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Solar Inverter Sizing

Recommended inverter size and DC/AC ratio from your panel array wattage. Free trade calculator for solar inverter sizing. Covers AU and US units.

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An installer has confirmed 25 x 400W panels (10 kW DC) for a single-phase residential connection. Before specifying the inverter model, you need to confirm the minimum inverter size and check compliance with AS/NZS 4777.1.

Solar Inverter Sizing
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Panel-to-inverter ratio must not exceed 133% under AS/NZS 4777.1 (2016). Single phase limit: 10 kVA. Three phase: 30 kVA.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the minimum inverter size required for a given panel DC capacity. Checks the DC-to-AC ratio against AS/NZS 4777.1 limits (maximum 1.33 ratio). Checks the system size against single-phase and three-phase grid connection limits. Flags any compliance issues.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Minimum inverter (kVA) = Panel DC capacity (kWp) / Derating factor Derating factor: 1.0 to 1.33 (typical 1.2-1.25 for standard residential) Panel-to-inverter ratio = Panel kWp / Inverter kVA (must not exceed 1.33 under AS/NZS 4777.1) Single-phase network limit: 10 kVA | Three-phase: typically 30 kVA (check DNSP)

An inverter sized smaller than the panel array allows more peak generation to be harvested in low-light conditions while clipping (limiting) output at peak irradiance. This is called 'oversizing' or 'clipping'. AS/NZS 4777.1 permits a DC-to-AC ratio of up to 1.33 -- meaning 13.3 kWp of panels on a 10 kW inverter. This is standard practice in Australia because panels rarely reach their STC rated output in real conditions.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
10 kWp system -- minimum inverter size
Given: Panel capacity: 10 kWp (25 x 400W) | Derating: 1.25 | Single phase
Working: Min inverter: 10 / 1.25 = 8.0 kVA | Ratio check: 10.0 / 8.0 = 1.25 | Under 1.33 -- compliant | Single-phase limit: 10 kVA | 8 kVA single phase: compliant
Answer: Minimum inverter: 8.0 kVA | Specify 8 kW or 10 kW single-phase inverter | AS/NZS 4777.1 compliant
💡 A 10 kW inverter is the more common choice for a 10 kW system for headroom. An 8 kW inverter would be acceptable at 1.25 ratio but would clip more often in high-irradiance conditions.
Standard
6.6 kW system (16 x 415W = 6.64 kWp)
Given: Panel capacity: 6.64 kWp | Derating: 1.2 | Single phase
Working: Min inverter: 6.64 / 1.2 = 5.53 kVA | Round up to 5 kW | Ratio: 6.64/5 = 1.33 -- exactly at maximum | Or use 6 kW: ratio = 6.64/6 = 1.11 -- comfortable
Answer: Minimum inverter: 5 kW (at maximum 1.33 ratio) | Recommended: 5 kW or 6 kW | Single-phase compliant (both below 10 kW)
💡 The common pairing of 6.6 kW of panels on a 5 kW inverter (ratio 1.32) is designed to sit at the limit. Many installers prefer 6 kW inverter for headroom and to avoid clipping.
Advanced
System exceeding single-phase limit
Given: Panel capacity: 13.3 kWp | Derating: 1.33 | Check phase requirements
Working: Min inverter: 13.3/1.33 = 10.0 kW | Single-phase limit: 10 kW | 10 kW inverter at single phase: at the limit | If network limit is 5 kW export: clipping will be significant
Answer: 10 kW system at single-phase limit -- works technically but network export may be limited | Consider three-phase connection for systems above 10 kWp
💡 Many network distributors (DNSPs) limit single-phase export to 5 kW even on a 10 kW inverter. A 13.3 kWp system would have significant clipping with 5 kW export limit.

4 Sanity check

AS/NZS 4777.1 DC:AC ratio limit
Maximum 1.33 (panel kWp / inverter kVA must not exceed 1.33)
Grid connection limits (typical AU)
Single phase: 10 kVA inverter | Three phase: 30 kVA (check with your DNSP)
Network connection limits vary by distributor -- check before specifying.
Common inverter sizes
Single phase: 3, 5, 6, 8, 10 kW | Three phase: 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 kW
Derating factor guidance
Standard residential AU: 1.2-1.25 | Coastal/hot climate: 1.15-1.20 | Cool climate: 1.25-1.33
Hotter climates produce more inverter clipping from temperature derating -- use lower derating factor.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Exceeding the 1.33 DC:AC ratio limit Oversizing the panel array significantly above what AS/NZS 4777.1 allows Non-compliant installation -- will fail grid connection inspection Panel DC capacity must not exceed 1.33 times the inverter AC rating. For a 10 kW inverter, maximum panel capacity is 13.3 kWp.
Not checking the DNSP's network connection limit before specifying inverter size Assuming all 10 kW single-phase installations are acceptable System installed but export limited by the network -- significant clipping and reduced savings Contact the network distributor for a network connection assessment before specifying large systems. Some networks limit single-phase export to 5 kW and require an export-limiting device for larger systems.
Using a single-phase inverter on a three-phase property supply Not checking the property's phase configuration before designing the system Unbalanced phase loading -- some networks require approval | May require a three-phase inverter Check the property's meter box for single-phase (two conductors: active and neutral) or three-phase (four conductors: three actives and neutral). Three-phase properties can use single-phase or three-phase inverters depending on the network requirements.
Not accounting for temperature derating in hot climates Using standard efficiency calculations without temperature derating Inverter clips more than expected in hot weather -- generation less than projected In hot climates (northern Australia, exposed north-facing roof installations) inverters derate output by 5-20% at high temperatures. Use a slightly larger inverter or apply a lower derating factor in the system size calculation.