Solar Panels on Roofs: Structural Loading, Roofer Responsibilities & Waterproofing

Quick Answer: A roofer's responsibility for a solar panel installation is limited to the weatherproofing of penetrations and tile/slate surrounds — the electrical and structural engineering aspects are the domain of the MCS-certified PV installer. However, roofers must understand the structural loading implications (PV panels add 10–25kg/m²), the correct method for making penetrations watertight, and the planning requirements (solar panels on domestic roofs are usually permitted development but with conditions).

Summary

Solar photovoltaic (PV) installation on existing UK homes has accelerated dramatically since the introduction of the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) and the broader energy cost crisis. Millions of UK homes now have rooftop PV, and the roofing trade has had to adapt — roofers are frequently called to fix PV installations that were poorly waterproofed at the penetration points, and to carry out re-roofing work on roofs that already have solar panels.

The interfaces between the roofing contractor and the PV installer are critical points where responsibility must be clearly understood. The PV installer is responsible for the panel, mounting rails, electrical connections, and inverter. The roofer is responsible for ensuring the roof remains watertight at all points where the mounting hardware penetrates or bears on the tile/slate covering. In practice, many PV installations are done without a qualified roofer's involvement at all — which is why solar-related roof leaks are a growing segment of roofing repair work.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Roof Type Solar PV Compatibility Notes
Plain tiles (clay or concrete) Good Through-roof fixings standard
Interlocking concrete tiles Good Tile hooks common
Natural slate Possible More difficult — slates crack around fixings; lead soakers essential
Fibre cement slate Possible As natural slate — careful drilling required
EPDM flat roof Good (specialist ballasted or bonded system) Different mounting system; PV installer specifies
Metal seam roof Good Clamp system — no penetrations
Asphalt/felt flat roof Possible (specialist) Weight distribution and penetration care needed
Listed building or conservation area Restricted May require LBC or planning — always check

Detailed Guidance

Structural Assessment

Before any PV installation, the structural capacity of the roof must be confirmed. This is primarily the PV installer's responsibility (MCS requirement), but roofers should be aware of the indicators of concern:

If there is any concern, instruct the customer to obtain a structural engineer's sign-off before the PV installation proceeds.

Roofer Involvement in PV Installation

A roofer may be involved in a PV installation in several ways:

During new PV installation:

Callout for existing leaking PV installation:

Penetration Sealing Methods

Lead soaker around through-roof fixing:

  1. Calculate the soaker size: upstand height behind the fixing (minimum 75mm), width (fixing OD + 75mm each side), and downstand over tiles below (minimum 150mm)
  2. Form the soaker from Code 4 lead sheet. Upstand must be dressed against the rafter/tile and sealed at the sides with turned-in edges (not open at the side)
  3. Drill the fixing hole through the soaker, tile, batten, and rafter
  4. Insert stainless steel fixing bolt through soaker and waterproof washer
  5. Seal around the bolt head with appropriate sealant (EPDM-compatible or bituminous sealant)
  6. Replace tiles below the soaker, overlapping the soaker's downstand by minimum 100mm

Proprietary sealing kits: Several manufacturers (Ejot, Sika, Wirquin) supply proprietary through-roof fixing kits with pre-formed EPDM gaskets. These are quicker to install than custom lead soakers and are tested and approved for various tile profiles. They must be specific to the tile profile — a gasket for a flat concrete tile will not seal correctly on a deep profiled tile.

Tile hook systems (no penetration): Some mounting systems use a hook that slides under the existing tile and hooks over the tile batten. No roof penetration is made, but the mounting rail bears on the tile structure. The hook must be a certified product for the specific tile type — using an incorrect hook on a tile profile it is not designed for risks tile cracking or lifting.

Re-Roofing Under Existing Solar Panels

Re-roofing work on a property with existing PV requires careful coordination:

  1. The PV installer (or an MCS-qualified engineer) must de-energise and remove the panels before the roofer begins stripping. Never attempt to move a live PV panel.
  2. Document the existing fixing positions and panel layout before removal.
  3. Complete the re-roof (new felt, battens, tiles) and confirm the new surface is weathertight.
  4. The PV installer reinstalls the panels using new or existing fixings — all penetrations re-sealed.
  5. The roofer confirms the final waterproofing at all penetration points.

Quote the de-installation and re-installation as a separate line in the contract, and clarify that this is the PV installer's scope — not the roofer's.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is planning permission needed for solar panels?

For most domestic properties in England, installing solar panels is permitted development under GPDO 2015 Part 14 Class A, provided: (a) the panels are on a dwelling, (b) no panel protrudes more than 200mm above the roof plane, (c) no panel is above the highest point of the roof, and (d) the property is not a listed building. Conservation areas may have additional restrictions — check with the LPA before assuming PD applies.

Can a roofer install solar panels themselves?

No — not the electrical aspects. The electrical connection of PV panels to the inverter and mains supply must be carried out by a person registered on an appropriate scheme (Part P competent person scheme, specifically the MCS scheme for solar PV). A roofer with an MCS certification can carry out the full installation; without it, the electrical work must be a separate contractor.

What are the common leak locations on solar panel installations?

The most common: (1) Through-roof fixings that were sealed with mastic only (no lead soaker or EPDM gasket) — the mastic fails within 3–5 years and becomes an easy water pathway; (2) Cracked tiles adjacent to fixings that were drilled or tightened without adequate care; (3) Tile hooks that were installed on an incompatible tile profile, causing uplift and a gap at the overlap.

Regulations & Standards