Solar Panel Calculator
Use our free Solar Panel Calculator to quickly estimate how many panels you need, your potential energy production, and annual cost savings based on your location and electricity usage. Perfect for homeowners, business owners, and contractors planning solar installations. This tool factors in sunlight hours, panel efficiency, and energy costs to show how much you could save by going solar. By visualizing payback time and offset percentage, it helps you plan smarter investments and understand long-term benefits before installation.
Get StartedCalculator Inputs
Solar System Results
Solar Panels Needed
0
Total System Size
0 kW
Estimated Installation Cost
$0
Estimated Annual Savings
$0
Annual Usage = Monthly × 12
Panel Production = (W ÷ 1000) × Sun Hours × Efficiency
Panels = ceil(Annual Usage ÷ Annual Panel Production)
System Size (kW) = (Panels × W) ÷ 1000
All calculations are estimates and should be verified by a professional.
Solar Panel Calculator Formula
Understanding the math behind solar energy production helps homeowners estimate realistic savings and avoid undersizing or overspending. Solar system output depends on geography, roof direction, tilt, and efficiency losses (like shading or inverter inefficiency). Knowing your expected power output helps you plan energy independence, calculate ROI, and qualify for incentives like the federal solar tax credit. The Solar Panel Calculator simplifies these complex variables into clear, actionable insights so you can make confident decisions about your solar investment without needing an engineer’s background.
How this solar panel calculator works
This calculator estimates your solar system requirements and savings potential by combining your energy consumption data with regional sunlight conditions. It provides clear guidance for system size, cost, and long-term value.
Inputs and logic:
The calculator multiplies sunlight hours by efficiency to estimate daily generation per panel, scaling up to match your total energy needs. Results include system size (kW), panel count, estimated energy output, annual savings, and payback years.
When to use this solar panel calculator
Use this calculator before purchasing solar panels or when comparing installation quotes. It’s also useful for homeowners exploring energy independence or ROI scenarios.
New solar projects: Estimate how many panels you need before contacting installers.
Home purchase evaluations: Compare homes with different energy potentials.
Investment planning: Forecast payback time and long-term savings.
Off-grid design: Size battery storage and panels for energy self-sufficiency.
Utility cost comparison: See how solar offsets your grid electricity expenses.
Want to make your solar planning smarter?
Use ServiceAgent.ai to automate estimates, manage proposals, and track profitability—all from one dashboard.
Book a Free DemoAverage Solar System Costs and Returns by Industry
Understand how solar system costs and profit margins differ across markets and applications. Use these figures to benchmark installation or investment decisions.
Residential Installers
15–25% net margin
Commercial Solar Providers
20–35% net margin
Utility-Scale Solar Developers
25–40% net margin
Solar Panel Manufacturers
10–20% net margin
Battery Storage & Energy Management Firms
30–45% net margin
Solar Financing & Leasing Companies
25–35% net margin
These benchmarks help contractors, investors, and homeowners understand the economics of solar projects and assess whether quotes align with market standards.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is this solar panel calculator?
It provides a solid preliminary estimate using your usage, sun hours, and panel wattage. Final designs may change after a site audit, shading analysis, and local code checks.
What is a "performance ratio" and what value should I use?
It represents real-world system losses (temperature, inverter, wiring, soiling). A typical range is 0.75–0.85. If unsure, use 0.80.
How does location affect solar performance?
Regions with more average sunlight hours—like Arizona or California—generate more energy per panel than cloudier areas.
How much roof space do I need for solar panels?
A typical 6 kW system needs about 350–400 square feet of roof space, depending on panel wattage.
What if my roof has shade or isn't south-facing?
Shading and orientation reduce output. Lower the performance ratio or add a shading % reduction to compensate in your estimate.
Do solar panels work on cloudy days?
Yes, though output drops by 10–25%. They still generate electricity even under diffuse light.
Does this include batteries?
No. This calculator sizes the PV array only. Batteries are sized based on backup duration and peak loads and can be added later.
Will I still get savings with net metering changes?
Usually, yes—savings depend on your tariff, export credits, and self-consumption. Use this to size the array, then check payback with your local rate structure.