Switching to commercial solar panels is one of the few decisions that cuts a UK firm's running costs straight away, protects it from rising energy prices, and usually pays for itself inside four to eight years. By generating power on your own roof, you stop buying so much expensive grid electricity, you earn money for the surplus you sell back, and – once the right grants and tax relief are applied – the bill to get started can be a good deal smaller than business owners expect.
Picture a mid-sized manufacturer in the West Midlands. Machines hum all day, the lights never go off, and every quarter the electricity bill lands like a punch. That firm has two choices: keep paying whatever the market demands, or fit
solar panels for business use and start making its own power. More and more UK companies are choosing the second option, and here’s how it works, explained in straightforward terms.
So, what exactly is commercial solar?
Strip away the jargon, and commercial solar is straightforward. Panels on your roof turn daylight into electricity. Your business uses that power first, and whatever you don't use flows back to the grid, where your supplier pays you for it.
The clever bit is in those two streams of value. Power you use yourself replaces electricity you'd otherwise buy at roughly 24-28p per unit. Power you export earns you somewhere between 3p and 15p per unit. So, the trick with any good commercial solar installation is to use as much of your own generation as possible during the working day, which suits factories, warehouses, farms, offices and shops down to the ground.
How much will a system cost, and when does it pay back?
This is the question every owner asks first, so let's get straight to the numbers. Here's a realistic overview for the UK in 2026:
For sites spending £8,000–£15,000 a year on electricity, a 15-30 kW system typically costs £18,000–£40,000 to install, saving roughly £4,000–£8,000 a year, with payback in 5-8 years. For £20,000–£40,000 annual spend, a 50-80 kW system runs £50,000–£85,000, saving £10,000–£18,000 a year, paying back in 4-7 years. For sites spending £60,000+ annually, a 150 kW+ system costs £120,000–£200,000+, saving £25,000+ a year, with payback in 4-6 years.
These are indicative figures for UK commercial sites in 2026; your result depends on roof, usage and tariff (sources: industry market data; GOV.UK business energy guidance).
After payback, the panels keep working for another 20 years or more – that's two decades of cheap, predictable power while everyone else rides the energy market's ups and downs.
There's a second income on top, too. Through the Smart Export Guarantee (SEG), overseen by Ofgem, larger energy suppliers must pay you for the electricity you export. Your commercial solar panel installation has to be MCS-accredited to qualify, so this is one more reason to use a proper accredited firm. Think of export income as a bonus — most of your savings will come from using your own electricity.
Can my business get a grant for solar?
Here's an honest picture. Big cash grants for solar are thinner on the ground than they used to be – the UK Shared Prosperity Fund, once the main pot for
solar panel grants, shut to new applicants on 31 March 2026. But that doesn't mean the support has dried up. Most of the real value now comes through the tax system and a handful of targeted schemes.
Prefer to spend nothing up front? A Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) lets an outside investor pay for, own and maintain the whole commercial solar panel installation, while you simply buy the cleaner power it makes at a lower, fixed rate. It’s a practical way to start saving without using your capital budget.
What does the process actually involve?
A capable commercial solar installer keeps it simple for you:
● Survey first. An engineer studies your roof, your half-hourly usage and your grid connection.
● A clear design. You get a quote showing expected output, savings, payback and any funding you qualify for.
● Paperwork sorted. Your installer handles grid applications and any planning or structural checks.
● Quick install. Most commercial jobs wrap up in days to a few weeks, with little fuss on site.
● Switch on and watch. The system is certified to MCS standards and linked to an app so you can track your savings live.
Adding commercial solar battery storage is well worth a look for sites that draw power in the evening – it banks daytime generation so you use more of your own electricity and lean on the grid less.
How do I choose the right solar energy company?
There are plenty of solar energy companies out there now, and not all are equal. Run through this before signing:
1. Is the firm MCS-accredited? Without it, your warranty and your SEG payments are at risk.
2. Do they install for businesses regularly? A specialist in commercial solar panels will handle a working site far better than a domestic-only outfit.
3. Are the savings based on your real data? Be wary of rosy averages.
4. What aftercare is offered? Ask about warranties and commercial solar maintenance.
5. Is everything in writing? Guarantees, performance figures and grant support should all be on paper.
It’s helpful to gather two or three commercial solar quotes, just be sure to compare panels, inverters, and warranties on a like-for-like basis.
Why firms across the UK choose Excel Energy UK
Excel Energy UK fits commercial solar installation UK projects of every shape, from a corner shop to a sprawling distribution centre. Each system is MCS-accredited, each quote is built from your true consumption, and our own engineers see the job through from first survey to switch-on. We also lay out the commercial solar panel grants, tax relief and finance options in language you can act on.
Because Excel UK works only in the UK market, we know the regional schemes, the grid process and what it takes to install on a busy commercial site without holding up your day. The result is a commercial solar panel installation UK businesses can rely on, and savings that appear on your very next bill.
The bottom line
Energy costs aren’t going back to previous levels. Installing commercial solar lets you lock in cheaper power for decades while also reducing your carbon footprint. Get a free, no-pressure assessment of your savings and funding from Excel Energy UK.
Click here to request your quote or read more about the grants your business could claim today.