Green Home Technology UK — Solar, Heat Pumps and Battery Storage

Solar Panel Maintenance and Warranty UK — What to Expect Over 25 Years

How much does it cost to maintain solar panels in the UK? What the warranties cover, when you'll need to replace components, and how to keep your system running efficiently.

Solar panels are often promoted as “fit and forget” — and compared to many home systems, they genuinely are. But low maintenance is not zero maintenance. Here is what to expect over the life of your system.

Lifetime Cost Overview

Component Expected life Replacement cost When
Solar panels 25–35 years Rarely replaced within warranty Year 25+
String inverter 10–15 years £500–£1,200 Year 10–15
Microinverters 20–25 years £150–£250 per unit Variable
Battery storage 10–15 years £2,500–£6,000 Year 10–15
Monitoring system 10–20 years £200–£500 Variable
Annual cleaning £50–£150/year Ongoing

Cleaning and Output Loss

UK solar panels accumulate grime from rain, birds, algae, and moss. In a clean state, panels operate at rated capacity. The impact of dirt:

Contamination Estimated output reduction
Light dust only 1–3%
Moderate urban grime 3–8%
Heavy grime / moss coverage 10–25%
Bird droppings on cells Up to 30% (spot losses)

UK rainfall naturally cleans much horizontal dust, but panels tilted at 30–35° (standard UK installation) don’t self-clean as effectively as low-tilt roofs in hotter climates.

Cleaning frequency: For most UK installations, once every 12–18 months is sufficient. Properties near trees, busy roads, or with pigeon issues may need more frequent cleaning.

The inverter converts direct current (DC) from panels into alternating current (AC) for your home. It is the component most likely to fail or need replacement within your system’s life.

Inverter type Description Lifespan Replacement cost
String inverter One unit for all panels 10–15 years £500–£1,200
Microinverter One per panel 20–25 years £150–£250 each
Hybrid inverter Controls panels + battery 10–15 years £800–£2,000
Optimisers + string Reduces shading loss 15–20 years £200–£400 (optimisers) + inverter

Signs your inverter needs attention:

  • Monitoring data shows sudden significant output drop
  • Inverter display shows error codes
  • Inverter makes unusual sounds
  • Inverter fails to start on sunny mornings

Always use an MCS-certified engineer for inverter work — it involves working with live DC circuits and roof access.

Performance Warranties Explained

Most reputable manufacturers offer a performance degradation warranty:

Warranty type What it guarantees
10-year product warranty No manufacturing defects
25-year performance warranty ≥80% of original rated output at year 25 (typical)

Linear degradation guarantee: Premium panels (e.g., SunPower, Panasonic) guarantee no more than 0.25–0.3% annual degradation. Standard panels guarantee 0.5–0.6% annual degradation. At 0.5%/year, a 400W panel produces 350W at year 25.

Manufacturer risk: If the manufacturer goes bust, warranties may not be honoured. Larger, established brands (LG, Panasonic, SunPower, JA Solar, Trina Solar) carry lower brand-failure risk. Your installer’s workmanship warranty (typically 5–10 years) is a separate matter.

Battery Storage Maintenance

If you have battery storage, expect:

Battery type Typical lifespan Capacity at end of life Replacement cost
Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) 10–15 years 70–80% of original £2,500–£4,000
Nickel Manganese Cobalt (NMC) 8–12 years 70–80% of original £2,500–£5,000

Most batteries come with a 10-year warranty guaranteeing minimum capacity retention (typically 70% at year 10). After warranty, batteries continue to function but with reduced capacity.

Insurance Considerations

Check your home insurance covers:

  • Storm damage to solar panels (most policies do — check exclusions)
  • Inverter failure (not always covered as standard — specialist solar insurance exists)
  • Theft of panels or inverter (increasingly rare with modern mounting systems)

Many specialist solar insurance policies cost £50–£120/year and cover inverter failure, storm damage, and liability. Worth considering alongside standard home insurance.

Annual Health Check: What to Look For

You don’t need a professional every year, but monitor these yourself:

  • Monthly: Check monitoring app/system for output vs expected generation
  • Annually: Visual inspection from ground level for damaged panels, displaced mounting, or debris build-up
  • Every 2 years: Professional clean
  • Every 5 years: Full inspection by MCS-certified engineer (£150–£250)
  • At year 10–15: Budget for inverter replacement

Monitoring Your System

Most modern inverters include monitoring via an app or web portal. This shows:

  • Daily, monthly, and annual generation (kWh)
  • Current output (kW)
  • Export to grid vs self-consumption (if metered)

Compare your actual generation against your predicted generation (provided at installation). A 10%+ underperformance sustained over weeks suggests a fault — call your installer.

What Voids Your Solar Panel Warranty

Warranties are only as good as the conditions attached. Common actions that void panel or inverter warranties:

  • Allowing unqualified persons to work on the system — any modification or repair must be carried out by a qualified electrician and, for electrical changes to the solar system itself, an MCS-certified installer
  • Modifications to mounting or wiring — adding components without manufacturer approval
  • Physical damage caused by the owner — walking on panels, cleaning with abrasive materials, or pressure washing at close range can crack cells or delaminate the glass
  • Failure to report faults promptly — some warranties require fault notification within a specified period; ignoring a clear performance drop for months may weaken a warranty claim

Keep records of every service visit and retain original installation documentation (including MCS certificate, system datasheets, and any commissioning reports) — these are essential for warranty claims.

Choosing a Maintenance Provider

Not every solar installer offers ongoing maintenance. When choosing a maintenance provider:

  • Confirm they are MCS-certified — this matters for any warranty work
  • Ask whether they use original manufacturer replacement parts (important for inverter warranties)
  • Check whether they can access your monitoring system remotely — good providers can diagnose faults before visiting
  • Compare annual service contract costs (£80–£200) against pay-as-you-go callout rates

Your original installer is often the best starting point for maintenance, but you are not contractually obliged to use them.

Sources

  1. Energy Saving Trust — Solar Maintenance
  2. MCS — Consumer Guide
  3. GOV.UK — Consumer Rights on Warranties