What Is MCS Certification?
The Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS) is an independent, Ofgem-recognised quality standard for small-scale renewable energy installations in the UK. It covers solar photovoltaic systems, heat pumps, wind turbines, and battery storage. For solar, MCS accredits both the installer company and the specific products they use.
In practice, MCS certification means a third-party auditor has verified that:
- The installation company employs qualified engineers who follow British Standards
- The solar panels and inverters used meet minimum performance and safety specifications
- The installer carries appropriate insurance and agrees to a consumer code of conduct
- Each completed installation is registered on the MCS database
Why MCS Matters in 2026
It unlocks the Smart Export Guarantee
Without an MCS installation certificate, no licensed supplier is permitted to pay you for electricity you export under the Smart Export Guarantee. This is not a technicality — it is a hard requirement. An uncertified installation, however large or expensive, generates zero export income.
It supports your EPC rating
Energy Performance Certificate assessors in England and Wales recognise MCS-registered solar installations. A system without MCS documentation may not be credited fully on your EPC, which affects your rating and any future property sale.
It provides consumer protection
MCS installers must adhere to the MCS Consumer Code, which requires written quotations, 14-day cancellation rights, a 6-year workmanship warranty, and a dispute resolution process through the Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC) or the Home Insulation and Energy Systems (HIES) schemes.
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What MCS Checks During Accreditation
| Area | What Is Verified |
|---|---|
| Installer qualifications | City & Guilds 2399 or equivalent PV design/installation units |
| Insurance | Public liability minimum £2 million |
| Product compliance | Panels and inverters on the MCS product directory |
| Installation standards | BS EN 62446 (commissioning) and IET Wiring Regulations |
| Consumer code membership | RECC or HIES membership confirmed |
How to Verify an MCS Installer
Before signing any contract, take three minutes to check:
- Visit mcscertified.com — enter the company name or postcode to confirm their accreditation status and expiry date.
- Ask for their MCS licence number — a legitimate installer will provide this without hesitation.
- Check the product directory — confirm the specific panels and inverter they propose are listed on the MCS product directory at mcsproductdirectory.net.
Never accept a verbal assurance. If a company cannot provide their MCS licence number, walk away.
The Installation Certificate
Once your system is commissioned, the installer must register it on the MCS Installation Database and provide you with an MCS Installation Certificate within 10 working days. This document contains:
- System location and owner details
- Panel make, model, and MCS number
- Inverter make, model, and MCS number
- Declared net capacity (kWp)
- Installer licence number
- Date of commissioning
Keep this document safe. You will need it to:
- Register for SEG payments
- Apply for home battery grants (where available)
- Provide evidence on property sale
- Make warranty claims
Common MCS Misconceptions
"Any NICEIC-registered electrician can certify my solar"
NICEIC registration covers general electrical competence. MCS is a separate, additional accreditation specifically for microgeneration. An electrician may be NICEIC registered but not MCS certified.
"My panels are from a reputable brand so the installation must be MCS-compliant"
Panel brand quality and installer MCS status are separate issues. Even premium SolarEdge or Enphase equipment installed by a non-MCS company does not qualify for SEG registration.
"I can get MCS certification retroactively"
In most cases, you cannot. Retrospective MCS certification requires the original installer to be MCS accredited at the time of installation and to have registered the system within the required window. Installations by non-MCS companies cannot be backdated.
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What Happens If Your MCS Installer Goes Out of Business?
MCS maintains a warranty protection insurance scheme. If your installer ceases trading, the workmanship warranty transfers to MCS's collective insurance. Report the situation to MCS directly. This protection is one of the key reasons the scheme exists.