Old solar panels in the UK follow several possible paths when they reach the end of their useful life. Many continue operating well beyond their 25-year warranty, producing 85-90% of their original output for another decade or more. Others are replaced during repowering projects, where older panels are swapped for newer, more efficient models. Functional older panels increasingly enter the second-hand market for use in off-grid projects, agricultural buildings, or budget installations. Panels that genuinely reach end of life must be recycled under UK WEEE regulations, with 85-95% of materials recovered for reuse.
The idea that solar panels simply become waste after 25 years is a common misconception. The 25-year mark refers to warranty coverage, not a failure point. Modern panels degrade at just 0.5% per year on average, meaning a panel rated at 400W when new still produces around 350W at age 25. Many panels continue generating useful electricity for 30-40 years. When panels do eventually need replacing, the UK has legal frameworks ensuring they are recycled rather than landfilled, with valuable materials like glass, aluminium, silicon, copper, and silver recovered for manufacturing.
This guide explains everything that happens to old solar panels in the UK, from continued operation through to final recycling. Whether you are wondering what will happen to your own panels eventually, considering buying second-hand panels, or simply curious about the solar industry’s approach to end-of-life management, this guide covers the complete picture. For the flip side – deciding whether your panels actually need replacing in the first place – see our when to replace solar panels guide.
Quick Overview
| Typical panel lifespan | 25-40 years (warranty covers 25) |
| Output at 25 years | 85-90% of original (still functional) |
| Main end-of-life paths | Continued use, repowering, second-hand sale, recycling |
| UK recycling requirement | Mandatory under WEEE regulations |
| Material recovery rate | 85-95% by weight |
| Global recycling rate (current) | ~10% (most of remainder landfilled outside EU/UK) |
The Four Paths for Old Panels
Overview of End-of-Life Options
| Path | When It Happens | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Continued operation | Panels still performing adequately | Kept in place; generating power |
| Repowering | Economic benefit to upgrade | Replaced with newer, more efficient panels |
| Second-hand sale | Panels still functional after removal | Sold for reuse in other projects |
| Recycling | Panels no longer viable | Materials recovered at recycling facility |
Decision Factors
| Factor | Continue | Repower | Sell | Recycle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Output remaining | 70%+ | Any | 70%+ | Below viable |
| Physical condition | Good | Any | Good | Any |
| New panel efficiency gains | Small | Large | N/A | N/A |
| Economic calculation | Keep generating | Upgrade payback | Recover value | Dispose responsibly |
Path 1: Continued Operation
Why Panels Keep Working Past 25 Years
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| 25 years is warranty, not lifespan | Manufacturers guarantee minimum output; panels typically exceed this |
| Degradation rate | 0.5% per year average; best panels 0.2-0.3% |
| Output at 25 years | ~87.5% of original at 0.5% annual degradation |
| Output at 30 years | ~85% of original |
| Modern panel potential | 40-50 year lifespan anticipated for premium panels |
Example: Panel Performance Over Time
| Age | Output (400W Original) | Percentage Remaining |
|---|---|---|
| New | 400W | 100% |
| 10 years | 380W | 95% |
| 20 years | 362W | 90.5% |
| 25 years | 353W | 88.1% |
| 30 years | 344W | 86% |
| 35 years | 336W | 84% |
When to Keep Panels Running
| Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Still meeting energy needs | Keep operating |
| No physical damage | Keep operating |
| Inverter still working | Keep operating (replace inverter if needed) |
| No upgrade incentives | Keep operating |
| Minimal efficiency gains from new panels | Keep operating |
Path 2: Repowering
What Is Repowering
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Definition | Replacing older panels with newer, more efficient models |
| Typical timing | 10-20 years into system life |
| Main driver | Efficiency gains justify early replacement |
| Common on | Commercial solar farms; large rooftop systems |
For homeowners who don’t want a full panel replacement but do want more generation, our upgrading old solar systems guide covers inverter upgrades, battery additions, and adding panels rather than replacing the whole system.
Why Repower Before End of Life
| Reason | Example |
|---|---|
| Efficiency improvements | 2010 panel: 250W; 2026 panel: 450W+ (same footprint) |
| Better land/roof utilisation | More output from same space |
| Improved revenue | Higher generation = more income |
| New technology benefits | Better low-light performance; bifacial gains |
| Reduced maintenance | Modern panels more reliable |
UK Repowering Timeline
| Installation Period | Likely Repowering Window | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2010-2015 (FiT boom) | 2027-2035 | Early commercial sites already considering |
| 2015-2020 | 2035-2045 | Will depend on efficiency gains |
| 2020-2025 | 2045-2055 | Further into future |
What Happens to Removed Panels
| Condition | Destination |
|---|---|
| Functional (70%+ output) | Second-hand market; reuse projects |
| Marginal (50-70% output) | Off-grid use; budget projects; recycling |
| Non-functional | Recycling |
Path 3: Second-Hand Market
For a dedicated guide to the used panel market – what to look for, typical prices, and where to find them – see our used solar panels guide.
The Growing Reuse Market
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Market status | Growing; 150,000+ used modules traded in Europe 2025 |
| Main sources | Repowering projects; damaged installations; upgrades |
| Key platforms | Search4Solar (B2B); various online marketplaces |
| Typical buyers | Installers; developers; off-grid users; farmers |
Used vs Refurbished Panels
| Type | Definition | Warranty | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Used | Previously installed; sold as-is | None or limited | 30-50% of new |
| Refurbished | Tested, repaired, certified | Limited (not original manufacturer) | 40-60% of new |
| New | Factory fresh | 25-30 years | Full price |
Suitable Applications for Old Panels
| Application | Why Suitable |
|---|---|
| Agricultural outbuildings | Lower output acceptable; cost-sensitive |
| Off-grid cabins | Any generation useful; no grid connection needed |
| Garden offices | Low power needs; budget-friendly |
| Electric fence chargers | Minimal power requirement |
| Boat/caravan | Portable power; weight tolerant |
| Community projects | Cost savings; educational value |
| Developing countries | Any power valuable; humanitarian reuse |
Buying Second-Hand: What to Check
| Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Glass condition | Cracked glass = usually not repairable |
| Output testing | Verify actual vs rated output |
| Physical inspection | Check for burns, hotspots, delamination |
| Age and model | Older panels less efficient; parts availability |
| Documentation | Serial numbers; provenance; test results |
| MCS certification (if grid-connected) | May not be possible with old panels |
UK Considerations for Second-Hand Panels
| Issue | Details |
|---|---|
| MCS certification | Required for grid connection; difficult with used panels |
| DNO notification | Still required for grid-connected systems |
| Warranty | Original warranty unlikely to transfer |
| Installation costs | Same as new panels; scaffolding, labour, etc. |
| Best use | Off-grid applications where certification not needed |
Path 4: Recycling
UK panel recycling is coordinated across Europe by the PV CYCLE non-profit, which runs free take-back schemes and is the default fallback if your original installer is no longer trading. Full details of UK Extended Producer Responsibility rules are available on the UK government WEEE page.
When Panels Go to Recycling
| Situation | Recycling Appropriate |
|---|---|
| Output below viable level | Yes |
| Physical damage (cracked glass) | Yes |
| Electrical faults (unrepairable) | Yes |
| No second-hand market demand | Yes |
| Storm/fire damage | Yes |
If panels have been damaged by a storm, check our storm damage solar panels guide before moving straight to recycling – insurance claims and partial repairs may apply.
UK Legal Requirements
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| WEEE Regulations | Solar panels classified as Category 14 |
| Landfill ban | Illegal to dispose of panels in landfill |
| Producer responsibility | Installer/manufacturer must fund recycling |
| Licensed carriers | Must use licensed waste carriers for transport |
| Authorised facilities | Processing only at approved treatment facilities |
The Recycling Process
Understanding how panels are made informs how they get unmade – see our how solar panels are made guide for the manufacturing stages that recycling reverses.
| Stage | What Happens | Output |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Collection | Panels collected from site | Whole panels |
| 2. Disassembly | Frame and junction box removed | Aluminium; electrical components |
| 3. Glass separation | Glass removed from laminate | Glass (70-75% of weight) |
| 4. Thermal processing | Heated to 500°C; burns off EVA | Freed cells; captured plastics |
| 5. Cell processing | Chemical etching; metal extraction | Silicon; silver; copper |
| 6. Material sorting | Separation by type | Sorted commodities |
Materials Recovered
| Material | % of Panel | Recovery Rate | Where It Goes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glass | 70-75% | 90-95% | New panels; fibreglass; bottles; insulation |
| Aluminium | 10-15% | ~100% | New frames; general aluminium products |
| Silicon | 3-4% | 80-95% | New wafers (high-purity); other uses |
| Copper | ~1% | 90%+ | Electrical wiring; components |
| Silver | 0.05-0.1% | 70-95% | New panels; electronics; jewellery |
| Plastics | 5-7% | Variable | Energy recovery; some recycling |
Recovering high-value materials like silver also reduces the supply chain pressure for new panels – see our rare earth metals in solar panels guide for the wider picture on materials and sourcing.
Closed-Loop Recycling
| Concept | Details |
|---|---|
| Panel-to-panel recycling | Recovered materials go back into new panel manufacturing |
| Current status | Emerging; some facilities achieving this |
| Silicon recovery | Advanced plants recovering solar-grade silicon |
| Glass recovery | High-purity glass can return to panel production |
| Future target | Industry aiming for 75% recycled content in new panels |
The Global Picture
Current Global Recycling Rates
| Region | Recycling Rate | Legal Framework |
|---|---|---|
| EU/UK | High (regulated) | WEEE Directive; mandatory |
| USA | Low (~10%) | State-by-state; limited federal rules |
| China | Developing | New regulations emerging |
| Australia | Growing | Product stewardship schemes |
| Global average | ~10% | Majority landfilled or stockpiled |
Why Global Rates Are Low
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Economics | Recycling costs more than landfill in many regions |
| Infrastructure | Limited recycling facilities outside EU |
| Regulations | No mandatory recycling in most countries |
| Volume | Not enough waste yet to justify investment |
| Awareness | Many owners unaware of options |
Projected Waste Volumes
| Year | Global Cumulative Waste | UK Annual Waste |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | ~1-2 million tonnes | ~1,000 tonnes |
| 2030 | 4-8 million tonnes | ~5,000-10,000 tonnes |
| 2040 | ~50 million tonnes | ~50,000-80,000 tonnes |
| 2050 | 78-200 million tonnes | ~2 million tonnes (cumulative) |
UK Recycling Infrastructure
Major UK Facilities
| Company | Location | Recovery Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Recycle Solar | Scunthorpe | 90-95% |
| SolRecycle | Manchester | Up to 95% |
| Pravas Sustainable Technologies | Worcester | 95%+ |
| PV Recycling | Burscough | 85-95% |
| Solar Recycling Solutions | London | Up to 99% |
Recent Developments
| Development | Date | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Segen recycling scheme | April 2026 | Commercial panel recycling; £6-7 per panel |
| ROSI/Waste Experts partnership | March 2025 | French technology; UK collection network |
| CEF drop-off network | Ongoing | 390+ branches accepting WEEE |
Environmental Considerations
Why Proper Disposal Matters
| Risk if Landfilled | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Lead leaching | Groundwater contamination |
| Cadmium release | Soil pollution; health risks |
| Lost resources | Valuable materials wasted |
| Increased mining | More virgin material extraction needed |
| Carbon footprint | New materials have higher embodied carbon |
Benefits of Recycling
| Benefit | Details |
|---|---|
| Resource conservation | 70% less energy to make silicon from recycled vs virgin |
| Reduced mining | Less extraction of silver, silicon, aluminium |
| Supply chain security | Recovered materials reduce import dependency |
| Carbon savings | Lower emissions than virgin production |
| Economic value | £8-15 billion recoverable globally by 2050 |
For the broader carbon picture on manufacturing and end-of-life, see our carbon footprint of solar manufacturing guide.
Circular Economy Vision
| Target | Projection |
|---|---|
| Recovered material value (2050) | $15 billion globally |
| New panels from recycled material | 2 billion panels possible |
| Equivalent capacity | 630 GW from recycled materials |
| Industry target | 75% recycled content in new panels |
What UK Homeowners Need to Know
Your Rights Under WEEE
| Right | Details |
|---|---|
| Free recycling | Producer must fund collection and recycling |
| Producer responsibility | Installer/manufacturer obligated to take panels back |
| No landfill | Panels cannot legally be landfilled |
| Compliance scheme backup | PV CYCLE etc. step in if producer defunct |
What You May Pay For
| Service | Typical Cost | Who Pays |
|---|---|---|
| Roof removal | £200-500 | Homeowner |
| Electrician disconnection | £100-200 | Homeowner |
| Collection/transport | Free | Producer |
| Recycling | Free | Producer (pre-funded) |
Steps When Your Panels Need Replacing
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Assess whether panels still functional (consider continued use) |
| 2 | Get output tested if uncertain |
| 3 | Consider second-hand sale if still working |
| 4 | Contact original installer for recycling |
| 5 | If installer defunct, contact PV CYCLE or local recycler |
| 6 | Arrange roof removal (separate from recycling) |
| 7 | Producer arranges collection and recycling |
Future Outlook
Industry Trends
| Trend | Status |
|---|---|
| Design for recycling | Manufacturers making panels easier to disassemble |
| Extended Producer Responsibility | Spreading globally; more countries adopting |
| Recycling technology | Improving recovery rates and purity |
| Secondary market growth | B2B platforms expanding; volumes increasing |
| Automation | AI and robotics improving efficiency |
Market Projections
| Metric | 2025 | 2030 |
|---|---|---|
| Global recycling market | ~$460 million | ~$1.12 billion |
| Growth rate (CAGR) | 19.5% annually | |
| Key players | First Solar, ROSI, SolarCycle, Reiling, Rinovasol | |
Frequently Asked Questions
Basic Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Do solar panels just die after 25 years? | No; they degrade slowly and typically continue working for 30-40 years |
| Can old panels be recycled? | Yes; 85-95% of materials recoverable |
| Are old panels toxic waste? | Most silicon panels are non-hazardous; proper recycling prevents any risk |
| Can I sell my old panels? | Yes, if still functional; second-hand market growing |
UK-Specific Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Can panels go to landfill in UK? | No; illegal under WEEE regulations |
| Who pays for recycling? | Producer (installer/manufacturer); pre-funded |
| What if my installer closed? | Contact PV CYCLE or commercial recycler |
| Do I get money back? | No; but you don’t pay for recycling either |
Summary
| Path | When Applicable | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Continued operation | Panels still performing well | Keep generating electricity |
| Repowering | Economic benefit to upgrade | New panels; old ones resold or recycled |
| Second-hand sale | Panels still functional | Reuse in other projects |
| Recycling | Panels no longer viable | 85-95% materials recovered |
Old solar panels in the UK follow multiple possible paths, with outright disposal being the least common and least desirable. The most important thing to understand is that the 25-year mark on panel warranties represents a guarantee, not an expiry date. Modern panels degrade at just 0.5% per year on average, meaning a panel rated at 400W when new still produces around 350W after 25 years of service. Many panels continue operating effectively for 30-40 years, particularly high-quality monocrystalline models.
When panels are eventually replaced, whether through repowering projects or genuine end of life, the UK’s legal framework ensures responsible management. WEEE regulations make landfilling illegal and place the cost of recycling on producers, not homeowners. This Extended Producer Responsibility model means your installer or the panel manufacturer must arrange and pay for collection and recycling when your panels reach end of life, though you may need to pay separately for physical removal from your roof.
The second-hand market for solar panels is growing rapidly, with over 150,000 used modules traded across Europe in 2025. Functional older panels find new homes on agricultural buildings, off-grid installations, community projects, and budget-conscious applications where maximum efficiency is less critical than cost savings. This reuse extends panel lifespans significantly, doubling their lifetime carbon-offsetting potential.
For panels that genuinely need recycling, UK facilities can recover 85-95% of materials by weight, including glass, aluminium, silicon, copper, and silver. Advanced facilities are increasingly achieving closed-loop recycling, where recovered materials return directly to new panel manufacturing. By 2050, recovered materials from old panels could be worth £8-15 billion globally and provide enough raw material for 2 billion new panels, representing 630 GW of capacity without mining new resources.
The thing most UK homeowners don’t realise: WEEE means you should never pay for panel recycling itself. The collection and processing is legally funded by the producer (your installer or panel manufacturer). What you may pay is the physical labour of getting panels off your roof – typically £200-£500 for roof removal and another £100-£200 for electrical disconnection. If anyone quotes you a separate “recycling fee” on top of removal, push back and ask which compliance scheme covers your panels.
If your original installer has closed down (common for systems installed in the 2011-2014 FiT boom), PV CYCLE is the safety net – they coordinate free take-back across Europe and UK recycling facilities. Keep your installation paperwork: serial numbers and model details speed up the process enormously. And before jumping to recycling, do consider whether a 15-year-old panel at 90% output might have value to someone building a garden office, off-grid cabin, or agricultural PV project. What’s “end of life” for grid-tied FiT economics is often still perfectly useful to a different buyer.