Solar Panel Efficiency Calculator: How Much Power Can You Generate?

☀️ Solar Panel Efficiency Calculator

Estimate daily & annual power output from your solar array based on panel specs, area, and sun hours

Quick Presets
📋 System Configuration
📊 Your Solar Output Estimate
💡 Panel Type Efficiency Comparison
20–23%
Monocrystalline
15–17%
Polycrystalline
10–13%
Thin-Film (CdTe)
22–25%
Bifacial Mono
21–23%
PERC Mono
23–25%
HJT (Heterojunction)
22–24%
TOPCon
29%+
Lab Record (R&D)
🌞 Peak Sun Hours by US Region
Region State Examples Peak Sun Hrs/Day Annual kWh per kW
Southwest DesertAZ, NM, NV5.5 – 6.51,900 – 2,300
SoutheastFL, GA, TX4.5 – 5.51,500 – 1,900
California CoastCA (coastal)4.5 – 5.51,500 – 1,900
MidwestIL, MO, KS4.0 – 4.81,300 – 1,600
Mid-AtlanticVA, MD, NC4.0 – 4.51,300 – 1,500
NortheastNY, MA, CT3.5 – 4.21,100 – 1,400
Pacific NorthwestWA, OR3.0 – 3.81,000 – 1,250
Alaska / CanadaAK, Canada2.5 – 3.5800 – 1,100
📐 System Size vs. Typical Home Usage
System Size Panels (400W) Daily Output (4 PSH) Annual Output
1 kW3 panels~3.4 kWh/day~1,240 kWh/yr
2 kW5 panels~6.9 kWh/day~2,520 kWh/yr
3 kW8 panels~10.3 kWh/day~3,760 kWh/yr
5 kW13 panels~17.2 kWh/day~6,280 kWh/yr
7 kW18 panels~24.1 kWh/day~8,800 kWh/yr
10 kW25 panels~34.5 kWh/day~12,600 kWh/yr
15 kW38 panels~51.7 kWh/day~18,900 kWh/yr
20 kW50 panels~69.0 kWh/day~25,200 kWh/yr
📏 Tilt Angle Efficiency Factor
Tilt Angle Best Latitude Relative Output Factor Notes
0° (flat)0° (equator)0.87Good in tropics only
10°10°0.90Low pitch rooftops
20°20°0.95Mild climate regions
30°30° (optimal US South)1.00Reference standard
35°35°1.00Most US rooftops
40°40°0.98Typical US North
45°45°0.96Steep roofs
60°60° (Nordic)0.88High latitudes
🔧 Common System Loss Sources
Loss Source Typical Range High-Quality System Older System
Inverter Conversion4 – 6%3 – 4%6 – 8%
Wiring / DC Resistance1 – 3%1%2 – 3%
Temperature Derating3 – 7%3%5 – 8%
Soiling / Dust1 – 5%1%4 – 5%
Mismatch1 – 2%1%2%
Shading0 – 30%0%Varies
Total (excl. shading)10 – 23%9 – 11%19 – 26%
💡 Tip — Peak Sun Hours vs. Daylight Hours: Peak sun hours are NOT the same as daylight hours. A peak sun hour equals 1,000 W/m² of irradiance. A 6-hour sunny day might only produce 4.5 peak sun hours due to morning/evening angle losses. Use your region’s actual PSH value for accurate results.
⚡ Tip — Temperature Coefficient: Solar panels lose efficiency as they heat up. Most panels have a temperature coefficient of -0.3% to -0.5% per °C above 25°C (77°F). On a hot rooftop at 65°C, a panel can lose 12–20% of its rated output. Factor this into your system loss percentage.

The efficiency of a Solar Panel comes down to one main spot: how many percent of the incoming sunshine truly turn into usable electricity. Take for instance a panel with 20% efficiency. That means that one from five parts of the sun energy that hits its surface turns into usable energy.

You might think that is low but it is quite a lot like the efficiency of a piston engine, that turns burning into motion.

How Solar Panels Turn Sunlight Into Power

Progress in the last ten years was truly wonderful. The typical efficiency of panels grew from about 15% to more than 23%. This shows big breakthroughs.

Current panels for sale usually have efficiency between 15% and 22%. Single crystal silicon panels reach 22-23%, while polycrystalline versions mostly stay at 15-17%. Here exists a trade-off.

Polycrystalline panels commonly have shorter lifetime and do not work as well over long time.

Some producers already reach higher levels. The N-type TOPCon cell of Trina Solar marks 25.9%. The Tiger Neo 3.0 of Jinko Solar reached 24.8%, and the HI-MO6 of Longi is at 23.3%.

Thsoe values simply keep growing.

In labs, the results become truly exciting. Scientists succeeded with cells that get close to 50% efficiency, where the highest record is 40.6%. But here comes a limit; the second law of thermodynamics lays a hard ceiling above everything.

A Solar Panel cell can not reach 100% efficiency, end of story. Hybrid perovskite-silicon cells already reached 33.2% and a theoretical limit of 37-38%. Add a third layer on top, and you can hope for 40% or more.

Work on layered cells that react to different wavelengths and let unused light pass threw to other layers can give even more energy.

Temperature strongly affects the efficiency. When panels warm, their output drops. Silicon cells lose around 0.45% of power for every degree of temperature increase.

Strangely, panels work better in cold, sometimes they boost by 10-15%. Pretty funny, if you think about it.

The position of panels matters more than one assumes. Tilt it at 45 degrees to the sun, and it beats a flat setup. Local conditions also play a role.

In Detroit, at about 42.8 degrees north, the sun reaches 47.2 degrees above the horizon at midday March 21st, which gives only 73% of the rated efficiency under ideal conditions. Smoke and clouds really hurt the output. Australian rooftop panels lost up to 45% of production during dense smoky days.

In California it happened the same way, smoke and ash dropped efficiency by 35% or more.

High efficiency truly matters only when space is tight. A 300-watt panel gives 300 watts anyway, but a 22% model needs less roof area than a 15% one for the same power. Multi-layer panels cost much more to produce thansingle-layer ones, so the best efficiencies come with a high price.

Solar Panel Efficiency Calculator: How Much Power Can You Generate?

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