Fill factor (FF) is a measure of solar cell quality that indicates how efficiently a panel converts its theoretical maximum power into actual usable power. It’s calculated by comparing the maximum power output (Pmax) to the product of open-circuit voltage (Voc) and short-circuit current (Isc). A perfect cell would have a fill factor of 100%, meaning all theoretical power is captured; real cells achieve 75-85%.

Think of fill factor as measuring how “well-behaved” a solar cell is. When you plot a cell’s current-voltage (I-V) curve, a high fill factor creates a more rectangular shape – the cell maintains high current until close to its maximum voltage. A low fill factor creates a more curved, sloping shape – the cell loses current earlier, wasting potential power.

This guide explains what fill factor means, why it matters, what affects it, typical values for different technologies, and how to interpret this specification when comparing panels.

Quick Overview

What it measuresRatio of actual power to theoretical maximum
FormulaFF = Pmax ÷ (Voc × Isc)
Expressed asPercentage or decimal
Typical range75-85%
Higher is betterMore power extracted
On datasheets?Sometimes; can be calculated

Understanding Fill Factor

The Basic Concept

TermMeaning
Open-circuit voltage (Voc)Maximum voltage when no current flows
Short-circuit current (Isc)Maximum current when voltage is zero
Voc × IscTheoretical maximum power
PmaxActual maximum power achieved
Fill factorHow much of theoretical power is real

The standard physics treatment of fill factor describes it geometrically as “the area of the largest rectangle which will fit in the I-V curve” of a solar cell. The authoritative reference work on the topic is the PVEducation fill factor page maintained by the PV research community at the Australian National University.

The Formula

ComponentDetails
Fill Factor (FF)= Pmax ÷ (Voc × Isc)
Also written as= (Vmp × Imp) ÷ (Voc × Isc)
UnitsPercentage or decimal (0.80 = 80%)

Example Calculation

SpecificationValue
Voc41.5V
Isc13.5A
Voc × Isc560.25W (theoretical max)
Pmax (rated)440W
Fill Factor440 ÷ 560.25 = 78.5%

The I-V Curve Explained

What the Curve Shows

PointMeaning
Y-axisCurrent (amps)
X-axisVoltage (volts)
Top left (Isc)Maximum current; zero voltage
Bottom right (Voc)Maximum voltage; zero current
Curve shapeHow current drops as voltage rises
Maximum power pointBest operating point on curve

High vs Low Fill Factor

Fill FactorCurve ShapePerformance
High (82%+)Near-rectangular; sharp kneeExcellent power extraction
Good (78-82%)Slightly rounded cornerGood power extraction
Moderate (74-78%)Noticeably curvedSome power lost
Low (<74%)Very rounded; gradual slopeSignificant power lost

Visual Interpretation

AspectIdeal (Perfect FF)Real Cell
ShapePerfect rectangleRounded corner
Current behaviourFlat until VocDrops before Voc
Area under curveVoc × IscPmax (smaller)
Power pointAt cornerOn knee of curve

Why Fill Factor Can’t Be 100%

Physical Limitations

FactorEffect on Fill Factor
Series resistance (Rs)Voltage drop at high current
Shunt resistance (Rsh)Current leakage paths
RecombinationElectrons lost before collection
Diode behaviourInherent I-V curve shape

Series Resistance (Rs)

SourceImpact
Cell contactsMetal-silicon junction resistance
Busbars and fingersConductor resistance
Cell interconnectsRibbon/wire resistance
EffectVoltage drops as current increases
High RsLowers fill factor

Shunt Resistance (Rsh)

SourceImpact
Manufacturing defectsCurrent leakage paths
Cell edge imperfectionsShort circuits
Crystal defectsLocalised leakage
EffectCurrent lost at low voltage
Low RshLowers fill factor

Ideal Resistance Values

ResistanceIdealEffect
Series (Rs)As low as possibleMinimises voltage loss
Shunt (Rsh)As high as possibleMinimises current leakage

Fill Factor by Technology

Typical Values

TechnologyTypical Fill FactorRating
HJT (Heterojunction)82-85%Excellent
IBC (Back Contact)82-84%Excellent
TOPCon80-83%Very good
PERC (quality)79-81%Good
PERC (standard)77-79%Acceptable
Older mono75-78%Average
Polycrystalline74-77%Below average

Fill factor is one of the strongest fingerprints of which cell technology a panel actually uses. For more on the broader technology landscape and which cells perform best in UK conditions, see our best solar panels for UK climate guide and how efficient are solar panels.

Why Technologies Differ

TechnologyWhy Better/Worse FF
HJTExcellent passivation; low Rs
IBCNo front contacts; optimised collection
TOPConGood passivation; low recombination
PERCDecent passivation; standard contacts
PolyCrystal boundaries cause losses

Cell vs Module Fill Factor

LevelTypical FFWhy Different
Cell80-85%Individual cell only
Module75-82%Additional losses from connections
Difference2-5%Interconnect resistance; mismatch

What Affects Fill Factor

Manufacturing Quality

FactorImpact on FF
Contact qualityGood contacts = low Rs = higher FF
Passivation qualityBetter passivation = higher FF
Defect densityFewer defects = higher Rsh = higher FF
Process controlConsistent process = consistent FF

Cell Design

FeatureImpact on FF
More busbars (MBB)Lower Rs = higher FF
Half-cut cellsLower current = lower Rs losses
Finer fingersBetter collection; slight Rs increase
Shingled cellsVery low Rs = high FF

The trend toward multi-busbar designs is one of the main drivers of rising fill factor across the industry over the last few years – see our breakdown of multi-busbar (MBB) solar cell technology for the engineering rationale.

Operating Conditions

ConditionImpact on FF
High temperatureDecreases FF
Low irradianceMay decrease FF slightly
Cell damageDecreases FF (lower Rsh)
Degradation over timeGradually decreases FF

Fill Factor and Performance

Relationship to Efficiency

ComponentRole in Efficiency
VocVoltage the cell can produce
IscCurrent the cell can produce
Fill FactorHow much of Voc × Isc is captured
Efficiency formulaη = (Voc × Isc × FF) ÷ (Area × Irradiance)

Impact of 1% FF Change

Original FF+1% FFPower Increase
78%79%~1.3% more power
80%81%~1.25% more power
82%83%~1.2% more power

Fill Factor vs Other Parameters

ParameterTypical VariationPower Impact
Fill Factor75-85% rangeUp to 13% difference
Voc~5% variation typical~5% power difference
Isc~5% variation typical~5% power difference
Combined effectAll three matterDetermines efficiency

Fill Factor and Shade

Impact of Partial Shading

ConditionEffect on FF
Uniform lightNormal FF
Partial shadeEffective FF drops significantly
Bypass diode activeSection bypassed; FF irrelevant for that section
MismatchSystem FF lower than individual cell FF

For a deeper look at how bypass diodes restore array output when one section gets shaded, see our bypass diodes guide. The diodes don’t restore the shaded cells’ contribution but they prevent the rest of the string from being dragged down with them.

Why Shade Hurts FF

MechanismExplanation
Current mismatchShaded cells limit string current
Operating point shiftNot at optimal power point
Reverse biasShaded cells may consume power
Overall effectSystem produces less than sum of parts

Fill Factor and Temperature

Temperature Effects

As Temperature RisesEffect
VocDecreases significantly
IscIncreases slightly
Fill FactorDecreases
Net powerDecreases

Why FF Drops With Heat

FactorThermal Effect
Increased recombinationMore electrons lost
Higher leakage currentLower effective Rsh
Changed diode behaviourI-V curve shape changes

Typical FF Temperature Coefficient

TechnologyFF Temp Coefficient
Typical silicon~-0.1 to -0.2%/°C
HJTBetter (lower loss)
Combined with Voc lossCreates overall power coefficient

For panels installed in conditions where panel temperature regularly exceeds 50°C – integrated roof installs, dark south-facing surfaces, summer rooftops – low temperature coefficient becomes the more important specification. See our best solar panels for high temperatures guide for the technologies that hold their fill factor best when hot.

Fill Factor on Datasheets

Where to Find It

LocationLikelihood
Explicitly statedSometimes; not always
Electrical characteristicsIf present, here
Calculate from specsAlways possible

Calculating from Datasheet

You NeedWhere to Find
Pmax (Wp)Power rating
VocElectrical characteristics (STC)
IscElectrical characteristics (STC)
CalculationFF = Pmax ÷ (Voc × Isc)

Example Calculations

PanelPmaxVocIscFF
Panel A420W41.2V13.2A77.2%
Panel B440W42.5V13.0A79.6%
Panel C450W41.8V13.5A79.8%
Panel D430W40.2V13.1A81.6%

Comparing Panels Using Fill Factor

What FF Tells You

FF LevelIndicates
Very high (82%+)Excellent cell quality; advanced technology
High (79-82%)Good quality; modern design
Average (76-79%)Standard quality; acceptable
Low (<76%)Lower quality; older technology

FF as Quality Indicator

ScenarioWhat It Suggests
High Voc, high Isc, high FFPremium panel; excellent all round
High Voc, high Isc, low FFPoor power extraction; manufacturing issue
Lower Voc/Isc, high FFGood quality cell; limited by design
Lower everythingBudget panel; compromises throughout

Comparing Similar Panels

Both PanelsHigher FF Panel
Same wattageBetter cell quality
Same efficiencyBetter power extraction
Same technologyBetter manufacturing
Same priceBetter value

Fill Factor and Degradation

How FF Changes Over Time

FactorEffect on FF
Initial degradationSmall FF drop possible
Long-term degradationGradual FF decline
Hotspots/damageSignificant FF reduction
Connection degradationIncreased Rs; lower FF

Degradation Mechanisms

MechanismImpact on FF
LID (Light Induced)Reduces FF slightly
PID (Potential Induced)Can significantly reduce FF
CorrosionIncreases Rs; lowers FF
DelaminationIncreases Rs; lowers FF
MicrocracksMay lower FF if severe

Microcrack-driven fill factor decline is one of the slow, invisible degradation mechanisms that affect long-term solar performance – see our solar panel microcracks guide for detection and prevention.

FF as Diagnostic Tool

ObservationPossible Cause
Low FF but normal Voc/IscResistance problem
Low FF and low VocCell degradation
Sudden FF dropDamage or connection failure
Gradual FF declineNormal aging

Pseudo Fill Factor

What It Is

TermMeaning
Pseudo Fill Factor (pFF)FF without series resistance effect
PurposeSeparates Rs losses from other losses
MeasurementRequires special equipment (Suns-Voc)
Typical values2-4% higher than actual FF

Diagnostic Use

ComparisonIndicates
pFF high, FF lowSeries resistance problem
pFF and FF both lowFundamental cell quality issue
pFF close to FFLow series resistance (good)

Fill Factor in System Design

Impact on Inverter Sizing

ConsiderationRelevance
Power outputFF already factored into Pmax
String voltageUse Voc for maximum (independent of FF)
String currentUse Isc for maximum (independent of FF)
MPPT rangeVmp matters (related to FF)

Mismatch Considerations

ScenarioImpact
Matched FF panelsSystem FF close to panel FF
Mixed FF panelsSystem FF may be lower
Best practiceUse same panel model throughout

UK Relevance

Practical Importance for UK

FactorUK Context
TemperatureModerate; FF less affected than hot climates
Quality indicatorUseful for comparing panels
Low lightFF may drop slightly in very low light
OverallModerate importance; one factor of many

What UK Buyers Should Focus On

PrioritySpecification
HigherOverall efficiency
HigherTemperature coefficient
HigherWarranty terms
ModerateFill factor (quality indicator)
LowerIndividual Voc/Isc values

For broader low-light performance – which matters more in UK conditions than absolute peak efficiency – our best solar panels for low light guide ranks the technologies that hold their fill factor and overall output through cloudy and diffuse conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Basic Questions

QuestionAnswer
What’s a good fill factor?Above 78% good; above 80% very good
Why can’t FF be 100%?Physical losses in real cells
Does higher FF mean better panel?Generally yes – better quality
Is FF on all datasheets?Not always; can calculate from Pmax, Voc, Isc

Technical Questions

QuestionAnswer
Does FF change with temperature?Yes – decreases when hot
Does FF degrade over time?Slightly – part of overall degradation
Can I measure FF at home?Difficult – needs I-V curve tracer
Does shade affect FF?Effectively yes – system FF drops

Summary

AspectKey Point
DefinitionRatio of actual power to Voc × Isc
FormulaFF = Pmax ÷ (Voc × Isc)
Typical range75-85%
Good valueAbove 78%
Excellent valueAbove 82%
Main influencesSeries resistance; shunt resistance
Best technologiesHJT and IBC (82-85%)
Use asQuality indicator when comparing panels

Fill factor is a fundamental measure of solar cell quality that reveals how efficiently a panel extracts power from its theoretical maximum. A panel with high Voc and Isc but low fill factor wastes potential – the I-V curve is too rounded, and the cell can’t maintain high current as voltage increases. Conversely, a high fill factor indicates well-designed cells with low resistance losses and minimal defects.

For UK homeowners, fill factor serves primarily as a quality indicator rather than a specification to optimise for. When comparing similar panels, calculating the fill factor can reveal which has better underlying cell quality. A panel achieving 440W with an 81% fill factor has better cells than one achieving the same power with 77% – the first extracts more of what’s theoretically available.

Fill factor isn’t typically listed on datasheets, but you can easily calculate it from the specifications that are: divide Pmax by (Voc × Isc). Values above 78% indicate good quality; above 80% is very good; and above 82% represents excellent cells, typically found in premium HJT or IBC panels.

While fill factor is worth understanding, other specifications often matter more for practical purchasing decisions. Efficiency, temperature coefficient, degradation warranty, and price per watt directly affect your system’s value. Fill factor is one component that contributes to efficiency – useful for deeper analysis but not the primary metric for most buyers.

The 30-second datasheet check. When you’re comparing two panel datasheets and they look superficially similar – same wattage, similar physical size, both monocrystalline – run the fill factor calculation: Pmax / (Voc × Isc). If one comes out at 81% and the other at 77%, that 4-point gap is the cleanest available signal that the higher-FF panel has better cell quality, lower resistance losses, and likely uses a more modern manufacturing process. It’s not the only signal – check warranty length, degradation curve, temperature coefficient too – but it’s the one that’s hardest to fake on a datasheet.

Where fill factor matters less is when one panel is clearly higher-spec across the board. A premium 22%-efficient HJT panel will outperform a 20%-efficient PERC panel regardless of how the fill factors compare; the FF check is for distinguishing among similar-tier products. Don’t get drawn into FF arms races between premium panels – the differences are real but small compared to other specifications.