Ask about the hot tub before the bill gets dramatic.
Planning solar around a hot tub, pool, battery, EV charger, or backyard load? ABC Solar can help review the bigger energy picture: real loads, panel capacity, batteries, peak rates, backup priorities, and safety boundaries.
Contact information
Use email or phone and include enough load information to make the first conversation useful.
ABC Solar Incorporated
24454 Hawthorne Blvd
Torrance, CA 90505
Phone: 1-310-373-3169
Email: [email protected]
Website: ABCsolar.com
California Contractor License: CCL #914346
Email is best for load details
Send photos of the main panel, subpanels, hot tub nameplate, existing solar equipment, battery equipment, pool equipment, and recent utility bills if available.
[email protected]Call for first-pass discussion
Use the call to explain the goal: lower utility bill, add solar, add battery, support hot tub timing, review pool loads, or plan backup power.
1-310-373-3169Website
ABC Solar handles solar, batteries, load planning, and homeowner solar-battery questions from a practical contractor perspective.
ABCsolar.com
The better the information, the better the first answer.
Hot tub planning is really property energy planning. ABC Solar needs to understand the hot tub, the house, the electric panel, the rate plan, and any existing solar or battery equipment.
Tell ABC Solar what you want the system to do.
The equipment discussion changes depending on whether the main goal is savings, backup, peak shaving, off-grid operation, or comfort-load management.
The conversation focuses on annual energy use, solar production, utility rates, self-consumption, hot tub schedule, and whether the cover or controls can reduce avoidable energy use.
The conversation focuses on when the hot tub heats, whether preheating is practical, whether the cover can preserve heat, and whether batteries or controls can reduce expensive grid purchases.
The conversation focuses on essential loads first. The hot tub may be included, limited, locked out, or excluded depending on real battery capacity, inverter output, and safety requirements.
The conversation includes pool pumps, heaters, automation, lighting, EV charging, outdoor kitchens, saunas, and other loads that may affect solar and battery planning.
The conversation focuses on colder weather, higher heat loss, shorter solar days, longer battery nights, backup support, and cover quality.
The conversation becomes stricter: essential loads, battery capacity, winter solar production, generator support, load management, and operating rules must be clear.
Do not ask for magic. Ask for a load plan.
A useful first conversation should not begin with “how many panels for a hot tub?” It should begin with the hot tub’s actual load, the home’s actual utility rate, and the property’s real electrical situation.
- Photograph the hot tub nameplate and breaker.
- Photograph main panel and relevant subpanels.
- Collect recent electric bills.
- Write down normal hot tub use times.
- Describe whether the goal is savings, backup, peak shaving, or resilience.
Contacting ABC Solar does not replace permits, inspections, or local requirements.
Solar-Hot-Tub.com explains concepts. Real projects require proper site review, scope definition, licensed professionals, manufacturer-approved methods, utility requirements, permits, inspections, and code-compliant installation.
Do not send a vague “just wire it” request
Hot tubs, pools, batteries, solar systems, and backup loads near water require serious design. The more complete the information, the safer and more realistic the conversation.
Do not treat the site as approval
Solar-Hot-Tub.com is educational and entertaining. It is not a permit, plan set, inspection approval, utility approval, warranty approval, or installation instruction.
Review the most relevant page first.
These pages help organize your question before you contact ABC Solar.