How to Size a Solar System for Off-Grid
Power Systems·Intermediate·20 min read·Updated 2026-03-22·India edition

How to Size a Solar System for Off-Grid

PM Surya Ghar does NOT apply to off-grid systems. The PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana subsidy is for grid-connected rooftop solar only. Standalone off-grid systems are explicitly excluded. Verify with your local DISCOM before budgeting on this assumption.
Quick Answer

Off-grid solar sizing in India follows the same five steps but uses monsoon-season PSH as your design month — as low as 2.0h in the Northeast and 2.5h in Kerala. Design for July and your system works year-round.

1 kW complete off-grid system cost: ₹70,000–₹90,000. No PM Surya Ghar subsidy applies to off-grid systems.

OG

Off Grid Collective Editorial Team

Verified by licensed solar installers

Which System Fits Your Situation?

Pick the scenario closest to your situation. Each worked example later in this guide uses these exact loads and locations.

Van / Small Camper

Laptop, phone, fan, LED lights, 12V fridge. 400–800 Wh/day. Roof space is the real constraint — typically 1–2 panels maximum.

  • 200W panel, 100Ah LiFePO₄, 20A MPPT
  • Parts cost: $537–$687
See full worked example →

Off-Grid Cabin

Lighting, laptop, chest freezer, water pump, small appliances. 2,500–4,000 Wh/day. The most common off-grid scenario.

  • 1.1kW array, 9.6kWh LiFePO₄, 60A MPPT
  • Parts cost: $2,330–$3,550
See full worked example →

Full Homestead

Full kitchen, well pump, HVAC mini-split, workshop, EV charging. 12,000–18,000 Wh/day. Requires professional installation.

  • 4.5kW array, 56kWh LiFePO₄, dual MPPT
  • Installed cost: $25,000–$45,000
See full worked example →

What's in an Off-Grid Solar System

Four components every off-grid system needs, and how they connect:

Solar Panels (Array)

Convert sunlight to DC electricity. Sized in watts (W) or kilowatts (kW). In 2026, TOPCon panels (22–24% efficiency) are standard at $0.30–$0.50/W retail. Output varies with sun angle, temperature, and shading.

Charge Controller (MPPT)

Sits between panels and batteries. An MPPT controller harvests 20–30% more energy than PWM and is required for any system over 200W. Sized in amps — the controller amp rating determines how many panels you can connect.

Battery Bank

Stores energy for night and cloudy days. Sized in kilowatt-hours (kWh). LiFePO₄ is the 2026 default: 3,000–5,000 cycles, 80–100% usable depth of discharge, no maintenance.

Inverter

Converts DC battery power to 230V AC. Must be rated for your peak simultaneous load plus 20–25% surge headroom. Pure sine wave is required for sensitive electronics and variable-speed motors.

Power flow: Sun → Panels → Charge Controller → Battery Bank → Inverter → AC loads. DC loads (12V fridge, fans) connect directly via a fused DC bus, bypassing the inverter.
SolarPanelsDC sourceDCChargeControllerMPPTDCBatteryBankLiFePO₄DCInverter(Pure Sine)DC → ACACAC/DCLoadsappliancesSolar energy flows left to right through each component

Step 1: Calculate Your Daily Load (Wh/day)

Every correctly sized solar system starts here. List every device you'll run, multiply wattage by daily hours of use, and sum the total. Then add 10% for inverter losses and phantom loads. Use the power needs assessment guide to build a complete load list before buying anything.

Formula:

Device Watts × Hours/Day = Wh/day per device

Sum all devices × 1.10 (losses) = Total Daily Load (Wh)

DeviceWattsHrs/DayWh/Day
LED lighting (8 × 10W)805400
Laptop656390
Phone charging10220
Chest freezer (12 cu ft)15081,200
Water pump (on-demand)4000.5200
Ceiling fan508400
Subtotal2,610
+ 10% system losses2,871

This is a mid-range cabin load. Always overestimate by 10–15% on individual appliances — measuring with a Kill-A-Watt meter ($25) is more reliable than label wattages, which often show maximum rather than running power.

Typical Daily Energy Load by Setup TypeVan / RV~750 Wh/dayFull-time Cabin~3,500 Wh/dayHomestead~15,000 Wh/day05k10k15k Wh

Step 2: Find Your Monsoon-Month Peak Sun Hours

Peak Sun Hours (PSH) is not "hours of daylight." It's the number of hours per day your location receives the equivalent of full 1,000 W/m² irradiance. A location with 5 PSH receives the same total solar energy whether the sun shines weakly for 10 hours or strongly for 5. Always design for your monsoon-month PSH, not the annual average — your system must work when the sun is worst.

Monsoon-month PSH by India region (design for July, typically worst month):

India design rule: Use monsoon PSH as your design month, not the summer peak (which in Rajasthan can reach 7h+). A system sized for July will have surplus energy from October through May and reliably power your loads during the monsoon. Using summer PSH means you'll be short 30–50% of the time during rains.

Step 3: Size Your Solar Array

With your daily load and worst-month PSH, calculate the array wattage needed. The 0.75 system efficiency factor accounts for wiring losses (~3%), MPPT efficiency (~5%), temperature derating (~8%), and soiling (~5%). It's conservative, but real-world systems routinely validate it.

Panel Sizing Formula:

Array Watts = (Daily Load Wh ÷ Worst-Month PSH) ÷ 0.75

Example: 3,000 Wh ÷ 4.42 PSH (Texas Dec) ÷ 0.75 = 904W → round up to 1,100W (4 × 275W panels)

Panel Wiring: Series vs ParallelSERIES (higher voltage)Panel 120V / 5A+-Panel 220V / 5A+ChargeControllerResult: 40V × 5A = 200WVoltage adds • Current stays sameUse for: higher-voltage 24V/48V battery systemsPARALLEL (higher current)Panel A20V / 5APanel B20V / 5AChargeControllerResult: 20V × 10A = 200WCurrent adds • Voltage stays same

2026 Panel Technology: TOPCon is the Standard

TOPCon (Tunnel Oxide Passivated Contact) panels now hold over 65% of global market share. At 22–24% efficiency, a 400W TOPCon panel measures roughly 1.7m × 1.1m (67″ × 43″). PERC panels are still available but are being phased out of new production. In India, 1 kW of panels from Loom Solar or Waaree costs approximately ₹25,000 (IndiaMart pricing, Q1 2026).

Use the Solar System Calculator to run your exact numbers — it applies regional PSH data and the 0.75 efficiency factor automatically.

Step 4: Size Your Off-Grid Solar Battery Bank

Your battery bank must cover your loads for consecutive cloudy days — called "days of autonomy." Two to three days is the practical target for most off-grid homes. For LiFePO₄, use 80% depth of discharge (DoD); for AGM, use 50% DoD.

Battery Sizing Formula (LiFePO₄):

Battery kWh = (Daily Load Wh × Days Autonomy) ÷ 0.80 ÷ 1,000

Example: 3,000 Wh × 3 days ÷ 0.80 ÷ 1,000 = 11.25 kWh → select two 100Ah 48V batteries (9.6 kWh) or four 200Ah 24V (19.2 kWh)

Cold charging warning: LiFePO₄ must NOT be charged below 0°C (32°F) — this is the manufacturer minimum. Charging below this temperature causes permanent lithium plating, voiding your warranty and reducing capacity. Practitioners configure BMS charge cutoff at 5°C (41°F) as a safety buffer. In cold climates, use a battery enclosure with a heating element or a self-heating battery model. See the battery guide for cold-climate solutions.

Step 5: Choose Your System Voltage

System voltage (12V, 24V, or 48V) determines wiring gauge, charge controller compatibility, and inverter selection. Higher voltage = lower current = thinner, cheaper wire. Committing to a system voltage locks in all three major components — change it later and you're replacing everything.

System SizeRecommended VoltageWhy
Under 800W / Van builds12VSimple, cheap, wide component availability
800W – 3kW / Cabin24VBalances wire cost and component selection
3kW+ / Homestead48VRequired for high loads; dramatically lower wire losses

A 12V system running 1,000W pulls 83A through your wiring. A 48V system running the same load pulls only 21A — meaning wire that's 1/4 the cost and 1/4 the weight. For anything over 800W, 24V or 48V is not optional.

System Voltage Comparison12VUSE CASEVan / RVWIRE GAUGE NEEDED4 AWG for 20A runsPRACTICAL MAX~500W practical24VUSE CASESmall cabinWIRE GAUGE NEEDED8 AWG for 20A runsPRACTICAL MAX~1,500W practicalRECOMMENDED FOR 1.5kW+48VUSE CASECabin / HomesteadWIRE GAUGE NEEDED10 AWG for 20A runsPRACTICAL MAX5kW+ possibleHigher voltage = lower current = thinner wire = lower losses. Double the voltage → quarter the wire losses.

Step 6: Select Your Charge Controller and Inverter

MPPT Charge Controller Sizing

Controller amp rating = (Array Watts × 1.25 safety factor) ÷ System Voltage. Round up to the next standard size (10A, 20A, 30A, 40A, 60A, 80A, 100A).

Controller Sizing Formula:

Controller Amps = (Array Watts × 1.25) ÷ System Voltage

Example: 1,100W × 1.25 ÷ 24V = 57.3A → select 60A MPPT controller

Victron Energy remains the reliability benchmark. The SmartSolar 20A (van builds) retails at $158 from EcoDirect; the 100A unit costs $612.85 from ShopSolarKits. Budget brands cost less but have shorter warranties and limited firmware support. Full controller guidance in the charge controllers and power management guide.

Inverter Sizing

Inverter wattage must cover your peak simultaneous load — not your daily average. A chest freezer motor draws 3–5× its running wattage on startup. An undersized inverter trips on that surge.

ScenarioInverter SizeApprox Cost
Van / basic loads (no AC)300W$40–$80
Cabin (freezer + pump + lights)1,000–2,000W$150–$300
Homestead (HVAC + appliances)3,000–5,000W$350–$700

Worked Example: Van Build (200W System)

200W

Panel Array

1× TOPCon panel

1.2 kWh

Battery Capacity

100Ah 12V LiFePO₄

$537–$687

Estimated Parts Cost

DIY only

Scenario: Full-time van dwelling, western US, summer-primary travel

  • Laptop 65W × 5h = 325 Wh
  • Phone 10W × 2h = 20 Wh
  • LED lights 20W × 4h = 80 Wh
  • 12V fan 25W × 8h = 200 Wh
  • 12V compressor fridge 45W × 12h = 540 Wh
  • Subtotal 1,165 Wh × 1.10 = 1,282 Wh/day
  • Location: Arizona (worst-month Dec PSH: 6.01h)

Daily Load

1,282 Wh/day

Measured loads × 1.10 system losses

Location / Winter PSH

Arizona: 6.01h (Dec)

Roof-mounted flat penalty applied

Panel Array

200W (roof space limited)

Formula: 1,282 ÷ 6.01 ÷ 0.75 = 284W needed; shore power tops up

Battery (1.5 days autonomy)

100Ah 12V LiFePO4 = 1.2 kWh usable

1,282 × 1.5 ÷ 0.80 ÷ 1,000 = 2.4 kWh; 1 battery at 80% DoD

Charge Controller

Victron SmartSolar 20A MPPT

200W × 1.25 ÷ 12V = 20.8A

Inverter

300W pure sine wave

Only if running AC loads

Estimated DIY parts cost (US 2026): $537–$687

Includes panel, battery, controller, inverter, and wiring

This works for summer western US travel. Winter full-timing in Oregon (1.90 PSH Dec, 1.62h effective with flat mount) makes solar-only impractical November through February. See the van conversion guide for roof layout and tilt solutions.

Worked Example: Off-Grid Cabin (1.1kW System)

1,100W

Panel Array

4× 275W TOPCon panels

9.6 kWh

Battery Capacity

2× 200Ah 24V LiFePO₄

$2,330–$3,550

Estimated Parts Cost

DIY; add $1.5–3k for install

Scenario: 600 sq ft cabin, Texas hill country, year-round occupancy

  • LED lighting 80W × 5h = 400 Wh
  • Laptop 65W × 6h = 390 Wh
  • Chest freezer 150W × 8h = 1,200 Wh
  • Water pump 400W × 0.5h = 200 Wh
  • Ceiling fan 50W × 8h = 400 Wh
  • Phone/misc 30W × 2h = 60 Wh
  • Subtotal 2,650 Wh × 1.10 = 2,915 Wh/day
  • Location: Texas (worst-month Dec PSH: 4.42h)

Daily Load

2,915 Wh/day

2,650 Wh measured × 1.10 system losses

Location / Winter PSH

Texas: 4.42h (Dec)

Worst-month December design

Panel Array

1,100W (4× 275W TOPCon)

2,915 ÷ 4.42 ÷ 0.75 = 879W → round to 1,100W

Battery (3 days autonomy)

9.6 kWh at 24V (2× 200Ah)

2,915 × 3 ÷ 0.80 ÷ 1,000 = 10.9 kWh target; 9.6 kWh within 3%

Charge Controller

60A MPPT

1,100W × 1.25 ÷ 24V = 57.3A → select 60A

Inverter

1,500W pure sine wave

Peak load ~750W; 2× headroom for motor surges

Estimated DIY parts cost (US 2026): $2,330–$3,550

Add $1,500–$3,000 for professional installation. Texas freeze events warrant a generator backup.

Add $1,500–$3,000 for professional installation if not DIY. Texas freeze events (2021-style) can knock out solar production for 3–5 days — a 3,000W propane generator backup is strongly advised. See the cabin solar setup guide for wiring diagrams.

Worked Example: Full Homestead (4.5kW System)

4,500W

Panel Array

15× 300W TOPCon panels

~56 kWh

Battery Capacity

Multiple 48V LiFePO₄ units

$25–45k

Estimated Installed Cost

Professional install required

Scenario: 1,800 sq ft homestead, Colorado, year-round family of four

  • Full kitchen appliances, well pump, mini-split HVAC (moderate use), workshop, partial EV charging, lighting, entertainment
  • Estimated daily load: ~14,000 Wh × 1.10 = 15,400 Wh/day
  • Location: Colorado (worst-month Dec PSH: 4.44h)

Daily Load

15,400 Wh/day

~14,000 Wh estimated × 1.10 system losses

Location / Winter PSH

Colorado: 4.44h (Dec)

Snow load + tilt angle critical

Panel Array

4,500W (15× 300W TOPCon)

15,400 ÷ 4.44 ÷ 0.75 = 4,621W → select 4,500W

Battery (3 days autonomy)

~56 kWh at 48V

15,400 × 3 ÷ 0.80 ÷ 1,000 = 57.75 kWh; multiple 48V units in parallel

Charge Controller

Two 60A MPPT in parallel

4,500W × 1.25 ÷ 48V = 117A total

Inverter

10kW pure sine (Victron Quattro)

Peak load ~8,000W; includes generator input

Estimated installed cost (US 2026): $25,000–$45,000

Colorado requires permits for fixed electrical above 50V. Budget $8–15k for professional installation on top of parts.

Professional installation required. A 4.5kW+ system at 48V involves significant electrical hazard. Colorado requires permits for fixed electrical systems above 50V. Budget $8,000–$15,000 for professional installation on top of parts. Total installed range: $25,000–$45,000.

Battery Chemistry Comparison: LiFePO₄ vs AGM vs Gel

For new off-grid builds in 2026, LiFePO₄ is the right choice in most situations. Here's the full comparison so you can verify that for your case:

LiFePO₄ (Lithium Iron Phosphate)

Recommended
  • 3,000–5,000 cycles (10× AGM life)
  • 80–100% usable depth of discharge
  • ~13 kg for 12V 100Ah (50% lighter)
  • No off-gassing — install anywhere
  • $179–$195/kWh retail (12V packs)
  • Zero maintenance; built-in BMS
  • Do not charge below 0°C (32°F)

AGM Lead-Acid

  • 300–500 cycles (replace 5–10× more often)
  • 50% usable depth of discharge
  • ~28–32 kg for 12V 100Ah
  • Sealed — minimal off-gassing
  • $70–$110/kWh retail
  • Annual capacity check recommended
  • Charges in cold (down to −20°C)
Verdict: LiFePO₄ costs more upfront per kWh of nameplate capacity but delivers 2× the usable capacity and 10× the cycle life vs. AGM. Over a 10-year period, LiFePO₄ is cheaper in almost every scenario. The exceptions: budget-constrained builds with a planned 3–5 year lifetime, or locations where cold charging (below 0°C) can't be managed without heating. Full deep-dive in the battery storage guide.

2026 Off-Grid Solar System Cost Breakdown

Prices reflect Q1 2026 Indian market rates. PM Surya Ghar subsidies do NOT apply to off-grid systems.

Stacked by component: panels / battery / install + BOS. Midpoint values used.

India Brand Guide: Off-Grid Solar Components

The Indian market has different dominant brands from the US and EU. These are the most widely stocked options across major cities and online (IndiaMart, Amazon India):

CategoryBrandsNotes
Solar PanelsLoom Solar, Waaree, Adani Solar, RenewSysLoom Solar widely available online; Waaree and Adani have pan-India distribution networks
MPPT ControllersVictron (imported), Smarten, LuminousVictron available via importers at premium; Smarten and Luminous are widely stocked domestically
InvertersLuminous, Microtek, UTL SolarLuminous dominates mid-market; UTL specializes in off-grid inverter-chargers
Batteries (Lead-Acid)Exide, Amaron, LuminousMost accessible; nationwide service network
Batteries (LiFePO₄)Loom Solar, BattX, imported brandsLimited domestic servicing; verify warranty coverage before purchase
Serviceability tip: In rural India, LiFePO₄ service centers are rare outside major cities. If you're more than 50km from a major city, prioritize brands with strong domestic service (Luminous or Exide for lead-acid; Loom Solar for lithium) over premium imported brands with no local service network.

11 Common Off-Grid Solar Sizing Mistakes

  1. 1
    Designing for average sun, not worst-month sun

    Your system must work in July monsoon, not July. Using annual average PSH means you run out of power for months at a time. Always use the worst-month PSH as your design number.

  2. 2
    Removing the 0.75 system efficiency factor

    Wiring losses, MPPT inefficiency, temperature derating, and soiling combine to roughly 25% in real-world conditions. Dropping the 0.75 factor produces a system that underperforms on every cloudy day and dies completely in your worst month.

  3. 3
    Sizing battery to nameplate, not usable capacity

    A 200Ah AGM gives you 100Ah usable (50% DoD). A 200Ah LiFePO₄ gives you 160–200Ah. If you buy both expecting identical performance and you run into AGM's 50% ceiling nightly, you'll reduce its 400-cycle life to under 200 cycles.

  4. 4
    Using a PWM controller for systems over 200W

    PWM controllers waste 20–30% of available solar energy in most conditions. MPPT pays back its cost premium in 6–18 months on any system over 200W. It's not optional for cabin-scale and larger systems.

  5. 5
    Charging LiFePO₄ below 0°C

    Charging LiFePO₄ below 0°C (32°F) causes permanent lithium plating that permanently reduces capacity. The manufacturer minimum is 0°C; practitioners set BMS charge cutoff at 5°C (41°F) as a safety buffer. In cold climates, this requires a heated battery enclosure.

  6. 6
    Underestimating refrigeration loads

    A 12 cu ft chest freezer draws 150W but runs 8–14 hours/day (1,200–2,100 Wh/day). Refrigeration typically accounts for 30–50% of total cabin load. Getting this wrong makes your entire system calculation wrong.

  7. 7
    Buying a modified sine wave inverter for sensitive electronics

    Modified sine wave damages variable-speed motor drives (HVAC, well pumps), causes computer power supplies to run hot, and voids warranties on many appliances. Any system with a pump, modern fridge, or computer equipment requires pure sine wave.

  8. 8
    Choosing 12V for a system over 800W

    A 12V system running 1,000W pulls 83A through your wiring. The same load at 48V pulls 21A — requiring wire that's 1/4 the cost and weight. For cabin-scale and larger, 12V is the expensive choice, not the cheap one.

  9. 9
    Not accounting for flat-mount losses in winter

    Panels on a van roof or low-pitch cabin with no tilt lose 15% of winter output vs. optimal tilt. In Oregon (1.90 PSH Dec), effective design PSH drops to 1.62h with a flat mount — making a solar-only van effectively impossible November through February.

  10. 10
    Guessing appliance wattages from labels

    Manufacturers often list max power, not running power. A Kill-A-Watt meter ($25) measures actual consumption. Guessing 30% high wastes money on oversized components; guessing 30% low means a battery bank that dies every evening.

  11. 11
    Assuming PM Surya Ghar applies to off-grid systems

    PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana is explicitly a grid-connected rooftop solar program. Off-grid systems are excluded. Verify with your local DISCOM before making any purchasing decisions based on this subsidy.

Size Your System in 5 Minutes

Enter your appliances and location — the calculator applies your worst-month PSH and the 0.75 efficiency factor automatically and outputs a complete component list.

Open Solar System Calculator

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the price of a 1 kW off-grid solar system in India?

A complete 1 kW off-grid system in India costs ₹70,000–₹90,000 (panels, battery, inverter, mounting, wiring). Panel-only cost for 1 kW from Loom Solar or Waaree is approximately ₹25,000. Prices vary by state and battery chemistry.

What is the price of a 3 kW off-grid solar system in India?

A complete 3 kW off-grid system costs ₹1,80,000–₹2,85,000 depending on battery type (lead-acid vs. LiFePO₄) and installation complexity. Panel costs alone for 3 kW are approximately ₹75,000.

Does PM Surya Ghar apply to off-grid solar systems?

No. PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana is explicitly for grid-connected rooftop solar. Off-grid systems are excluded. Verify with your local DISCOM before making purchasing decisions based on this subsidy.

How many peak sun hours does India get during monsoon?

India's monsoon PSH varies significantly: Northeast India 2.0h (July), Kerala 2.5h, Maharashtra/Goa 2.8h, Gujarat 3.0h, Rajasthan 3.5h. Always design for your monsoon-month PSH — not the summer peak.

Which is better for off-grid solar in India — LiFePO₄ or lead-acid?

LiFePO₄ offers better cycle life and lower 20-year cost, but lead-acid has nationwide service networks and is easier to replace in rural areas. For locations more than 50km from a major city, Exide or Amaron lead-acid is often the practical choice due to serviceability.

Can I get an off-grid solar system on EMI in India?

Yes. Many dealers (IndiaMart vendors, Loom Solar, UTL Solar) offer EMI financing. Some NBFCs and rural cooperative banks offer solar loans at 9–15% per annum. PM Surya Ghar financing is not available for off-grid systems.

What size inverter do I need for a 1 kW solar system in India?

For a 1 kW system powering fans, lights, and basic appliances, a 1,500W (1.5 kVA) pure sine wave inverter is typically sufficient. Size the inverter for your peak simultaneous load — including motor startup surges — not your average load.

Is off-grid solar suitable for farming in India?

Yes, particularly for pump irrigation where grid power is unreliable. A 3–5 kW system can run a 1–2 HP surface pump for 4–6 hours per day. For deeper borewells (3+ HP pumps), a 5–10 kW system may be needed. Factor pump startup surge current into inverter sizing.

Key Takeaways

  • Design for monsoon-month PSH, not summer peak: 2.0h in Northeast India, 2.5h in Kerala.
  • The sizing formula: Array Watts = (Daily Load Wh ÷ Monsoon PSH) ÷ 0.75
  • PM Surya Ghar subsidy does NOT apply to off-grid systems.
  • Complete 1 kW off-grid system: ₹70,000–₹90,000. Complete 3 kW: ₹1,80,000–₹2,85,000.
  • TOPCon panels from Loom Solar or Waaree: approximately ₹25,000 per kW (Q1 2026).
  • In rural areas over 50km from major cities, prioritize locally serviceable brands (Luminous, Exide).
  • LiFePO₄ has lower 20-year cost but limited rural service coverage; lead-acid is often more practical remotely.
  • MPPT charge controller required for any system over 200W — recovers 20–30% more energy than PWM.
  • Size inverter for peak simultaneous load plus 20–25% surge headroom, not average daily load.

Related Guides

Assessing Your Power Needs

Build a complete appliance load list before sizing your system

Learn more

Energy Storage & Batteries

LiFePO₄ vs AGM deep dive, cold-climate solutions, and brand recommendations

Learn more

Power Conversion & Management

MPPT selection, wiring, and configuration for off-grid systems

Learn more

Solar System Calculator

Enter your appliances and get a complete component list automatically

Learn more

Best US States for Off-Grid Living

Solar resources, land costs, legal frameworks, and permit requirements by state

Learn more

Rainwater Harvesting Basics

Pump loads are the most underestimated power draw — size them correctly

Learn more

Sources

  1. NREL PVWatts Calculator — pvwatts.nrel.gov (December PSH data by US state)
  2. NREL Solar Resource Maps and Data — nrel.gov/gis/solar-resource-maps
  3. US Congress, One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1) — Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit expiration, December 31, 2025
  4. US International Trade Commission — Antidumping/CVD tariff rates on crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells from Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia (2025)
  5. LiTime — 12V 100Ah LiFePO₄ Battery product listing, Q1 2026 retail ($229–$249); litime.com
  6. EcoDirect — Victron SmartSolar MPPT 75/20 retail price, Q1 2026 ($158); ecodirect.com
  7. ShopSolarKits — Victron SmartSolar MPPT 150/100 retail price, Q1 2026 ($612.85); shopsolarkits.com
  8. Victron Energy — LiFePO₄ minimum charge temperature specification: 0°C (product documentation and battery protection manual)
  9. IEEFA — "TOPCon Market Share Surpasses 65% Globally in 2025" (January 2026)
  10. BloombergNEF — Solar module cost and technology report, Q4 2025
  11. India Meteorological Department (IMD) / Global Solar Atlas — Monsoon PSH data by India region
  12. Loom Solar — 1 kW panel pricing on IndiaMart, Q1 2026 (₹25,000)
  13. Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) — PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana scheme eligibility criteria (grid-connected systems only)
  14. Waaree Energies — 3 kW system pricing, Q1 2026
  15. Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) — U.S. Solar Market Insight Q4 2025
  16. EnergySage — Off-grid system installation cost survey, 2025
  17. Renogy — TOPCon solar panel efficiency specifications (22–24%), product documentation
  18. Battery University — "BU-808: How to Prolong Lithium-based Batteries" (charging temperature constraints)
  19. IRENA — Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2024 (battery storage cost trends)
  20. Fronius — Inverter and charge controller sizing guidelines (1.25× safety factor)
  21. Colorado Division of Electrical Engineering — Permit requirements for fixed electrical installations above 50V
  22. National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 690 — Solar photovoltaic systems wiring and safety requirements
  23. NREL — Best Practices for Operation and Maintenance of Photovoltaic and Energy Storage Systems (soiling and temperature derating factors)