housing stock means roof structural assessment and panel upgrades are common prerequisites for solar.
BS&A permit (pickup in person). Michigan LARA licensing. DTE Energy net metering. Panel upgrade likely. Roof assessment.
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Dearborn MI home improvement: practical guidance for homeowners and contractors

Dearborn's permit process has one distinctive step that surprises many applicants: building permits must be picked up in person at the Dearborn Administrative Center (16901 Michigan Ave.) by the homeowner, contractor, or a representative with a notarized letter of authorization. You cannot simply download or email your permit — even after online approval. Build this in-person pickup step into your project timeline. Trade permits (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) have more flexible mail-in options. For permit questions, call 311 or email DBNinspections@dearborn.gov.

Michigan's dual contractor licensing system — LARA state license plus Dearborn city registration — means two separate credential verification steps. Check the contractor's Michigan LARA license at michigan.gov/lara, and confirm their City of Dearborn registration status by calling the City Clerk's Office at (313) 943-2015. Both must be current. Michigan Residential Builders (RB) and Residential Maintenance & Alteration Contractors (RMA) have different scopes — an RMA license covers repairs and alterations to existing residential structures, while an RB license is needed for new construction and additions. Verify that the contractor's specific license classification covers your project type.

DTE Energy provides both electricity and natural gas to Dearborn — a single utility company serving both energy needs. For electrical service upgrades or gas service modifications, contact DTE Energy at dteenergy.com or 1-800-477-4747. DTE Energy's residential service scheduling typically runs 2–4 weeks for service entrance work; coordinate DTE and the city permit in parallel. DTE Energy also offers rebates for energy efficiency improvements including insulation, high-efficiency HVAC, and energy-efficient appliances — check dteenergy.com for current rebate programs before finalizing any HVAC or insulation project in Dearborn.

Dearborn's housing stock — primarily 1920s through 1950s construction with a smaller share from the 1960s–1970s — means virtually every residential property in the city predates 1978. EPA RRP lead paint procedures are the standard, not the exception, for Dearborn renovation work. Asbestos-containing materials (floor tiles, pipe insulation, ceiling textures, drywall joint compound) are also common in pre-1980 Dearborn homes. Contractors performing renovation work must hold EPA RRP certification for lead paint work. Asbestos testing before disturbing suspect materials is a best practice in Dearborn's older housing stock. These requirements apply regardless of whether the work requires a permit.

Dearborn MI permit context: Michigan LARA licensing, DTE Energy, and Motor City heritage

Dearborn is Wayne County's second-largest city, home to approximately 110,000 residents and deeply tied to Ford Motor Company — Henry Ford was born in Dearborn, and Ford's world headquarters and the iconic Ford River Rouge Complex are both located here. The city has the largest Arab American community per capita in the United States, and its dense residential neighborhoods were developed primarily in the 1920s through 1950s around the automotive industry's growth. This means the vast majority of Dearborn's housing stock predates 1978, making EPA RRP lead paint and potentially asbestos-containing materials relevant to virtually every renovation project in the city. Dearborn's winters are genuine Michigan winters — deep frost, ice, snow — and the city's building code reflects this fully.

Dearborn's permits are handled by the Economic Development Department at 16901 Michigan Ave., Suite 7, with a plan review process that typically takes 5–10 business days. Building permits must be picked up in person at the Dearborn Administrative Center by the homeowner, contractor, or a designated representative with a notarized letter of authorization. BS&A online portal handles permit applications and inspection scheduling for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC permits. Contact 311 (city services) or email DBNinspections@dearborn.gov for permit questions. The Electrical Division is at 313-943-2414 and the general response center at 313-943-2150.

Michigan contractor licensing is administered by LARA (Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs) Bureau of Construction Codes. Michigan requires: Residential Builders (RB) and Residential Maintenance & Alteration Contractors (RMA) for general residential work; Michigan master electrician license plus contractor registration for electrical work; Michigan plumbing license; Michigan mechanical license. Verify any contractor's active Michigan LARA license at michigan.gov/lara. Contractors must ALSO register with the City of Dearborn — contact the City Clerk's Office at (313) 943-2015 for registration information. Both the state LARA license and the Dearborn registration must be current before permits can be issued.

DTE Energy provides both electricity (Detroit Edison) and natural gas (MichCon/DTE Gas) to Dearborn — a single utility company for both services, contact at dteenergy.com or 1-800-477-4747. For service entrance changes, panel upgrades, or gas service modifications, coordinate with DTE Energy. Michigan's net energy metering law allows residential solar customers to earn retail-rate credits for solar exports to the grid for systems sized up to 150% of annual consumption. Wayne County's frost depth is approximately 42 inches — one of the deepest in this series — requiring footings to extend well below grade for all structural projects. Michigan's residential code requires ice and water shield at roof eaves due to genuine ice dam conditions in Wayne County winters.

Common questions about Dearborn MI solar panels permits

How does solar net metering work in Dearborn MI?

DTE Energy (Detroit Edison) administers net metering for Dearborn residential solar customers under Michigan's net energy metering law. Michigan requires DTE to credit residential solar exports at the retail electricity rate for systems sized up to 150% of the customer's annual electricity consumption. This is more favorable than California's NEM 3.0 Solar Billing Plan, which credits exports at only the avoided cost rate (~$0.05–$0.09/kWh). Contact DTE Energy at dteenergy.com or 1-800-477-4747 for current interconnection procedures and submit the interconnection application simultaneously with the city permit applications.

Do I need a building permit for solar panels in Dearborn MI?

Yes. Solar panel installations require both a building permit (for structural roof mounting) and an electrical permit (for the PV system wiring per Michigan Electrical Code NEC Article 690). Apply via the BS&A portal at dearborn.gov/resources/forms-documents/permit-applications or by mail. After approval, building permits must be picked up in person at the Dearborn Administrative Center (16901 Michigan Ave., Ste. 7). Michigan LARA-licensed electrical contractor registration and City of Dearborn registration are required.

Dearborn MI home improvement: the Motor City legacy and what it means for permits

Dearborn's identity is inseparable from the Ford Motor Company — Henry Ford's birthplace, Ford World Headquarters, and the River Rouge Complex all anchor this community. The auto industry drove Dearborn's residential development in the 1920s through 1950s, creating the dense, working-class neighborhoods of bungalows, Cape Cods, and Colonial Revival homes that still define the city's housing stock. This heritage means two things for home improvement projects: first, virtually every Dearborn home predates 1978, making EPA RRP and asbestos awareness standard rather than exceptional; second, Dearborn's contractor market is deep and experienced, with many Michigan LARA-licensed contractors who understand the specific challenges of the city's older housing stock.

The City of Dearborn has been modernizing its permit process through the BS&A online portal at dearborn.gov/resources/forms-documents/permit-applications, which handles application submission, fee payment, and inspection scheduling for most permit types. However, one distinctively in-person step remains: building permits must be picked up in person at the Dearborn Administrative Center (16901 Michigan Ave., Suite 7) after approval. Contractors and homeowners should factor this into project timelines — plan review typically takes 5–10 business days, followed by the in-person pickup. For trade permits (electrical, plumbing, HVAC), mail-in applications to the same address are accepted, making these more flexible than building permits. Note: The city periodically upgrades its software systems; contact 311 or DBNinspections@dearborn.gov to confirm current portal availability and requirements.

Michigan's contractor licensing through LARA (Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs, Bureau of Construction Codes) creates specific license types that differ from California's CSLB and New Mexico's CID systems. Key Michigan licenses for residential work: Michigan Residential Builder (RB) — required for new construction and additions to residential buildings; Michigan Residential Maintenance & Alteration Contractor (RMA) — for repairs, renovations, and alterations to existing residential structures. Both RB and RMA are issued by LARA's BCC (Bureau of Construction Codes). Trade licenses — electrical master, journeyman, plumbing, and mechanical — are issued separately and their holders must be the qualifying agent behind a registered contracting business. Verify the license type and active status of any Dearborn contractor at michigan.gov/lara before signing a contract. The contractor must also be registered with the City of Dearborn — confirm via City Clerk at (313) 943-2015.

Dearborn's Arab American community — the largest per capita of any US city — has been a central part of the city's identity for decades, and is increasingly influential in the city's home improvement and construction market. Mayor Abdullah Hammoud, the first Arab American mayor of Dearborn, has focused city government on housing quality, flood preparedness, and neighborhood investment. Dearborn has experienced recurring flooding issues from combined sewer overflows during heavy rain events — a factor relevant to basement renovation, sump pump installation, and backwater valve requirements. The city's flood preparedness resources at dearborn.gov/residents/flood-preparedness can help homeowners understand basement waterproofing permit requirements and flood mitigation options that may also be relevant for home improvement projects.

City of Dearborn — Economic Development Department, Permits Division 16901 Michigan Ave., Suite 7, Dearborn, MI 48126
Call 311 (city services) · Email: DBNinspections@dearborn.gov
Electrical Division: 313-943-2414 · Response Center: 313-943-2150
Contractor registration: City Clerk (313) 943-2015
BS&A permit portal: dearborn.gov/permits
Michigan LARA license lookup: michigan.gov/lara

DTE Energy (electric & gas): dteenergy.com · 1-800-477-4747

General guidance based on City of Dearborn Economic Development/Permits and Michigan Building Code sources as of April 2026. For a personalized report, use our permit research tool.