Solar-Panel Fraud Arbitration Leads

Solar fraud leads, screened before they ever reach your intake team.

Solar fraud leads bought from a generic list are a name and a zip code. Ours are homeowners with a signed installation or financing contract, a documented misrepresentation — inflated savings claims, forged signatures, undisclosed liens — and a confirmed arbitration clause in the contract they signed. Your firm reviews a screened file, not a cold call.

I. The Problem

Volume without verification is a liability, not a pipeline.

Residential solar sold nearly ten million systems on borrowed money and door-to-door pressure — and generated a matching wave of deceptive-sale, undisclosed-lien, and forged-signature complaints. Most solar fraud lead vendors sell the complaint, not the contract behind it.

“A lead without the signed contract is a phone number. A lead with the contract is a case.”

II. The Marketplace Model

Capital funds outreach to the homeowners already holding the paperwork.

ArbitrationIntel is a three-side marketplace. Accredited capital funds campaigns aimed at homeowners with a signed solar installation or financing contract and a documented misrepresentation — not homeowners who merely have solar panels. Every response is checked against the contract and the underlying arbitration clause before your firm ever sees a name.

Your firm carries no ad-spend risk on a vertical that has become one of the most expensive paid-search categories in consumer law.

III. Claim Profile & Screening Criteria

What has to be true before a claimant reaches your firm.

Signed contract

A signed installation, power-purchase, or financing agreement is on file, not just a homeowner's account of the sale.

Documented misrepresentation

Evidence of a material misrepresentation — savings projections, incentive eligibility, financing terms, or system performance — beyond a homeowner's dissatisfaction alone.

Confirmed arbitration clause

The installation or financing contract is reviewed to confirm it compels arbitration, and on what terms — solar loan and PPA agreements frequently do.

Financial exposure

A quantifiable harm on file — an active lien, a loan balance exceeding disclosed terms, or a non-performing system still under contract.

Capacity fit

Claimants are matched to firms with open solar-fraud intake capacity in the relevant state.

IV. How A Claimant Reaches Your Firm

Four stages between outreach and a warm handoff.

I

Funded Outreach

Campaigns target homeowners in states with heavy residential-solar penetration and known installer or lender complaint patterns.

II

Contract & Complaint Verification

The signed contract and the specific misrepresentation are collected and checked against the claim profile.

III

Arbitration-Clause Confirmation

The contract's dispute-resolution terms are reviewed to confirm arbitration governs, and under which rules.

IV

Capacity Match & Handoff

Qualified claimants are matched to a firm on the panel with open solar-fraud capacity and delivered as a screened case file.

V. The Flywheel — Proof, Not A Promise

Three sides. One loop. Each screened claimant funds the next campaign.

Capital

Accredited funders back solar-fraud outreach, targeting a measured-risk return.

Deployment is per-vertical, not pooled-blind. Returns are targeted, not guaranteed, and available to accredited investors only.

Your Firm

Screened solar-fraud claimant flow, without bidding on the country's priciest search terms.

Contract review and arbitration-clause confirmation happen upstream. You review the case, not the ad account.

Claimants

Homeowners deceived on installation or financing terms are matched to counsel who takes the case.

Every file is screened for contract and misrepresentation before a firm ever sees it.

This is the same engine behind the case results in the Bennett Legal case study — the better a campaign performs for one vertical, the better it performs across the panel.

VI. Questions Firms Ask

The questions you're already asking.

What makes a solar fraud lead qualified?

A signed installation or financing contract, a documented misrepresentation on record, and a confirmed arbitration clause in the contract — claimants who don't clear all three are never delivered.

Why do solar disputes so often end up in arbitration?

Most residential solar installation, power-purchase, and third-party financing agreements include a mandatory arbitration clause. We confirm that clause exists and review its terms before a claimant is matched to your firm.

How is this different from a solar-fraud lead list?

A list is unverified contact information. A claimant on this panel has a signed contract, a documented complaint, and a confirmed arbitration path — your intake team reviews a case file, not a cold contact.

What does it cost my firm to add solar-fraud capacity?

Panel terms are set case type by case type and confirmed before you sign on. There is no ad-spend line item — your firm pays only for claimants who've already cleared screening.

Which states have the most active solar-fraud claim volume?

Volume tracks residential-solar penetration and door-to-door sales activity, concentrated in states with high installation rates. Current state-by-state coverage is confirmed on a call.

Elsewhere On The Panel

Related reading.

VII. Join The Panel

See the current solar-fraud pipeline before you commit a marketing dollar.

Book a 15-minute call to review current solar-fraud claimant coverage in your states, or apply to join the panel by email.

Not ready to talk? Request the Mass Arbitration Lead Economics report — the data behind claimant-flow ROI, before you get on a call.