Solar Panel Costs UK 2026: Prices, Payback, Savings & What Affects Quotes

Solar panel costs in the UK can vary a lot depending on system size, roof type, installer pricing, and whether you add a battery. This guide explains typical cost ranges, what you’re paying for, and how to get the best value quote.
System size & layout Battery vs no battery VAT relief SEG export payments Payback & savings
Quick snapshot:
  • A typical UK home solar system is often priced in the “few thousand pounds” to “low five figures” range depending on size and extras.
  • 0% VAT currently applies to eligible solar installs until 31 March 2027. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
  • You can get paid for surplus electricity you export via the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) (tariffs vary by supplier). :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

How much do solar panels cost in the UK?

Most quotes depend on system capacity (kWp), panel count, roof complexity (scaffolding, access), inverter choice, and whether you’re adding a battery. As a rough way to think about it: bigger systems cost more upfront, but can deliver stronger long-term savings if you use more of the electricity you generate.
Small system (1–2 bed)
Lower cost
Fewer panels, smaller inverter
Larger system (3–5+ bed)
Higher cost
More panels, bigger inverter, often optional battery

Typical system sizes and what changes the price

Factor What it means Impact on cost
System size (kWp) More panels = more generation Usually increases upfront cost, often improves long-term savings
Roof access & scaffolding Hard-to-access roofs need more setup Can add noticeable labour/scaffold cost
Inverter type String inverter vs microinverters/optimisers Microinverters/optimisers can cost more, help with shading/complex roofs
Battery storage Store solar for evening use Adds cost, can increase self-use and reduce grid imports
Quality & warranties Panel/inverter warranty lengths vary Higher quality often costs more but can reduce long-term risk

Battery storage: is it worth the extra cost?

A battery can help you use more of your solar power in the evening (when panels aren’t generating). Whether it’s worth it depends on your daytime usage, tariff, and how much you export vs self-consume.
Practical rule: If most of your electricity use is in the evening (after work/school), a battery often improves your solar “self-use”. If you’re home in the daytime anyway, a battery may be less essential.

How much can solar panels save you?

Savings come from two places:
  • Bill savings: using your own electricity instead of buying it from the grid.
  • Export payments: getting paid for surplus energy sent to the grid through SEG. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
SEG eligibility (headline): you’ll usually need suitable certification (often MCS or equivalent) and an export-capable meter setup (commonly a smart meter). :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

0% VAT on solar panels

The UK currently applies a zero rate of VAT to qualifying energy-saving installations (including solar) from 1 May 2023 to 31 March 2027. From 1 April 2027, this is set to revert to 5% VAT. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

How to reduce your solar quote

  1. Compare like-for-like quotes (same system size, panel brand tier, warranty length).
  2. Ask what’s included (scaffolding, bird protection, monitoring app, export meter setup support).
  3. Check certification if you want SEG eligibility (install + installer certification matters). :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
  4. Consider usage habits: the more you use during the day, the better your savings typically look.

Are solar panels worth it?

Solar panels tend to be most worthwhile when you can use a decent share of your generation and when your quote is competitive for your roof and system size. VAT relief and SEG can improve the financial case further. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

Potential benefits

  • Lower electricity bills (self-generated power)
  • Export payments via SEG
  • More energy independence
  • Low maintenance and long lifespans

Things to watch

  • Quotes vary hugely by installer
  • Shading/roof layout can affect yield
  • Battery adds cost (not always needed)
  • Export income depends on tariff and usage

Next steps

  1. Decide your target system size (based on roof space + annual usage).
  2. Get 3+ quotes and compare inclusions/warranties.
  3. If you want export payments, confirm SEG/MCS requirements with your installer.