Known Installers
Were You Sold by Pink Energy / Power Home Solar in Florida?
· 4 min read
Pink Energy — formerly Power Home Solar — filed for bankruptcy in 2022 and shut down nationwide after thousands of complaints about systems that never produced the power that was promised. If you were one of their Florida customers, the company may be gone, but your options are not.
What we typically see on Pink Energy installs
- Undersized systems that never came close to the savings that were promised.
- Failed or non-functional battery units.
- No Permission to Operate — panels that never legally turned on.
- Loans through GoodLeap or Solar Mosaic that kept billing anyway.
What still works in your favor
- The FTC Holder Rule — your lender (often GoodLeap or Mosaic) can be held responsible for what Pink Energy promised.
- Equipment warranties that run directly to you from the manufacturer and survive the bankruptcy.
- Florida's FDUTPA, for the deceptive way many of these systems were sold.
We document your Pink Energy system, permits, and loan, and connect you with a vetted Florida attorney.
Get a Free Project ReviewGeneral information, not legal advice. Talk to a licensed Florida attorney about your situation.
Frequently asked questions
Pink Energy is bankrupt — can I still do anything?
Yes. Even though Pink Energy is gone, the FTC Holder Rule may let you hold your lender responsible, your equipment warranties survive with the manufacturer, and Florida's consumer-protection laws may still apply. Start by documenting everything.
Who financed Pink Energy systems?
Most Pink Energy / Power Home Solar systems in Florida were financed through GoodLeap or Solar Mosaic. Those lenders can be subject to Holder Rule claims for the installer's conduct.
Think this is your situation?
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