A homeowner uses 28 kWh per day and gets 5.2 peak sun hours in their area. Before the site inspection, you need an estimated system size and roof area requirement to see if it is even feasible.
System kW = Daily kWh ÷ (Sun hours × Efficiency)
1 What this calculator does
Estimates the required solar PV system size in kW from daily energy consumption, peak sun hours and system efficiency. Shows approximate panel count and roof area needed. Guides selection of the next standard system size.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
System size (kWp) = Daily energy use (kWh) / (Peak sun hours x System efficiency)
System efficiency: 0.75-0.85 (accounts for inverter, cable and temperature losses)
Panels = Ceiling(System kWp x 1000 / Panel watt rating)
Roof area = Panels x Panel area (m²) x 1.25 (25% spacing clearance)
A solar panel rated at 400W generates that power under Standard Test Conditions (STC). In real conditions, efficiency losses from heat (panels are less efficient when hot), inverter conversion and cable resistance reduce actual output to about 75-85% of the rated figure. Dividing the daily energy requirement by the effective daily generation (peak hours x efficiency) gives the required system size. Peak sun hours are location-specific -- Bureau of Meteorology provides data for Australian locations.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
System size: 28 / (5.2 x 0.80) = 28 / 4.16System size: 120 / (4.8 x 0.78) = 120 / 3.744Solar covers daytime use + charges battery | System needs to generate approximately 18 x 1.4 to account for export and battery inefficiency = 25 kWh equivalent | System: 25/(4.5x0.80)4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using energy consumption from the electricity bill without adjusting for the bill period | Bill is in kWh for 90 days -- dividing by 90 gives daily average but seasonal variation is ignored | Summer or winter bias in the estimate | Use the lowest seasonal quarter for system sizing to avoid over-investing for self-sufficiency during low-production periods. Summer sizing will result in export in summer and shortfall in winter. |
| Not checking network export limits before specifying system size | Sizing on consumption without checking grid rules | Larger system installed but export is curtailed -- system never reaches payback | Check the network connection application requirements (DNSP rules) before committing to a system size. Many networks limit single-phase export to 5 kW even on a 10 kW system. |
| Using panel efficiency instead of system efficiency for the calculation | Confusing panel STC efficiency with overall system efficiency | System significantly undersized -- does not meet consumption targets | System efficiency (0.75-0.85) accounts for inverter conversion losses, cable resistance, temperature derating and soiling. Panel efficiency (typically 20-22%) is a separate specification used to calculate panel physical size, not system output. |
| Not checking roof orientation and tilt | Assuming all roof space is equally productive | North-facing assessment used for east-west orientation -- system produces significantly less | North-facing at the local latitude tilt is optimal in Australia. East-west split systems can be effective for self-consumption. South-facing panels in AU produce 30-40% less than north-facing -- rarely worthwhile. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
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