Solar Panels Glasgow: Costs, Grants & Climate Guide 2026

Solar panels can work in Glasgow's climate, but lower sunshine hours compared to southern England mean payback periods are longer and careful cost analysis is essential.

Solar panel installation in Glasgow costs £5,000-8,000 for a typical 4kW system (10-12 panels) on a 3-bed house. Glasgow receives approximately 800-900 kWh per kWp annually, about 20-25% less than southern England due to lower sunshine hours. With export tariffs paying 15p/kWh (Smart Export Guarantee, 2026) and electricity costing 24-28p/kWh, payback periods are typically 15-20 years. The Home Energy Scotland Grant provides up to £7,500 for solar combined with battery storage. Tenement flats rarely have suitable roof access for solar panels.
Last reviewed: 2026-07-06 | Reading time: 6 minutes | Verified against 7 sources

Do solar panels work in Glasgow?

Yes, solar panels work in Glasgow, but generate less electricity than in sunnier parts of the UK:

Solar panels are most cost-effective in Glasgow if you have south, southwest, or southeast-facing roof space and can use most of your generated electricity during the day.

How much do solar panels cost in Glasgow?

4kW system (10-12 panels)
£5,000-6,500 installed on typical Glasgow house
6kW system (14-16 panels)
£7,000-9,000 for larger roof or higher electricity usage
Battery storage (optional)
£3,000-5,000 for 5-10kWh battery to store excess generation
Annual electricity generation (4kW system)
3,200-3,600 kWh in Glasgow climate
Annual bill savings
£300-500/year depending on usage pattern and export tariff
Payback period
15-20 years at current Glasgow generation rates and 2026 electricity prices

Prices include panels, inverter, mounting equipment, installation, and MCS certification (required for export tariff eligibility).

Scottish grants for solar panels

Home Energy Scotland Grant and Loan

Solar panels combined with battery storage can qualify for funding:

Call Home Energy Scotland on 0808 808 2282 to check eligibility. The grant prioritises complete renewable energy systems rather than solar panels in isolation.

No feed-in tariff

The UK Government's feed-in tariff (FIT) closed to new applicants in 2019. If you install solar panels in 2026, you'll earn income through the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) only, which pays significantly less than the old FIT scheme.

Export tariffs and battery storage

Smart Export Guarantee (SEG)

Energy suppliers pay you for surplus electricity exported to the grid:

Most Glasgow households use about 30-40% of their solar generation immediately and export the rest. Higher self-consumption improves financial returns because electricity you use is worth more than export payments (24-28p/kWh grid cost vs 15p/kWh export income).

Battery storage

Batteries store excess solar generation for use in evening/night:

Battery storage makes solar more economical but requires larger upfront investment (£8,000-13,000 total for solar + battery).

Is your Glasgow home suitable for solar panels?

Solar panels work best when you have:

Suitable roof

High daytime electricity usage

If you're out all day and only use electricity in evenings, solar panels will generate mostly export income (worth less than self-consumed electricity).

Glasgow tenements

Solar panels are rarely practical for Glasgow tenement flats:

Ground-floor tenement flats occasionally install panels on ground-level outbuildings, but this is uncommon.

Planning permission and conservation areas

Solar panels on houses typically qualify as permitted development (no planning permission needed) in Scotland if:

Conservation areas

Many Glasgow properties are in conservation areas (West End, Southside, Pollokshields, etc.). In these areas:

Check your conservation area status at glasgow.gov.uk/conservation or contact Glasgow City Council Planning on 0141 287 8555.

Solar panel installation process

Professional solar panel installation takes 1-2 days for a typical Glasgow house:

  1. Survey: Installer assesses roof structure, shading, electrical supply
  2. Design: System sized based on roof space and electricity usage
  3. Scaffolding: Erected for safe roof access (included in quote)
  4. Mounting: Brackets fixed to roof joists (through tiles, not visible from inside)
  5. Panels and wiring: Panels mounted, cables run to inverter inside property
  6. Inverter and meter: Inverter installed (usually in loft or garage), generation meter fitted
  7. Testing and commissioning: System tested and connected to grid
  8. MCS certification: Required for Smart Export Guarantee eligibility

You can stay in your home during installation. Electricity may be off for 1-2 hours during final connection.

Finding a solar panel installer in Glasgow

Look for installers who are:

Get at least 3 quotes and compare:

Solar panel maintenance

Solar panels require minimal maintenance:

Most installers offer annual maintenance contracts (£80-150/year) but these are optional for solar PV systems.

Is solar worth it in Glasgow?

Solar panels in Glasgow are marginal on financial returns alone:

Solar panels make more sense if you:

For most Glasgow homeowners, prioritising insulation, double glazing, or a heat pump delivers better financial returns than solar panels.

Next steps

  1. Check roof suitability: Assess direction, shading, structural condition
  2. Estimate daytime usage: Review smart meter data to see how much electricity you use during daylight hours
  3. Check planning requirements: Visit glasgow.gov.uk/conservation if your property is in a conservation area
  4. Get 3 MCS quotes: Compare realistic generation estimates and payback calculations
  5. Call Home Energy Scotland: 0808 808 2282 to check if solar + battery qualifies for grant funding

Related guides

Sources

  1. Energy Saving Trust Scotland, "Solar panel costs and generation estimates" (2026)
  2. Met Office, "Glasgow sunshine hours" (1991-2020 average)
  3. MCS, "Guide to microgeneration standards for solar PV" (2025)
  4. Ofgem, "Smart Export Guarantee rates" (accessed July 2026)
  5. Home Energy Scotland, "Home Energy Scotland Grant and Loan scheme" (accessed July 2026)
  6. Glasgow City Council, "Planning guidance for solar panels in conservation areas" (2024)
  7. UK Government, "Solar panel electricity generation and feed-in tariff closure" (2019-2026)

Last reviewed: 2026-07-06