How big a solar system do you actually need?
Sizing a solar array is the single most important decision in a residential installation. Go too small and you keep paying the utility for power you could have generated yourself; go too big and you may overproduce in a state where exported energy is credited well below the retail rate. The goal is to match your system to your real consumption and your local sunshine — and that is exactly what this calculator does.
The core formula is simple. Take your annual electricity consumption in kilowatt-hours (kWh) and divide it by your location’s production ratio — the number of kWh a one-kilowatt (kW) system produces in a year where you live. In the sunny Southwest that ratio can exceed 1,700, while the cloudier Northeast may sit closer to 1,150. A household using 12,000 kWh per year in a region with a 1,400 production ratio needs roughly 8.6 kW of solar panels.
Where to find your numbers
Your annual usage is printed on your utility bills — add up the kWh from the last twelve months for the most accurate figure, since usage swings with heating and cooling seasons. For sunshine, this tool uses peak sun hours, the daily average of full-strength sunlight. You can accept the regional default or, for a precise figure, use our address-based Solar Potential Estimator, which queries the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s PVWatts model using your exact latitude and longitude, roof tilt, and orientation.
From kilowatts to panels and roof space
Once you know the kW size, translating it into hardware is straightforward. Modern residential panels are around 400 watts each, so an 8 kW system is about twenty panels. Each panel needs roughly 21 square feet, and after you account for spacing, fire setbacks, vents, and shaded areas, plan on about a third more roof than the bare panel area. Our calculator reports an estimated gross roof area so you can sanity-check whether your roof can host the system before an installer ever visits.
Should you oversize or undersize?
The right offset target depends on your state’s net-metering rules. Where full retail-rate net metering is available, sizing to 100% of usage — or slightly above to cover a future electric vehicle or heat pump — usually maximizes value. In states that have moved to net billing with lower export credits, many homeowners size to cover the energy they consume during daylight hours and add a battery rather than exporting cheaply. Use the offset slider to model both scenarios, then check your state’s rules in our Incentive Finder.
Remember that this is a planning estimate. A professional installer will refine it with a shade analysis, your roof’s exact pitch and azimuth, and equipment specifications. Still, arriving at your consultation already knowing your approximate system size puts you in a far stronger position to compare quotes and avoid being upsold.