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Solar panel costs

Solar panel costs in Teesside

Transparent, fixed-price solar in Teesside from £4,999 for a 4kW system. Teesside’s east-coast position gives the area approximately 1,160 peak sun hours per year, with the flat, low-shading suburban estates of Ingleby Barwick, Coulby Newham and Marton among the strongest residential solar conditions in the North East..

Solar system prices in Teesside

Prices below are full-install costs by our fully certified team — covering panels, inverter, mounting, scaffolding, electrical work, install registration, Northern Powergrid DNO notification and Smart Export Guarantee setup. There are no hidden costs.

4kW (10 panels)

£4,999

+ £3,500–£5,000 for 5kWh battery

Standard 2-3 bed semi

6kW (15 panels)

£6,500

+ £4,500–£6,500 for 10kWh battery

3-4 bed detached with higher usage

10kW (25 panels)

£9,500

+ £6,000–£8,500 for 15kWh battery

Large family home or homes with EV + heat pump

Prices subject to survey. Exceptional access requirements (scaffolding over 3 storeys, listed buildings, large roof reinforcement) may attract additional cost — we'll always quote in advance.

Payback and savings in Teesside

Teesside’s east-coast position gives the area approximately 1,160 peak sun hours per year, with the flat, low-shading suburban estates of Ingleby Barwick, Coulby Newham and Marton among the strongest residential solar conditions in the North East. A typical 4kW system in Teesside generates 3,250–3,650 kWh per year. Combined with current grid electricity prices and Smart Export Guarantee rates, that gives most homes a payback of 6–9 years on solar-only, dropping to 5–7 years when paired with a battery on a time-of-use tariff like Octopus Go or Intelligent Octopus.

Over the panels' 25-year warranty period, a Teesside homeowner can typically expect £18,000–£28,000 in combined bill savings and SEG income from a 4kW system, or more with a battery.

6-9 yrs

Typical payback (solar only)

5-7 yrs

Payback with battery

£800-1,400

Year 1 bill savings, 4kW

4-24p

SEG export rate per kWh

What affects the cost in Teesside

Most Teesside homes fall within our standard pricing bands above. The main variables that can move the price are:

  • Roof complexity

    Multi-pitch or hipped roofs in Teesside need more panel arrangement work and sometimes more mounting kit.

  • Access

    Three-storey properties or hard-to-scaffold houses (back lanes, tight terraced streets) attract additional scaffolding cost.

  • Inverter & battery

    A hybrid inverter is included; a separate battery inverter or a high-capacity battery (15kWh+) pushes the total higher.

  • Electrical upgrades

    A small minority of older homes need a consumer unit upgrade for the install — surveyed in advance.

  • Conservation or listed status

    Some streets in Teesside sit in conservation areas. Standard solar usually still qualifies under permitted development, but listed buildings may need consent and a different panel finish.

Local context

Why Teesside matters for solar pricing

Teesside is the most polarised market we install across. On the same day we will quote a 3kW front-roof terrace solar job in central Middlesbrough or Stockton, a 6–10kW solar + 10–13.5kWh battery + 7kW EV charger on a detached new-build in Ingleby Barwick, Nunthorpe or Yarm, and an air source heat pump retrofit for an off-gas-grid stone cottage in Skelton or Loftus. Northern Powergrid is the DNO for every postcode from TS1 to TS29 and DL1 to DL3, so we use a single pre-approved G99/G98 process across the entire region.

Council

Tees Valley Combined Authority (Middlesbrough, Stockton-on-Tees, Hartlepool, Redcar and Cleveland, Darlington)

Net-zero target 2034

Population

700,000

Tees Valley Combined Authority area (ONS Census 2021, approximate)

Off-gas-grid

~6%

of dwellings

Avg EPC

D

most common band

Housing stock in Teesside

34%

Terraced

30%

Semi-detached

22%

Detached

14%

Flats

Conservation areas to be aware of

  • Yarm
  • Norton
  • Linthorpe
  • Saltburn-by-the-Sea
  • Headland (Hartlepool)
  • Darlington Town Centre

Listed-building density: medium

Local landmarks

  • Transporter Bridge
  • Tees Barrage
  • Saltburn Pier
  • Roseberry Topping
  • Head of Steam (Darlington Railway Museum)

Economic context

Teesside hosts the UK’s largest freeport at Teesworks, the Net Zero Teesside carbon capture and hydrogen cluster, the Hartlepool nuclear station, the Wilton chemicals complex and a fast-growing offshore wind supply chain at Port of Tyne and Hartlepool. The Tees Valley Combined Authority’s industrial decarbonisation programme is the most ambitious in England.

Energy context

The Tees Valley boroughs run between 2030 and 2050 council net-zero targets, with Middlesbrough Council’s 2034 target the most aggressive. Mains gas dominates the urban housing stock, but East Cleveland villages (Loftus, Skelton, Brotton, Skinningrove, Boosbeck) sit off the gas grid, where air source heat pumps with solar and battery are typically the only realistic decarbonisation route.

Neighbourhoods and surrounding areas we cover in Teesside

We install across the whole of Teesside and its surrounding Tees Valley catchment — including the following neighbourhoods, villages and outlying postcodes (and many more not listed):

MiddlesbroughStockton-on-TeesHartlepoolRedcarDarlingtonBillinghamNortonYarmSaltburnGuisborough

Not seeing your area? Call us — coverage extends well beyond named areas across the wider Tees Valley region.

Worked example

Year-by-year payback for a typical 4kW Teesside system

Imagine a typical Teesside household: a 3-bed semi using around 3,800 kWh of electricity per year at a unit rate of around 28p/kWh. They install a 4kW solar system for £4,999 and add a 5kWh battery for another £4,000, total £8,999. Here's how the numbers play out:

Item Per year
Solar generation in Teesside (4kW) 3,250–3,650 kWh
Direct self-consumption (no battery) ~30-40%
Self-consumption with 5kWh battery ~70-80%
Electricity bill saved (with battery, ~28p/kWh) ~£700-900
SEG export income (~15p/kWh average) ~£100-150
Total annual benefit ~£800-£1,050

At those numbers, the £8,999 capital cost pays back in roughly 9-11 years. Over the panels' 25-year warranty, the system continues to generate income for a further 14-16 years after payback — typical 25-year lifetime benefit is £18,000-£28,000 in combined savings and export income, excluding any future electricity price rises (which materially improve the numbers further).

Sensitivity: every 2p/kWh increase in retail electricity prices adds roughly £75-£100 to the annual benefit. Every 5p/kWh increase in SEG export rates adds roughly £30-£60. Both have been rising historically.

Smart Export Guarantee

Choosing an SEG supplier in Teesside

The Smart Export Guarantee is paid by your electricity supplier — not by the government — and rates vary materially. You're free to choose any SEG supplier regardless of who supplies your import electricity. Current notable options:

Octopus Outgoing Fixed

~15p/kWh fixed export rate. Among the best mainstream rates available. Requires a smart meter sending half-hourly readings.

Tesla Energy Plan

Up to 24p/kWh — currently the highest available SEG rate. Restricted to customers with a Tesla Powerwall battery installed.

Eon Next Export

~3-7p/kWh. Available to most customers. Lower than the leading offers but no requirement to switch import supplier.

British Gas Export & Earn

~6-15p/kWh depending on plan. Bundle options for customers also importing from British Gas.

Rates are reviewed periodically. We help you check current offers and register with your chosen supplier as part of the Teesside install — you don't need to research this independently.

Paying for it

Finance options for Teesside solar customers

Most Teesside customers pay cash from savings — solar is one of the highest-return uses of cash savings currently available in the UK. For customers who prefer to spread the cost:

  • 0% finance on selected packages — we offer 0% APR finance on certain product bundles, subject to status and affordability. Speak to us about which bundles currently qualify.
  • Green mortgages — several mortgage lenders offer rate discounts or additional borrowing for properties with renewable upgrades. Worth asking your mortgage broker before committing.
  • Home improvement loans — third-party personal loans typically run 8-12% APR. At these rates the monthly loan payment is usually below the monthly bill saving, so the system pays for itself from day one.

Local cost factors

What drives the final solar quote in Teesside

Two Teesside houses on the same street can end up with different solar quotes. The variables that move price most:

Roof complexity and panel count

Larger systems cost less per kW than smaller ones, because survey, scaffolding, DNO notification and MCS paperwork are fixed costs spread across more panels. A 6kW install isn't 1.5× a 4kW install — it's typically closer to 1.3×. For Teesside properties with the roof space, fitting all you can is usually the better economic decision.

Scaffolding access

Most Teesside properties are two-storey, which fits within our standard scaffolding allowance. Three-storey properties — common in central Teesside terraces — and properties with restricted access (back lanes, courtyards) attract additional scaffold cost, typically £200-500.

Battery sizing

Battery price scales with kWh capacity. A 5kWh battery typically adds £3,500-£5,000 to the install, 10kWh adds £4,500-£6,500, and 15kWh+ adds £6,000-£8,500. Most Teesside homes get the best payback from a 10kWh unit sized to cover evening and overnight consumption.

Conservation / heritage requirements

Properties in Teesside conservation areas (Yarm, Norton and others) may need all-black panels and sympathetic mounting. The hardware costs slightly more, but the difference is rarely more than £200-400 over a standard install.

Consumer unit and electrical upgrades

Teesside has a varied mix of housing ages. Pre-1980s properties sometimes need a consumer-unit upgrade as part of the install — we check during the free survey and quote it transparently if needed.

Quote red flags

How to spot a bad solar quote in Teesside

The solar industry has its share of high-pressure sales operations. If you're comparing quotes from multiple Teesside firms, here's what to watch for:

  • "Today only" pricing. Solar pricing is not time-pressured. If an installer is offering a 50% discount that disappears at the end of the visit, they're inflating the headline price first. Walk away — a good install will be available next week at the same fair price.
  • Vague "lifetime warranty" claims. A real warranty names specific component coverage periods (panels: 25 years performance; inverter: 10-12 years; workmanship: 5-10 years). "Lifetime" without a defined claims process is meaningless.
  • No 3D shading model. A real installer should show you a property-specific shading model with month-by-month generation projections. A generic "4kW = 3,500kWh" number isn't a real quote.
  • Inflated savings figures. Honest payback estimates assume realistic self-consumption (30-40% without battery, 70-80% with), realistic SEG rates (4-15p depending on supplier), and current — not projected — electricity prices. Quotes promising 4-year paybacks on a domestic 4kW system are almost always assuming unrealistic numbers.
  • No itemisation of what's included. A real quote itemises panels, inverter, mounting, electrics, scaffolding, DNO notification, install registration and warranty. A single "£8,499 for solar" line is hiding the breakdown.
  • Sales-led, not engineer-led. Some operations send a salesperson with a tablet who emails a quote later. Others (us included) send an engineer who's done thousands of Teesside-area surveys and can answer technical questions on the spot. The latter typically produces better-designed systems.
  • No MCS or RECC/HIES paperwork shown. Reputable installers will happily share their MCS registration number and consumer-code membership certificates. If they hesitate, there's a reason.

Our accreditations

Accredited, certified, and backed by independent standards

NICEIC Approved

D124458

Electrical contractor

Gas Safe Register

947841

Gas appliances

Heat Geek Trained

Heat pump design specialists

TrustMark

Government endorsed

Quality scheme

SafeContractor

Approved

H&S accredited

ISO 9001

2015

Quality management

ISO 14001

2015

Environmental management

ISO 45001

2018

OH&S management

PAS 2030

:2019

Retrofit standard

NAPIT

Member

Electrical inspection

F-Gas Certified

Air conditioning refrigerant

NICEIC Approved

D124458

Electrical contractor

Gas Safe Register

947841

Gas appliances

Heat Geek Trained

Heat pump design specialists

TrustMark

Government endorsed

Quality scheme

SafeContractor

Approved

H&S accredited

ISO 9001

2015

Quality management

ISO 14001

2015

Environmental management

ISO 45001

2018

OH&S management

PAS 2030

:2019

Retrofit standard

NAPIT

Member

Electrical inspection

F-Gas Certified

Air conditioning refrigerant

Every accreditation listed is independently verified. We carry the registration numbers — ask for any on request.

Solar panel cost FAQs for Teesside

How much do solar panels cost in Teesside?

A typical 4kW solar installation in Teesside starts from £4,999 fully fitted by our fully certified team. Adding a battery brings the total to between £7,500 and £10,000 depending on battery size. Larger systems (6kW–10kW) range from £6,500 to £9,500 before battery.

What is the payback period for solar panels in Teesside?

At Teesside's irradiance, a typical 4kW system generates 3,250–3,650 kWh per year. With current electricity prices and SEG export rates, payback typically sits at 6–9 years for systems without battery storage, and 5–7 years when paired with a battery on a time-of-use tariff.

Are there grants for solar panels in Teesside?

Domestic solar PV is no longer covered by the original Feed-in Tariff, but the Smart Export Guarantee pays you for any surplus electricity exported to the grid. Lower-income households in Teesside may qualify for the Home Upgrade Grant or other targeted local schemes. We'll advise on what applies during the survey.

What is the Smart Export Guarantee paying in Teesside?

Rates vary by supplier. As of 2026, Octopus Outgoing Fixed is paying around 15p/kWh, Eon Next around 4-7p/kWh, and Tesla Energy Plan among the highest at 24p/kWh for eligible Powerwall customers. We help you compare and register with your chosen SEG provider.

What is included in the £4,999 starting price?

The starting price covers a 4kW Tier-1 panel array, hybrid inverter, mounting kit, all electrical work, scaffolding, install registration, Northern Powergrid DNO notification and SEG application. There are no hidden add-ons — the quote is fixed.

Get a fixed-price solar quote in Teesside

No-pressure survey, fixed-price written quote, no obligation. We cover Teesside and the whole of Tees Valley.

Free, no-obligation survey Fixed-price written quote Fully-certified installation

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