5kW Solar Panel System UK: Is It Right for Your Home in 2026?
Last Updated 22 hours ago
- 1. When Is Electricity Cheapest in the UK?
- 2. Why Does Electricity Cost Change Throughout the Day?
- 3. What Are Peak and Off-Peak Electricity Times?
- 4. How Do Time-of-Use Tariffs Work?
- 5. How Can You Use Electricity More Efficiently at Home?
- 6. How Do Solar Panels and Battery Storage Change the Picture?
- 7. Is Shifting Your Usage Actually Enough — Or Do You Need Solar?
- 8. Conclusion
- 9. FAQs
Summary
Key facts about 5kW solar panel systems in the UK:
A 5kW sol solar panel system in the UK typically generates around 4,250 kWh per year — enough to cover a meaningful share of a 3–4 bed home’s electricity use
Without a battery, annual savings from avoided grid imports are around £419/year. With a battery (70–80% self-consumption), this rises to £733–£838/year plus up to £382/year from SEG export
It is typically the most future-proof system size for homes planning to add an EV charger or heat pump, if you’re deciding between sizes, see our 3kW vs 5kW comparison guide
Panel count is 11–12 at 450W or ~13 at 400W, for a full breakdown of how panel count is calculated, see our how many solar panels do I need guide
DNO paperwork is required before installation, the type (G98 or G99) depends on inverter output, not panel capacity. Solar4Good handles this as standard
How Much Electricity a 5kW System Produces in the UK
A 5kW solar panel system in the UK typically generates around 4,250 kWh per year, although this varies depending on location, roof orientation and shading.
Location | Typical annual output |
|---|---|
UK average | ~4,250 kWh |
Sunniest parts of southern England (Cornwall, Devon, Essex, Kent) | up to ~5,000 kWh |
Scotland | ~3,800–4,000 kWh |
On a daily basis, this averages around 11–12 kWh per day, not evenly distributed. Summer production can reach 20–25 kWh per day, while winter output may drop to 3–5 kWh.
Is a 5kW System Right for Your Home?
A 5kW solar panel system in the UK is best suited to homes where electricity usage is already moderate or likely to increase, family homes, properties with multiple occupants, or households already using more than around 3,000–3,500 kWh per year. It also becomes relevant where future demand is expected to rise: adding an EV charger, a heat pump or spending more time working from home.
A 5kW system tends to work well when electricity use is already above average, additional loads are planned, and there is enough usable roof space to support the system. If your usage is significantly higher and your roof allows it, our guide to the 10kW commercial solar system covers what a larger system can do for higher-demand properties.
Where a 5kW solar panelsystem UK homes can use becomes less suitable is when usage is consistently low or unlikely to change. In those cases, a larger system may generate more energy than the home can use during the day, with excess exported at a lower value.
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How Much Could You Realistically Save?
The savings from a 5kW solar panel system UK homes rely on depend on how much of the generated electricity you use directly. Electricity used in the home avoids buying from the grid at around 24.67p/kWh. Self-consumption is the key driver of savings. If you’re wondering whether solar panels are worth it before committing, our dedicated guide covers the full financial case.
Scenario | Self-consumption | Estimated annual saving |
|---|---|---|
No battery | ~40% (~1,700 kWh) | ~£419 |
With battery | ~70–80% | £733–£838 |
SEG export income | Surplus energy | up to ~£382 |
What actually drives your savings
The biggest factors are how much energy you use during the day, whether you install a battery, and your electricity tariff. The panels generate the energy, how you use it determines the return.
What Battery Should You Pair With a 5kW System?
With a 5kW solar panel system UK homes might need a battery that captures excess daytime generation and shifts it into the evening. For a full breakdown of solar battery prices in the UK, including costs by capacity and brand, see our dedicated battery cost guide.
Battery size | Solar4Good recommendation | When it fits |
|---|---|---|
5–7 kWh | FoxESS / GivEnergy | Moderate usage, limited evening demand |
~10 kWh | Sigenergy / Tesla Powerwall | Most common setup, balanced day/evening usage |
13–15 kWh+ | Sigenergy (modular) | High usage, EVs, or future expansion |
For most homes, a 10 kWh battery is the natural pairing — large enough to store meaningful surplus without oversizing the system. For a detailed review of the Sigenergy system including specs, EV charging capability and real-world performance, see our full Sigenergy battery review.
Can a 5kW System Power an EV?
A 5kW solar panel system can support EV charging, but it won’t fully replace the grid in most cases. A typical 5kW system generates around 4,000–4,500 kWh per year. An EV, depending on mileage, might use 2,000–3,000 kWh per year. Timing determines how much you actually use.
Daytime charging: can be largely supported by solar directly from generation
Evening charging: requires battery storage or grid top-up
Winter months: lower solar output, higher grid reliance
A 5kW system is usually the point where solar EV charging becomes meaningful rather than marginal. The key is how much of your charging it can replace across the year.
What Does a 5kW Solar System Cost in 2026?
System type | Typical cost |
|---|---|
Solar only | £7,000–£9,500 |
Solar + battery | £11,000–£16,000 |
A 5kW system generates around 4,000–4,500 kWh per year, which for many households with battery storage translates into £900–£1,200+ in annual savings. Without battery storage, direct savings from self-consumption are around £419/year. For a detailed breakdown of solar battery costs and how they affect overall system ROI, see our battery price guide.
How Long Before a 5kW System Pays for Itself?
For most UK homes, a 5kW solar panel system typically pays for itself within 8 to 12 years. A system without a battery will usually sit toward the longer end. Adding a battery shifts the dynamic; more of the energy is used later in the day, bringing payback closer to 8–10 years in many cases.
Homes that use more electricity during the day see faster payback
Homes that rely heavily on evening usage benefit more from a battery
Higher electricity rates increase savings and shorten payback
Do You Need DNO Approval?
Whether a 5kW solar panel system for UK homes requires pre-approval from the DNO depends on the inverter output, not the panel capacity. The threshold between G98 (notify within 28 days after installation) and G99 (pre-approval required before installation) is based on inverter AC output per phase:
If the inverter output is ≤3.68kW per phase: G98 applies , install first, notify the DNO within 28 days
If the inverter output exceeds 3.68kW per phase: a G99 application with pre-approval is required before installation begins
A standard 5kW system uses an inverter of approximately 3.5kW. If that is Solar4Good’s standard specification, G98 would apply, no pre-approval needed. Solar4Good manages all DNO paperwork as standard regardless of which process applies.
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Conclusion
A 5kW solar panel system represents one of the most practical and future-proof options for UK homes looking to reduce energy costs. When configured correctly, particularly with the right battery, it can deliver meaningful savings and significantly reduce reliance on the grid.
The key decision is not just whether to install solar but how to configure it properly. System size, battery pairing and usage patterns all play a role. Speak to Solar4Good for a no-obligation assessment and get a clear view of system size, cost and expected savings based on your actual usage.
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5. FAQs
Electricity is usually cheapest between midnight and 6am, when demand on the national grid is at its lowest. However, exact off-peak windows vary by supplier and tariff type — always check the specific hours for your tariff rather than assuming a standard window.
The most expensive window is typically 5pm to 8pm, when residential and commercial demand overlap. Cooking, heating, and charging all happen simultaneously, creating the highest load on the grid and the highest prices on time-of-use tariffs.
No. Standard flat-rate tariffs charge the same unit price all day. Cheaper overnight electricity is only available on time-of-use tariffs such as Economy 7, Economy 10, or smart dynamic tariffs like Octopus Agile.
Savings vary by household, but typical estimates for Economy 7 users who diligently shift usage range from £80–£200 per year. The actual saving depends on how much of your total electricity consumption you can realistically move to off-peak hours.
Yes. Solar panels generate electricity during daylight hours, replacing grid electricity with free self-generated power. For a typical 4–5 kW residential system, this translates to approximately £300–£500 in annual savings without a battery — rising to £650–£1,050 with battery storage to cover evening usage.
Not necessarily. Economy 7 tariffs typically charge a higher day rate than standard tariffs to offset the cheaper overnight window. If you cannot genuinely shift a substantial proportion of your usage overnight, the higher daytime rate may cancel out the overnight savings. An honest assessment of your household’s routines is essential before switching.
Generating your own. Solar panels reduce your grid dependency during the day. Battery storage extends that to evenings. Combined with smart EV charging on an off-peak tariff, households can reduce their grid electricity consumption by 60–80%, making the cost of imported electricity largely irrelevant for day-to-day usage.