How Many Solar Panels Does My House Need?
The average US home needs between 17 and 25 solar panels to offset 100% of its electricity consumption. But that number swings significantly depending on how much electricity your household uses, how many peak sun hours your location receives, and the wattage of the panels you choose. This guide walks you through the exact calculation.
The Three-Step Formula
Calculating your solar panel count comes down to three variables:
- Your annual electricity consumption (kWh)
- Your location's peak sun hours per day
- The wattage of the panels being installed
Step 1: Find Your Annual Electricity Usage
Look at your last 12 monthly utility bills and add up the kilowatt-hours (kWh) used each month. Most utilities print this on the bill; you can also log into your utility's online portal.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the average American household used approximately 10,500 kWh in 2025. California households average slightly lower — around 6,600–7,200 kWh annually — thanks to mild weather reducing heating and cooling loads. Texas and Florida households average 14,000–15,000 kWh due to intensive air conditioning.
| Household Size | Annual Usage (US Avg) | Annual Usage (CA) |
|---|---|---|
| 1–2 people, apartment | 5,000–7,000 kWh | 3,500–5,000 kWh |
| 3–4 people, average home | 9,000–12,000 kWh | 6,000–8,500 kWh |
| 4–6 people, large home | 13,000–18,000 kWh | 9,000–13,000 kWh |
| High-usage (pool, EV, large AC) | 18,000–25,000 kWh | 13,000–20,000 kWh |
Step 2: Look Up Your Peak Sun Hours
Peak sun hours (PSH) measures how many hours per day of full-intensity sunlight your location receives on average. This is not the same as daylight hours — it's the equivalent hours of 1,000 watts per square meter of direct radiation.
NREL (National Renewable Energy Laboratory) publishes PSH data for every US zip code through the PVWatts Calculator. Here are averages for major metros:
| City | Peak Sun Hours/Day | Annual kWh per kW installed |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix, AZ | 6.5 | 1,750–1,900 |
| Los Angeles, CA | 5.6 | 1,500–1,650 |
| San Diego, CA | 5.4 | 1,450–1,600 |
| Dallas, TX | 5.2 | 1,400–1,550 |
| Miami, FL | 5.1 | 1,380–1,520 |
| Atlanta, GA | 4.8 | 1,300–1,450 |
| New York, NY | 4.4 | 1,180–1,320 |
| Seattle, WA | 3.8 | 1,020–1,150 |
| Boston, MA | 4.2 | 1,130–1,280 |
| Denver, CO | 5.5 | 1,480–1,630 |
Step 3: Apply the Formula
Let's work through an example. A Los Angeles family uses 9,000 kWh per year, has 5.6 peak sun hours, and wants to install 400-watt panels:
Panels = 9,000 ÷ (5.6 × 365 × 0.4)
Panels = 9,000 ÷ 817.6
Panels ≈ 11 panels (rounded up to 12 for efficiency losses)
Always add 10–25% to account for system inefficiencies: temperature losses, wiring resistance, inverter conversion losses, and shading. So 12 raw panels becomes 14–15 panels in a real design.
Panel Wattage in 2026
Standard residential solar panels in 2026 produce between 380W and 430W per panel. The ongoing improvements in cell efficiency mean today's panels produce significantly more power in the same physical footprint than panels from 5–10 years ago.
- Budget panels (Tier 2 manufacturers): 380–395W
- Mid-range panels (Q CELLS, Canadian Solar, Silfab): 395–415W
- Premium panels (SunPower Maxeon, REC Alpha): 415–440W
A 400W panel is a reasonable middle ground for calculations. Using 400W panels vs. 380W panels on the same roof would give you about 5% more output per panel — reducing the total panel count needed by approximately 1–2 panels on a typical system.
Roof Space Requirements
Standard 60-cell and 72-cell residential panels measure approximately 65–68 inches × 39–42 inches (about 17–19 square feet per panel). A 20-panel system requires roughly 340–380 square feet of usable roof space.
However, not all roof space is usable. Setbacks from edges and ridges, HVAC equipment, vents, and chimneys all reduce available area. A roof with 800 square feet of total south-facing surface might yield only 500–600 square feet of usable panel area after setbacks.
This is why AI-based roof analysis (like Sun Pilot's free analysis tool) is more accurate than generic online calculators — it uses your actual roof geometry from satellite data, not an average estimate.
Roof Orientation & Its Impact on System Size
| Roof Orientation | Output vs. South-Facing | Panels Needed (10kW goal) |
|---|---|---|
| ★ South | 100% (baseline) | 25 panels |
| Southwest / Southeast | 92–96% | 26–27 panels |
| East or West | 75–85% | 29–33 panels |
| North | 55–65% | 38–45 panels |
Assumes 400W monocrystalline panels, tilt 20–30°, no significant shading. California conditions. Source: NREL PVWatts v8
Does Roof Orientation Matter?
Significantly. In the Northern Hemisphere, south-facing roofs receive the most direct sunlight throughout the day. Here's how orientation affects energy production relative to due-south:
- Due South: 100% of optimal production
- Southeast or Southwest: 90–95% of optimal
- Due East or Due West: 75–85% of optimal
- North-facing: 50–70% of optimal (rarely recommended)
If your primary roof faces east-west, you'll need more panels to generate the same annual output as a south-facing system. Your installer will design around this using NREL's PVWatts tool or Google Solar API data.
What If My Roof Isn't Big Enough?
If your usable roof space limits you to fewer panels than your usage demands, you have three options:
- High-efficiency panels: Premium panels (SunPower Maxeon at 22%+ efficiency) generate more watts per square foot, letting you fit more production into limited space
- Partial offset: Size your system to offset 70–80% of consumption, keeping the economics strong without needing to expand onto less-ideal roof planes
- Ground-mounted array: If you have yard space, a ground-mounted system can supplement or replace rooftop panels — typically at 10–15% higher cost per watt due to additional structural work
Find Your Exact Panel Count — Free
Sun Pilot's AI analyzes your actual roof using Google satellite data to calculate the precise number of panels that fit your home and offset your electricity bill.
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