How To Choose The Right Solar Panel Type?
Choosing the right solar panel type affects how much electricity you generate, how much space you need, and what you’ll pay. From traditional monocrystalline to cutting-edge TOPCon and heterojunction technologies, the UK market offers a wide range of options for every budget and requirement.
Overview of Solar Panel Types
Solar panels fall into two main categories based on the material used: crystalline silicon (which includes monocrystalline and polycrystalline) and thin-film. Within crystalline silicon, there are several cell technologies including PERC, TOPCon, and HJT. Most UK residential installations use monocrystalline silicon panels.
| Panel Type | Efficiency | Cost per Watt | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monocrystalline (PERC) | 20-22% | £0.80-£1.20 | Most residential installations |
| Monocrystalline (TOPCon) | 22-26% | £0.90-£1.30 | Maximum efficiency at good value |
| Monocrystalline (HJT) | 22-26%+ | £1.00-£1.50 | Premium efficiency, hot climates |
| Polycrystalline | 15-17% | £0.60-£0.90 | Budget (now rare) |
| Thin-film | 10-18% | £0.40-£0.80 | Large-scale commercial |
Monocrystalline Solar Panels
Monocrystalline solar panels dominate the UK residential market, accounting for over 90% of installations. They’re made from single-crystal silicon, giving them a uniform dark appearance and the highest efficiency among mainstream panel types.
Monocrystalline Cell Technologies
Within monocrystalline panels, there are several cell technologies that affect efficiency and cost:
MATURE TECH
PERC technology adds a passivation layer to the rear of the cell that reflects unused light back into the silicon for a second chance at energy conversion. This simple modification increases efficiency by 1-2% compared to standard cells.
TOPCon is the leading next-generation solar cell technology, offering higher efficiency than PERC while remaining cost-competitive. It adds an ultra-thin tunnel oxide layer and heavily doped polysilicon contacts to reduce electron recombination.
Key advantage: N-type silicon more tolerant to metal impurities, suffers less Light-Induced Degradation than P-type PERC cells
PREMIUM
HJT panels combine crystalline silicon with thin layers of amorphous silicon, achieving exceptional surface passivation and the lowest temperature coefficients of any silicon-based technology.
Best for: Hot climates, space-constrained installations, maximum long-term performance
AESTHETIC
Back-contact technology moves all electrical contacts to the rear of the cell, eliminating shading from front-side busbars and maximising the active cell area.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Polycrystalline Solar Panels
Polycrystalline panels (also called multicrystalline) are made from multiple silicon crystals melted together, giving them a distinctive blue, speckled appearance. While once popular as a budget option, polycrystalline panels have been largely phased out of the UK residential market.
Market Status: Major manufacturers stopped polycrystalline solar panel production in 2023-2024, with remaining inventory largely depleted by mid-2025. For UK installations in 2026, polycrystalline is effectively no longer an option. The efficiency gains and falling costs of monocrystalline technology have eliminated the price advantage that once made polycrystalline popular.
Thin-Film Solar Panels
Thin-film panels use an entirely different approach, depositing thin layers of photovoltaic material onto a substrate such as glass, metal, or plastic.
Most commercially successful thin-film technology (First Solar). Can reach 19%+ efficiency.
Highest thin-film efficiency potential, flexible substrate options.
Lowest cost but also lowest efficiency among thin-film types.
UK Applications
Thin-film panels are rarely used for UK residential installations because their lower efficiency requires too much roof space. Primary uses include:
Bifacial Solar Panels
Bifacial panels can generate electricity from both their front and rear surfaces, capturing reflected and diffuse light from the ground or roof surface below. This design can increase energy yield by 5-30% depending on installation conditions.
UK Bifacial Performance Data
A 2023 study by Edinburgh’s Heriot-Watt University found bifacial arrays generate 5-45% more electricity than monofacial equivalents, with most installations seeing 10-20% gains.
Highest gains (elevated above reflective ground)
Good with white membrane or gravel ballast
Elevated mounting allows excellent rear irradiance
Less dramatic gains (5-10%), but often cost only slightly more
Solar Panel Costs UK 2026
| System Size | Panels | Cost (Installed) | Annual Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3kW | 7-8 | £4,500-£6,000 | 2,500-2,800 kWh |
| 4kW | 9-10 | £6,000-£8,000 | 3,400-3,800 kWh |
| 5kW | 11-13 | £7,500-£9,500 | 4,200-4,700 kWh |
| 6kW | 13-15 | £8,500-£11,000 | 5,000-5,600 kWh |
| 8kW | 18-20 | £11,000-£14,000 | 6,800-7,600 kWh |
| Panel Type | Cost/Watt | 400W Panel | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mono PERC (budget) | £0.60-£0.80 | £240-£320 | Being phased out |
| Mono PERC (quality) | £0.80-£1.00 | £320-£400 | Still widely available |
| Mono TOPCon | £0.90-£1.20 | £360-£480 | Best value for efficiency |
| Mono HJT | £1.00-£1.50 | £400-£600 | Premium performance |
| Premium/back-contact | £1.20-£2.00 | £480-£800 | Highest efficiency |
Solar panels
Mounting system (rails, clamps, roof hooks)
Solar inverter (string or microinverters)
DC and AC isolators
Generation meter & consumer unit connection
Scaffolding
Electrical certification
MCS certification
VAT (0% for residential)
Top Solar Panel Brands UK 2026
The UK market is dominated by major global manufacturers, particularly Chinese brands that offer excellent value and proven reliability.
WORLD’S LARGEST
INNOVATION LEADER
Choosing the Right Panel Type
| Situation | Recommended Type | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Small roof, high electricity use | HJT or TOPCon (high efficiency) | Maximum power from limited space |
| Average home, best value | TOPCon (Tier 1 brand) ✓ | Excellent efficiency at competitive cost |
| Larger roof, budget priority | Quality PERC or entry TOPCon | Lower cost per watt, space isn’t limiting |
| Listed building/conservation | All-black back-contact or in-roof | Best aesthetics for planning approval |
| Ground-mount installation | Bifacial TOPCon | Maximum energy yield with rear-side gain |
| Flat commercial roof | Bifacial panels (ballasted) | Higher output without roof penetrations |
Future Technologies
Perovskite-Silicon Tandems
Tandem cells stack two different absorber materials to capture more of the solar spectrum. Perovskite-on-silicon tandems have achieved lab efficiencies exceeding 33%, far above the theoretical limit for single-junction silicon cells (approximately 29%).
Summary: Which Panel Type Should You Choose?
For most UK homeowners in 2026, the choice comes down to TOPCon or HJT monocrystalline panels from a Tier 1 manufacturer:
TOPCon panels from JinkoSolar, Trina, LONGi, or JA Solar. These offer 22-24% efficiency at competitive prices, with proven reliability and strong warranties.
HJT panels from REC or premium TOPCon/back-contact panels from LONGi, Maxeon. Higher upfront cost but maximum long-term energy production.
Quality PERC panels are still available but offer lower efficiency. The small price difference compared to TOPCon makes upgrading worthwhile.
Avoid: Polycrystalline panels (outdated, being phased out) and thin-film for residential use (impractical for UK roofs).
Remember that the installer and overall system design matter as much as panel choice. An MCS-certified installer using quality components from any Tier 1 manufacturer will deliver a reliable system that generates clean electricity for 25+ years.
This comprehensive guide was updated for 2026 to reflect the latest solar panel technologies, current UK pricing, and the shift from PERC to TOPCon as the dominant technology. The solar industry continues to evolve rapidly, with efficiency improvements and cost reductions making solar power increasingly accessible to UK homeowners.