Not all solar quotes are comparing like for like. A £6,000 system and a £10,000 system may have identical panel counts but radically different components, warranties, and post-installation support. Price alone tells you very little. Here is how to decode what you are actually being offered.
The Main Drivers of Solar Quote Price Variation
1. Panel Quality and Efficiency
Panel prices have converged significantly. In 2026, premium Tier 1 panels from brands such as SolarEdge (via their panel partners), Enphase-compatible modules, and reputable Chinese manufacturers including Longi, JA Solar, and Jinko all offer strong performance at competitive prices. However, there is still meaningful variation between:
- Efficiency: A 22%-efficient 430 W panel on a small roof produces more power than a 19%-efficient 400 W panel. Higher efficiency panels cost more per unit.
- Degradation rate: Premium panels warranty 0.25–0.4% annual degradation. Cheaper panels may warrant 0.5–0.7%. Over 25 years, that gap compounds.
- Product warranty: Industry standard is 12 years. Premium manufacturers offer 15–25 year product warranties.
2. Inverter Choice
The inverter is where price variation is most significant.
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- A Deye or generic string inverter: £300–600
- A SMA or Fronius string inverter: £700–1,100
- A SolarEdge HD-Wave with optimisers: £1,200–1,800
- An Enphase IQ8 microinverter system (per 6 panels): £900–1,400
- A GivEnergy or Sungrow hybrid inverter (battery-ready): £800–1,200
The inverter choice significantly affects long-term performance, monitoring capability, and the cost of future battery integration.
3. System Size
More panels mean higher cost. A 3-panel expansion can add £1,200–1,800 to a quote. Check that quotes specify the same system size (kWp) before comparing.
4. Scaffolding and Access
Scaffolding for a standard two-storey UK home costs £500–900. Some installers include this in their headline price; others present it as a separate line. A quote that appears cheap may exclude scaffolding entirely.
5. Battery Storage
A 5 kWh battery from GivEnergy, BYD, or Pylontech adds approximately £2,000–3,500. A Tesla Powerwall or Sonnen unit adds £6,000–8,500. If one quote includes a battery and another does not, that alone explains a £3,000+ difference.
UK Solar Quote Comparison Framework
| Line Item | Budget Quote | Mid-Range Quote | Premium Quote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Panels | Generic Tier 2 | Tier 1 (Longi, JA Solar) | Premium Tier 1, high efficiency |
| Inverter | Basic string | Fronius/SMA string | SolarEdge/Enphase or hybrid |
| Battery | None | None or 5 kWh entry | 10 kWh+ premium battery |
| Scaffolding | May be excluded | Included | Included |
| Monitoring | Basic app | Brand monitoring app | Full panel-level monitoring |
| Workmanship warranty | 2–5 years | 5–10 years | 10–25 years |
| Typical price range | £5,500–6,500 | £7,500–9,000 | £9,500–12,000+ |
What Is Worth Paying More For
- Inverter quality: Inverters fail more often than panels. A reliable inverter brand with strong UK warranty support (Fronius and SolarEdge both have UK service networks) is worth the premium.
- Longer workmanship warranty: A 10-year workmanship warranty is a strong signal of installer confidence.
- Hybrid inverter: If you plan to add a battery within five years, a hybrid inverter now saves a costly upgrade later.
- Panel-level monitoring: Particularly if you have any shading risk.
What to Be Sceptical About
- A high price does not guarantee quality. Ask specifically what justifies the premium.
- Branded premium panels from obscure European resellers may simply be rebranded Asian panels at inflated margins.
- "Enhanced" monitoring packages that are just the standard manufacturer app rebranded.