Solar PV Installation: Panel Types, Inverters, DNO & MCS Certification

Quick Answer: Solar PV installations must be carried out by an MCS-certified installer to qualify for the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) and any other grants. Systems connect to the grid via a G98 or G99 DNO notification (G98 for ≤3.68kW, G99 above), use a grid-tied inverter, and must comply with BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 Section 712. A typical 4kWp domestic system uses 10 panels and costs £5,000-£8,000 installed.

Summary

Solar photovoltaic (PV) systems convert sunlight into DC electricity, which is then converted to 230V AC by an inverter for domestic use. Any surplus electricity not consumed in the property can be exported to the grid under the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG), for which energy suppliers pay an export tariff. This has replaced the older Feed-in Tariff (FiT) scheme which closed to new applicants in 2019.

For tradespeople, solar PV installation requires specific competencies beyond standard electrical installation. The MCS (Microgeneration Certification Scheme) certification is the industry benchmark, and MCS certification is required for SEG eligibility and most finance/grant schemes. MCS covers both the installer company and the specific products installed — all panels, inverters, and mounting systems must appear on the MCS Product Register.

The electrical elements of a solar PV installation fall under BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 Section 712 (Solar photovoltaic supply systems). The DC side of the installation — from panels through to the inverter — is particularly important: DC arc faults are much harder to extinguish than AC faults, and string voltage can be dangerously high (potentially 600V+ on a domestic system).

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Panel Type Typical Efficiency Cost Best For
Monocrystalline (standard) 18-22% Mid Most domestic installations
Monocrystalline (high efficiency) 22-24% Premium Limited roof space
Polycrystalline 15-17% Lower Larger roof areas; less common now
Thin-film (CIGS/CdTe) 10-13% Variable Flat roofs, building-integrated PV
Bifacial 20-23% (front+rear) Premium Flat roofs or ground-mounted
Inverter Type Pros Cons Best For
String inverter Simple, low cost, easy to maintain Whole string affected by shading Unshaded roofs
Microinverter Per-panel monitoring and optimisation More expensive, harder to maintain Shaded or complex roofs
Power optimiser + string Per-panel optimisation, string inverter efficiency More components Partial shading
Hybrid inverter Integrates battery storage Higher cost Battery storage systems
System Size Panels (400W) Annual Generation (South UK) Roof Area Required
2kWp 5 ~1,700 kWh 12m²
3kWp 8 ~2,550 kWh 18m²
4kWp 10 ~3,400 kWh 24m²
5kWp 13 ~4,250 kWh 30m²
6kWp 15 ~5,100 kWh 36m²

Detailed Guidance

MCS Certification Process

To install solar PV and qualify installations for SEG, you must be MCS-certified:

  1. Join a certification body — Bodies include NAPIT, NICEIC, Stroma, and others authorised by MCS
  2. Demonstrate competency — Typically requires an approved training course (City & Guilds 2399, BPEC Solar PV, or equivalent) plus installation experience
  3. Quality management system — Your business must have documented processes for installation, commissioning, and customer documentation
  4. Insurance — Public liability insurance at appropriate level
  5. Annual audit — MCS requires periodic quality audits of installation work

Each completed MCS installation generates an MCS certificate, which the customer needs to register for SEG with their energy supplier.

DNO Connection (G98/G99/G100)

The engineering recommendation that governs connection to the distribution network:

In practice, most domestic solar PV (up to about 16 panels, single phase) qualifies for G98 and can proceed on notification without waiting for DNO approval. Systems over 3.68kW single phase require G99, and the DNO has 28 days to respond (though most respond faster).

The DNO may impose export limitation (often 3.68kW export limit even for larger systems) to protect local network capacity. An export limiting device may be required.

DC System Safety

The DC side (panels to inverter) is the most dangerous part of a solar installation:

Battery Storage

Adding battery storage significantly increases installation complexity and cost. Two types:

DC-coupled battery:

AC-coupled battery:

Battery storage adds roughly £3,000-£8,000 to system cost depending on capacity. The most common sizes are 5-10kWh. Batteries require their own MCS certification.

Planning and Permitted Development

Most domestic roof-mounted solar PV is permitted development and doesn't require planning permission, provided:

Conservation areas and listed buildings require planning permission. Groundmounted systems generally require planning permission.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my customer need to tell their energy supplier before installing solar PV?

They need to notify their DNO (not the energy supplier directly, though some suppliers ask separately). For systems up to 3.68kW, notification under G98 allows installation on the day of notification. For larger systems, G99 approval must be received first. After installation, the customer contacts energy suppliers to register for the Smart Export Guarantee to receive export payments.

What's the payback period for a typical domestic solar PV installation?

It varies significantly by location, electricity tariff, and self-consumption rate. A rough estimate: a 4kWp system generating 3,400kWh/year, with 50% self-consumed at 30p/kWh (saving £510) and 50% exported at 15p/kWh (earning £255), saves/earns approximately £765/year. At a system cost of £7,000, payback is around 9 years. With battery storage, self-consumption rises but so does the cost.

Can I install solar PV if I'm already a qualified electrician but not MCS-certified?

You can install the electrical works (connection to consumer unit, generation meter, grid connection) as a qualified electrician under Part P. However, without MCS certification, the installation doesn't qualify for the Smart Export Guarantee, and many customer finance products also require MCS. Most domestic customers expect MCS certification. In practice, it's not economical to offer solar PV installation without becoming MCS-certified.

What's the difference between a string inverter and microinverters?

A string inverter connects all panels in series (or parallel strings) to one central inverter. If one panel is shaded, it can drag down the output of the whole string. Microinverters fit one per panel and convert DC to AC at the panel — each panel operates independently, so shading of one doesn't affect others. Microinverters are typically 20-30% more expensive but can deliver 10-25% more generation on partially shaded roofs. They're also better for monitoring (you can see individual panel performance).

Regulations & Standards