£5,000 to £7,000. That's the realistic range for a 4kW system on a typical semi-detached house, fitted and commissioned by an MCS-certified installer.
But that headline figure hides a lot of variation. A smaller 3kW system for a terraced house might come in at £4,500, while a larger 5kW or 6kW setup for a detached property with high electricity use could push past £9,000. The panels themselves have actually come down in price over the past two years, but labour and scaffolding costs have crept up, so the total installed price has stayed fairly stable since mid-2024. Our full breakdown of solar panel costs covers the component-by-component pricing if you want the granular detail.
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One thing that catches people out: the 0% VAT on domestic solar installations is still in place until at least 31 March 2027. That saves you roughly £1,000 to £1,400 on a standard system. If your installer quotes you a price with 20% VAT included, challenge it. Domestic solar, battery storage and related electrical work are all zero-rated under current HMRC rules.
Here's a rough guide to what you'll pay by system size:
System size
Typical home
Installed cost (0% VAT)
Annual panels needed
3kW (8 panels)
Small terrace
£4,000–£5,500
2,550 kWh
4kW (10 panels)
Semi-detached
£5,000–£7,000
3,400 kWh
5kW (13 panels)
Larger semi / detached
£6,500–£8,500
4,250 kWh
6kW (16 panels)
Large detached
£7,500–£9,500
5,100 kWh
And batteries? That's a separate decision entirely. Adding a 5kWh battery adds £2,500 to £4,500 to the install cost. Whether that makes financial sense depends heavily on your usage pattern. We've written a full guide to solar battery storage that runs the numbers honestly.
How Much Can You Save on Energy Bills With Solar?
This is where things get genuinely interesting, and also where most websites fudge the numbers.
The honest answer: it depends on three things. How much electricity you use during daylight hours, where in the UK you live, and whether you add a battery. A south-facing 4kW system in Southampton will generate about 30% more electricity per year than the same system in Aberdeen. That's just physics and geography.
So let's talk real numbers.
A 4kW system generates roughly 3,400 kWh per year in southern England, dropping to about 2,800 kWh in Scotland. At the current Ofgem price cap rate of around 24.5p per kWh, every unit you use directly from your panels instead of buying from the grid saves you 24.5p. The trick is that solar generates most of its electricity between 10am and 3pm. If you're out at work during those hours and not running appliances on timers, you'll only self-consume about 35% to 45% of what your panels produce.
That means realistic annual savings for a 4kW system without a battery sit between £500 and £700 for most households.
Add a battery and self-consumption jumps to 70% to 85%. Your savings climb to £700 to £900 a year. But you've also spent an extra £3,000 or so on the battery, which pushes your payback period out by several years. It's not a clear-cut win.
Right, what about selling your surplus? The Smart Export Guarantee requires all licensed electricity suppliers with more than 150,000 customers to offer you a tariff for exported electricity. Rates vary wildly. Octopus Energy currently offers around 15p per kWh on their Flux tariff if you pair solar with a battery and shift exports to peak hours. British Gas sits at about 12p. Some smaller suppliers offer as little as 3p. Shopping around matters here more than most people realise.
Here's the honest bit: if you work from home or have an EV you charge during the day, solar panels are almost a no-brainer at current electricity prices. If you're out 9 to 5 with no battery and low daytime usage, the payback stretches to 12 to 15 years. Still worthwhile over the 25-year lifespan of modern panels, but not the dramatic savings some installers promise.
Which Grants and Schemes Can Help You Get Solar Panels?
Three routes can cut your solar panel costs in the UK right now, and one of them could wipe the bill out entirely.
ECO4: fully funded solar for eligible households
If your household receives benefits like Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Income Support or certain tax credits, and your home has an EPC rating of D, E, F or G, you may qualify for fully funded solar panel installation through ECO4. No partial funding. The whole system, installed, at no cost to you.
ECO4 runs until December 2026, so there's still time, but the scheme is oversubscribed in some areas and installers are prioritising homes where solar makes the biggest difference to the EPC rating. If you think you might qualify, check sooner rather than later. Our full guide to solar panel grants walks through the eligibility criteria in detail.
0% VAT
No forms. No income test. No application. Every domestic solar installation in the UK is zero-rated for VAT until at least 31 March 2027. This applies to panels, batteries, inverters and the installation labour. On a £6,000 system, that's £1,200 you're not paying. It's automatic, so if your quote includes VAT at 20%, something's wrong.
Smart Export Guarantee
Not a grant, but ongoing income. Once your system is installed and registered with MCS, you can sign up with any participating supplier to get paid for the electricity you export to the grid. As mentioned above, rates range from about 3p to 15p per kWh depending on the supplier and tariff. Over a year, that could mean £100 to £300 in export payments for a typical 4kW system.
One thing worth noting: the Great British Insulation Scheme closed in March 2026. It previously offered up to £3,000 towards insulation measures, and some people combined it with solar funding through ECO4. That combination is no longer available, but ECO4 itself remains open.
The Warm Homes: Local Grant is also running until 2028, though it's focused on insulation and heating rather than solar directly. If your home needs cavity wall insulation or other improvements alongside solar, it's worth checking what your local authority offers through that scheme. Our Warm Homes Plan guide has the details.
Is Your Home Suitable for Solar Panels?
Not every roof suits solar. But more do than people assume.
The ideal setup is a south-facing roof with a pitch of 30 to 40 degrees and no shading from trees, chimneys or neighbouring buildings. If that's your house, great. You'll get maximum generation.
But here's what most guides won't tell you: east and west-facing roofs are still perfectly viable. You'll lose about 15% to 20% of potential generation compared to due south, which on a 4kW system means roughly 500 to 700 fewer kWh per year. That's noticeable but not a dealbreaker. An east-west split (panels on both sides) actually spreads generation more evenly across the day, which can improve self-consumption if you're home mornings and evenings.
North-facing roofs are the one genuine no-go. Generation drops by 40% or more, and the payback period stretches beyond what makes financial sense.
So what else matters?
Roof condition. Panels last 25 to 30 years. If your roof needs replacing in the next decade, do that first. Removing and refitting panels to reroof costs £1,000 to £2,000.
Shading. Even partial shading from a single chimney or tree branch can significantly reduce output if your system uses standard string inverters. Microinverters or power optimisers (which add £300 to £800 to the install cost) solve this by letting each panel operate independently.
Structural integrity. Solar panels weigh about 18 to 20kg per square metre. Most roofs handle this without any modification, but older properties with weakened timbers might need a structural survey. Your installer should assess this during the site visit.
Planning permission. You almost certainly don't need it. Solar panels fall under permitted development rights in England and Wales for most homes. Exceptions: listed buildings, conservation areas, and panels that protrude more than 200mm from the roof surface. Scotland and Northern Ireland have slightly different rules. Check with your local planning authority if you're unsure.
Your EPC rating can also give you a clue about whether solar makes sense as a priority. If your home is rated E or below, you'll likely get better returns from improving your insulation first, then adding solar once the fabric of the building is sorted. If you're curious about how solar panels actually generate electricity, we've got a plain-English explainer.
How to Choose a Solar Panel Installer in the UK
This is where people make expensive mistakes.
The single non-negotiable: your installer must be MCS-certified. MCS stands for Microgeneration Certification Scheme. Without MCS certification, you can't register for the Smart Export Guarantee, you won't qualify for any grant funding, and your installation won't meet the quality standards that protect you if something goes wrong. It's not optional. It's the baseline.
Beyond that, get three quotes minimum. We see price differences of 30% to 40% between installers quoting on the same property, and the most expensive quote isn't always the best system. Some installers quote premium panels when mid-range would do the job perfectly well for your roof size and usage.
Look, choosing an installer is genuinely one of the harder parts of going solar, because the market has a mix of excellent small firms, large national operators, and a few cowboys. Here's what to check:
Ask what panels and inverter they're proposing, and why. A good installer will size the system to your actual electricity usage, not just fill your roof with panels. Ask about their warranty terms: you want at least a 10-year workmanship warranty from the installer, separate from the manufacturer's panel warranty (usually 25 years) and inverter warranty (usually 10 to 12 years).
Check reviews, but be sceptical of any company with exclusively five-star ratings. Look for how they handle problems, not just the glowing testimonials. Trustpilot, Google Reviews and the MCS installer database are all worth checking.
One thing that surprised us when we started comparing installers: the companies that offer the longest payment plans often have the highest total costs. A 15-year finance deal at 6.9% APR on a £7,000 system means you'll pay over £10,500 in total. If you can pay upfront or borrow more cheaply (a 0% credit card for part of it, or a home improvement loan at 3% to 4%), you'll save thousands over the life of the system. But that's a personal finance decision, not an energy one. Anyway.
Are Solar Panels Worth It in 2026?
Yes. For most UK homeowners, solar panels are worth it in 2026.
That's our position, and we'll explain why. A 4kW system costing £6,000 (after the VAT saving) that saves you £600 a year in electricity bills pays for itself in about 10 years. After that, you've got 15 to 20 years of near-free electricity, because modern panels retain 80% to 85% of their output even after 25 years. Over the full lifespan, you're looking at total savings of £12,000 to £18,000 on a £6,000 investment.
That's a better return than most ISAs.
But there are situations where solar makes less sense. If you're planning to move within five years, you might not recoup the cost, though solar panels do add value to your property (estimates vary, but Energy Saving Trust suggests £1,800 to £4,000 depending on the system size and location). If your roof faces north, the numbers don't work. And if your home is poorly insulated, you'll get more bang for your buck by sorting floor insulation and draughtproofing first, then adding solar once your energy demand is lower.
Honestly, the biggest risk with solar in 2026 isn't the technology. It's the electricity price. If the Ofgem price cap drops significantly, your savings shrink. If it rises, your savings grow. Nobody can predict energy prices five years out with any certainty, and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.
What we can say: electricity prices in the UK have been on an upward trend for over a decade, even before the 2022 spike. Solar gives you a hedge against that trend. Whether it's the single best investment you could make for your home depends on your specific situation, which is why we built the eligibility checker. Two minutes. You'll see exactly which grants and schemes apply to your property.
25 to 30 years, and most manufacturers guarantee at least 80% output at the 25-year mark. The inverter will likely need replacing once during that period (after 10 to 15 years, costing £500 to £1,500), but the panels themselves are remarkably durable. We've seen systems from the early 2000s still generating perfectly well.
Do solar panels work on cloudy days?
Yes. They generate less, but they still generate. Solar panels respond to light, not direct sunshine. On a typical overcast day in the UK, you'll get about 10% to 25% of the output you'd get on a clear summer day. That's why annual generation figures already account for our weather, so the savings estimates in this article are based on real UK conditions, not laboratory tests.
Can I get free solar panels in the UK?
If you're on qualifying benefits and your home has a low EPC rating, ECO4 can fund a full solar installation at no cost to you. Outside of that, no. The old free solar panel schemes (where a company installed panels on your roof and kept the Feed-in Tariff payments) ended years ago.
Do I need planning permission for solar panels?
Almost certainly not. Solar panels are classed as permitted development in England and Wales for most homes. The exceptions are listed buildings, properties in conservation areas, and installations where the panels would protrude more than 200mm from the roof surface. If you're in Scotland or Northern Ireland, the rules are slightly different but still generally permissive. Check with your local planning authority if you're unsure.
Will solar panels increase my property value?
The evidence says yes, though by how much is debatable. Energy Saving Trust research suggests a solar installation can add between £1,800 and £4,000 to a property's value depending on the system size and location. Anecdotally, estate agents in areas with high energy costs report that solar is increasingly a selling point, particularly since the 2022 energy price spike made buyers more conscious of running costs.
How many solar panels do I need for a 3-bedroom house?
Typically 10 to 12 panels, which gives you a 4kW to 5kW system. But the right answer depends on your actual electricity consumption, not your number of bedrooms. Check your annual kWh usage on your energy bills. A household using 3,500 kWh per year needs a different system size than one using 5,500 kWh.