Solar panels come in two main colours: the deep black of monocrystalline panels and the blue-ish hue of polycrystalline panels. This colour difference is not cosmetic – it reflects fundamentally different manufacturing processes and silicon structures that affect efficiency, cost, and appearance.
In 2026, black monocrystalline panels dominate the residential market, offering higher efficiency and sleeker aesthetics. Blue polycrystalline panels, once the budget choice, have largely been displaced except in certain commercial and utility applications. Understanding the technology behind each helps explain why black panels have become the standard choice for UK homes.
This guide explains why solar panels are different colours, how the underlying technology affects performance, and whether colour should influence your purchasing decision.
Blue vs Black at a Glance
| Blue panels | Polycrystalline silicon; multiple crystals |
| Black panels | Monocrystalline silicon; single crystal |
| Efficiency difference | Black typically 2-4% higher |
| Cost difference | Similar now; black often better value |
| Market share 2026 | Black dominates residential (~95%+) |
| Aesthetics | Black generally preferred |
| Recommendation | Black monocrystalline for most homes |
Why the Colour Difference?
The Science of Colour
| Factor | Blue (Polycrystalline) | Black (Monocrystalline) |
|---|---|---|
| Silicon structure | Multiple crystal fragments | Single continuous crystal |
| Light interaction | Reflects some blue light | Absorbs more light; reflects less |
| Appearance | Blue with visible grain pattern | Uniform dark black |
| Why this matters | Less absorption = lower efficiency | More absorption = higher efficiency |
Crystal Structure Explained
| Type | How It’s Made | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Polycrystalline | Silicon melted; cooled quickly | Multiple small crystals form |
| Monocrystalline | Single seed crystal grown slowly | One uniform crystal structure |
| Visual difference | Fragmented, blue appearance | Smooth, black appearance |
For a deeper look at the manufacturing process – including the Czochralski method used to grow the single crystals at the heart of mono panels – see our guide to how solar panels are made.
Why Blue Reflects Blue
| Crystal boundaries | Edges between crystals reflect light |
| Blue wavelengths | Particularly reflected by silicon boundaries |
| Energy loss | Reflected light = not converted to electricity |
| Efficiency impact | ~2-4% lower than monocrystalline |
Technology Comparison
Polycrystalline (Blue)
| Characteristic | Details |
|---|---|
| Also called | Multi-crystalline; poly-Si |
| Appearance | Blue with speckled/grainy look |
| Efficiency | 15-18% typical |
| Manufacturing | Simpler; less energy-intensive |
| Historical cost | Cheaper than mono (historically) |
| Current status | Declining market share |
Monocrystalline (Black)
| Characteristic | Details |
|---|---|
| Also called | Single-crystal; mono-Si |
| Appearance | Uniform black or dark grey |
| Efficiency | 19-23%+ typical |
| Manufacturing | More complex; Czochralski process |
| Current cost | Similar to poly; often better value |
| Current status | Dominant technology |
Performance Comparison
| Metric | Blue (Poly) | Black (Mono) |
|---|---|---|
| Efficiency | 15-18% | 19-23%+ |
| Power per panel | ~300-350W | ~400-450W |
| Space efficiency | Lower | Higher |
| Low-light performance | Slightly lower | Better |
| Temperature coefficient | Similar | Similar (varies by model) |
| Degradation rate | ~0.5-0.7%/year | ~0.3-0.5%/year |
For a fuller comparison of efficiency across all current panel technologies, see our guide to solar panel efficiency.
Visual Appearance
On Your Roof
| Aspect | Blue (Poly) | Black (Mono) |
|---|---|---|
| Overall look | Blue-ish; industrial | Sleek; modern; premium |
| Cell pattern | Visible crystal boundaries | Uniform; sometimes faint lines |
| Frame colour | Usually silver | Often black; silver available |
| Backsheet | Usually white | White or black available |
| Roof blending | Stands out more | Blends better with dark roofs |
All-Black Panels
| What they are | Black cells + black frame + black backsheet |
| Appearance | Completely uniform black |
| Cost premium | ~5-10% more than standard mono |
| Efficiency note | Black backsheet slightly hotter; marginal loss |
| Best for | Aesthetics priority; visible roofs |
Frame and Backsheet Options
| Configuration | Appearance | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Black cells, silver frame, white back | Standard mono look | Most common; best value |
| Black cells, black frame, white back | Clean; minimal | Popular upgrade |
| Black cells, black frame, black back | All-black; premium | Best aesthetics; slight efficiency loss |
| Blue cells, silver frame, white back | Classic poly look | Declining availability |
Efficiency and Output
What Efficiency Means in Practice
| Panel Type | Efficiency | Power (same size) |
|---|---|---|
| Polycrystalline (older) | 15-16% | ~300-320W |
| Polycrystalline (recent) | 17-18% | ~340-360W |
| Monocrystalline (standard) | 19-21% | ~380-420W |
| Monocrystalline (premium) | 21-23% | ~430-460W |
Roof Space Impact
| Scenario | 16% Poly Panels | 21% Mono Panels |
|---|---|---|
| Target output | 4 kW | 4 kW |
| Panels needed | ~12-13 panels | ~9-10 panels |
| Roof area | ~24-26 m² | ~18-20 m² |
| Benefit | – | Fits limited roofs; room for expansion |
Annual Output Comparison
| System | Efficiency | Annual Output (UK) |
|---|---|---|
| 4 kW poly (16%) | 16% | ~3,200-3,400 kWh |
| 4 kW mono (20%) | 20% | ~3,400-3,600 kWh |
| 4 kW mono (22%) | 22% | ~3,500-3,700 kWh |
Note: Higher efficiency panels often perform better in real-world conditions including low light and partial shading. UK low-light performance matters disproportionately – see our guides on best solar panels for low light and best solar panels for the UK climate.
Cost Comparison
Historical vs Current Pricing
| Era | Poly vs Mono Cost |
|---|---|
| 2010-2015 | Poly ~20-30% cheaper |
| 2015-2020 | Poly ~10-15% cheaper |
| 2020-2024 | Near parity |
| 2025-2026 | Mono often same or cheaper per watt |
Current Pricing (2026)
| Panel Type | Cost per Watt | Cost per Panel |
|---|---|---|
| Polycrystalline (if available) | ~£0.25-£0.35 | ~£90-£120 |
| Monocrystalline (standard) | ~£0.25-£0.40 | ~£100-£160 |
| Monocrystalline (premium) | ~£0.40-£0.60 | ~£170-£270 |
| All-black mono | ~£0.30-£0.50 | ~£130-£200 |
Value Comparison
| Factor | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Cost per watt | Similar; mono often better |
| Cost per kWh (lifetime) | Mono better (higher output, slower degradation) |
| Installation cost | Similar per panel; fewer mono needed |
| Overall value | Mono typically better |
For a wider look at where it makes sense to pay more for premium panels and where you don’t need to, see our premium vs budget solar panels guide.
Why Blue Panels Are Disappearing
Market Trends
| Year | Poly Market Share (Global) |
|---|---|
| 2015 | ~70% |
| 2018 | ~55% |
| 2020 | ~30% |
| 2022 | ~15% |
| 2024 | ~5-10% |
| 2026 | <5% (mostly legacy/specific uses) |
The shift is now well documented: Fraunhofer ISE’s Photovoltaics Report confirms that monocrystalline has become the dominant technology in crystalline silicon production, with around 70% of wafers now being n-type (used for the most efficient TOPCon, HJT and IBC mono cells) – a configuration that simply isn’t compatible with traditional polycrystalline manufacturing.
Reasons for Decline
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Price convergence | Mono costs dropped; no poly advantage |
| Efficiency gap widened | Mono improved faster |
| Space efficiency | Fewer panels = lower installation costs |
| Consumer preference | Black panels look better |
| Manufacturer shift | Factories converted to mono production |
| Technology advances | PERC, TOPCon, HJT all mono-based |
Where Poly Still Exists
| Application | Reason |
|---|---|
| Large utility projects (some) | Existing contracts; bulk pricing |
| Developing markets | Cost-sensitive buyers |
| Off-grid/DIY | Budget priority; surplus stock |
| Legacy replacements | Matching existing installations |
Modern Black Panel Technologies
Types of Black Monocrystalline
| Technology | Efficiency | Appearance |
|---|---|---|
| PERC | 19-21% | Black; uniform |
| TOPCon | 21-24% | Black; very uniform |
| HJT (Heterojunction) | 22-25% | Black; premium |
| IBC (Interdigitated Back Contact) | 22-25% | Black; no gridlines visible |
For research-cell efficiency records across all these technologies (the long-standing benchmark for what’s possible in mono silicon), the NREL Best Research-Cell Efficiency Chart is the canonical reference – it tracks confirmed records from independent labs and shows just how much faster mono technologies have improved than poly over the last decade.
Cell Design Evolution
| Feature | Older Panels | Modern Panels |
|---|---|---|
| Busbars | 2-3 visible silver lines | Multi-busbar (many thin lines) or none |
| Cell gaps | Visible spacing | Minimal or shingled |
| Overall look | Grid pattern visible | Near-uniform black |
The shift to many thin busbars has had a real impact on both efficiency and visual uniformity – see our multi-busbar (MBB) solar cells guide for what changed and why.
Premium Black Panel Brands
| Brand | Technology | Appearance |
|---|---|---|
| SunPower/Maxeon | IBC | Uniform black; no visible gridlines |
| REC Alpha | HJT | Very uniform black |
| LG NeON (discontinued new) | Various | Premium aesthetics |
| Meyer Burger | HJT | Clean black appearance |
| Jinko Tiger Neo | TOPCon | Black with fine lines |
| LONGi Hi-MO | PERC/TOPCon | Standard mono look |
Aesthetics Considerations
Roof Compatibility
| Roof Type | Blue Panels | Black Panels |
|---|---|---|
| Dark slate | Contrasts; stands out | Blends well |
| Dark tiles | Visible | Good match |
| Red/brown tiles | Contrasts | Still contrasts but sleeker |
| Light grey tiles | Very visible | Visible but cleaner |
| Metal roof (dark) | Contrasts | Can match well |
Frame Colour Impact
| Frame | Effect |
|---|---|
| Silver frame | Visible; industrial look |
| Black frame | Panels appear larger; sleeker |
| Black frame + black backsheet | Most uniform appearance |
Planning and Conservation Areas
| Situation | Colour Consideration |
|---|---|
| Conservation area | Black often preferred; less obtrusive |
| Listed building (if permitted) | All-black usually required |
| Visible from road | Black blends better |
| Planning condition | May specify colour requirements |
Performance in UK Conditions
Low-Light Performance
| Condition | Blue (Poly) | Black (Mono) |
|---|---|---|
| Overcast days | Lower relative output | Better low-light response |
| Morning/evening | Less efficient | More efficient |
| Winter | Reduced performance | Better winter output |
| UK relevance | High – UK has many cloudy days | Advantage matters here |
Temperature Performance
| Factor | Blue (Poly) | Black (Mono) |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature coefficient | ~-0.4% to -0.45%/°C | ~-0.3% to -0.4%/°C |
| Hot weather loss | Slightly more | Slightly less |
| UK relevance | Moderate – UK rarely very hot | Small advantage |
Degradation Over Time
| Timeframe | Blue (Poly) | Black (Mono) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual degradation | ~0.5-0.7% | ~0.3-0.5% |
| After 25 years | ~82-87% original output | ~87-92% original output |
| Warranty output (25yr) | ~80-82% | ~84-90% |
Making the Decision
Choose Black Monocrystalline When
| Situation | Why |
|---|---|
| Limited roof space | Higher efficiency = more power |
| Aesthetics matter | Sleeker; more modern look |
| Long-term ownership | Slower degradation; better lifetime output |
| Visible installation | Better appearance from ground |
| Conservation area | Less obtrusive |
| Best value | Now similar cost; better performance |
| Future-proofing | Modern technology; longer support |
Consider Blue Polycrystalline When
| Situation | Why |
|---|---|
| Matching existing poly installation | Visual consistency |
| Budget absolutely critical | May find clearance stock cheaper |
| Large ground mount (unlimited space) | Space not a constraint |
| Off-grid/DIY project | Budget panels for non-critical use |
2026 Recommendation
| Default choice | Black monocrystalline |
| Budget option | Standard mono (silver frame, white back) |
| Best aesthetics | All-black mono (black frame and backsheet) |
| Best performance | TOPCon or HJT mono |
| Poly recommendation | Generally not recommended for new installs |
For a step-by-step framework on choosing the right panel for your home, see our guide to how to choose a solar panel and the wider best solar panels for UK homes roundup.
All-Black vs Standard Black
The All-Black Premium
| Aspect | Standard Mono | All-Black Mono |
|---|---|---|
| Frame | Silver aluminium | Black anodised |
| Backsheet | White | Black |
| Appearance | Black with silver border | Completely black |
| Cost premium | Baseline | +5-15% |
| Efficiency | Baseline | ~0.5-1% lower (runs hotter) |
Is All-Black Worth It?
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Visual importance | Higher value if roof highly visible |
| Roof colour | More impact on dark roofs |
| Efficiency trade-off | Marginal; usually acceptable |
| Resale value | May enhance kerb appeal |
| Personal preference | Some strongly prefer; others indifferent |
Common Questions
Does Colour Affect Performance?
| Short answer | The technology behind the colour affects performance |
| Blue = poly | Lower efficiency; more reflection |
| Black = mono | Higher efficiency; better absorption |
| Key point | Colour is symptom of technology, not cause of performance |
Can You Get Black Polycrystalline?
| Technically | Anti-reflective coatings can darken poly |
| Practically | Very rare; poly manufacturing declining |
| Availability | Not generally available in UK market |
| Better option | Choose mono if you want black |
Do Black Panels Get Hotter?
| All-black panels | Yes – black backsheet absorbs more heat |
| Impact | ~1-3°C higher temperature |
| Output effect | ~0.3-1% lower on hot days |
| UK relevance | Minimal – UK rarely very hot |
Summary
| Aspect | Key Points |
|---|---|
| Blue panels | Polycrystalline; lower efficiency; declining availability |
| Black panels | Monocrystalline; higher efficiency; market standard |
| Efficiency difference | Black typically 2-4% higher |
| Cost difference | Similar now; black often better value |
| Aesthetics | Black strongly preferred |
| 2026 recommendation | Black monocrystalline for virtually all installations |
The colour difference between blue and black solar panels reflects fundamentally different technologies. Blue panels use polycrystalline silicon with multiple crystal boundaries that reflect blue light, reducing efficiency. Black panels use monocrystalline silicon with a uniform crystal structure that absorbs more light and converts it more efficiently to electricity.
In 2026, the choice is straightforward for most UK homeowners: black monocrystalline panels are the clear winner. They offer higher efficiency (19-23%+ vs 15-18%), better aesthetics, similar or better value per watt, slower degradation, and are now the industry standard with strong manufacturer support and ongoing technology development.
Blue polycrystalline panels have largely disappeared from the residential market. Their historical cost advantage has evaporated as monocrystalline manufacturing scaled up and improved. Today, you may only encounter poly panels in legacy installations, clearance stock, or large utility projects with existing contracts.
If aesthetics are particularly important – perhaps your roof is highly visible or you live in a conservation area – consider all-black panels with black frames and backsheets. The small efficiency penalty from running slightly hotter is negligible in UK conditions and well worth the sleeker appearance for many homeowners.
Specifying panels for a new install? Default to black monocrystalline. Ask quotes to specify the cell technology (PERC, TOPCon, HJT or IBC), the frame and backsheet colour, and the rated efficiency at standard test conditions – those three details together tell you almost everything about how a panel will look on your roof and how much electricity it will produce per square metre.
If you’re matching an existing poly array (perhaps replacing a damaged panel), check both the rated wattage and physical dimensions; mismatched panels in the same string can drag down the whole string’s output, so consistency matters more than aesthetics in that scenario.