Bifacial solar panels generate electricity from both sides – the front captures direct sunlight while the rear captures light reflected from the ground and surroundings. This dual-sided generation can boost output by 5-30% compared to standard monofacial panels, depending on mounting height, ground surface, and installation conditions. The technology has rapidly moved from commercial and utility projects into the residential market.
The key to bifacial performance is what’s beneath and around the panels. Light-coloured surfaces like white gravel, concrete, or snow reflect significant light back to the panel’s rear side. Dark surfaces like black roofing tiles provide minimal reflection and little bifacial benefit. For UK residential installations, the practical gain is often modest – typically 5-10% – because roof-mounted panels sit close to dark tiles with limited reflection.
This guide explains how bifacial panels work, what determines rear-side gain, ideal applications, UK-specific considerations, and whether bifacial technology makes sense for your installation.
Quick Overview
| What bifacial means | Generates power from both front and rear |
| Rear-side gain | 5-30% additional output |
| Best conditions | Elevated mount; light-coloured ground |
| UK roof reality | 5-10% typical gain |
| Ground mount | 10-20% gain achievable |
| Technology | Usually glass-glass; N-type cells |
How Bifacial Panels Work
Dual-Sided Generation
| Side | Light Source |
|---|---|
| Front side | Direct sunlight; diffuse sky light |
| Rear side | Reflected light from ground/surroundings |
| Combined output | Front + rear contribution |
Cell Structure
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Both sides active | Rear can absorb light and generate |
| Contacts on both sides | Or passivated rear with gaps |
| N-type typically | TOPCon and HJT naturally bifacial |
| Bifaciality factor | Rear efficiency as % of front |
Bifaciality Factor
| Technology | Typical Bifaciality |
|---|---|
| PERC (P-type) | 65-75% |
| TOPCon (N-type) | 80-85% |
| HJT | 90-95% |
| IBC | Can be >95% |
For a deeper look at the cell architectures behind these bifaciality differences (PERC vs TOPCon vs HJT vs IBC), see our guide to multi-busbar (MBB) solar cells, which covers the cell-side technology trends that pair with bifacial designs.
What Bifaciality Means
| Example | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Front efficiency | 22% |
| Bifaciality factor | 85% |
| Rear efficiency | 22% × 85% = 18.7% |
| Meaning | Rear converts light at 18.7% efficiency |
Panel Construction
Glass-Glass Design
| Layer | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Front glass | Protection; light transmission |
| Front encapsulant | Seals and protects cells |
| Solar cells | Generate electricity both sides |
| Rear encapsulant | Seals and protects cells |
| Rear glass | Light transmission; protection |
Comparison: Glass-Glass vs Glass-Backsheet
| Feature | Glass-Glass | Glass-Backsheet |
|---|---|---|
| Bifacial capable | Yes – fully | No – rear blocked |
| Weight | Heavier (~25-30kg) | Lighter (~20-22kg) |
| Durability | Excellent | Good |
| Fire rating | Often better | Depends on backsheet |
| Degradation | Lower | Standard |
Transparent Backsheet Option
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Construction | Glass front; clear backsheet rear |
| Bifaciality | Partial – some light through |
| Weight | Lighter than glass-glass |
| Less common | Glass-glass now standard for bifacial |
Rear-Side Irradiance
Sources of Rear-Side Light
| Source | Contribution |
|---|---|
| Ground reflection (albedo) | Primary source |
| Diffuse sky light | From behind panel |
| Building reflection | Nearby light surfaces |
| Adjacent panel reflection | In rows |
Albedo Values
| Surface | Albedo (%) | Rear-Side Potential |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh snow | 80-90% | Excellent |
| White concrete | 50-60% | Very good |
| White gravel/stone | 40-50% | Good |
| Light sand | 30-40% | Good |
| Dry grass | 20-25% | Moderate |
| Green grass | 15-25% | Moderate |
| Aged concrete | 20-30% | Moderate |
| Bare soil | 10-20% | Low |
| Dark roofing | 5-15% | Minimal |
| Black roof tiles | 5-10% | Very low |
Calculating Rear Irradiance
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| Ground albedo | Higher = more reflection |
| Panel height | Higher = sees more ground |
| Tilt angle | Affects view of ground |
| Row spacing | More space = more rear light |
For accurate rear-irradiance simulation, NREL’s Photovoltaic Bifacial Irradiance and Performance Modeling Toolkit uses ray-tracing to model the full scene – including module tilt, height, row spacing and surface albedo – and is the reference open-source tool for bifacial yield prediction.
Mounting Height Importance
Why Height Matters
| Height | Effect |
|---|---|
| Close to ground/roof | Rear sees limited area |
| Elevated | Rear sees more reflecting surface |
| Ground mount typical | 0.5-2m clearance |
| Roof mount | Often only 10-15cm |
Typical Gain by Height
| Mounting Height | Approximate Rear Gain |
|---|---|
| Flush/in-roof | 0-2% |
| 10-15cm (standard roof) | 2-5% |
| 30-50cm | 5-10% |
| 1m | 10-15% |
| 1.5-2m | 15-25% |
Roof Mount Reality
| Factor | UK Roof Impact |
|---|---|
| Low mounting | Limited view of surroundings |
| Dark tiles | Low albedo reflection |
| Roof shadow | Own roof may shade rear |
| Practical gain | Often only 3-8% |
Best Applications for Bifacial
Ideal Conditions
| Condition | Why Beneficial |
|---|---|
| Ground mount | Elevated; good ground view |
| Light-coloured ground | High albedo reflection |
| Elevated structures | Carports; pergolas |
| Vertical installation | East-west facades |
| Snow regions | High albedo when snowing |
Ground Mount Systems
| Feature | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Height adjustable | Optimise for rear gain |
| Surface control | Can add white ground cover |
| Row spacing | Design for rear access |
| Typical gain | 10-20% |
Ground-mount projects on farms also pair well with bifacial – especially in agrivoltaic configurations where panels are elevated above crops or grazing. See our guides to agrivoltaic farming in the UK and floating solar farms (where water reflection adds further rear-side gain).
Carports and Pergolas
| Feature | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Elevated mounting | Good height for bifacial |
| Light surface below | Concrete parking often |
| Additional function | Shade for vehicles |
| Typical gain | 10-25% |
Vertical and Building Integrated
| Application | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Façade mounting | Captures light from both sides |
| Fence/barrier | True bilateral exposure |
| East-west faces | Morning and afternoon sun |
| Gain potential | High – both sides fully exposed |
UK Residential Considerations
Typical UK Roof Installation
| Factor | Reality |
|---|---|
| Mounting height | 10-15cm above tiles |
| Roof surface | Often dark tiles (low albedo) |
| Diffuse light | UK has significant diffuse |
| Realistic gain | 3-8% typically |
When Bifacial Makes Sense for UK Roofs
| Scenario | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Light-coloured roof | White membrane; light tiles |
| Flat roof with standoff | Can elevate more |
| Surrounded by light surfaces | Reflection from nearby |
| Premium panels anyway | Many top panels now bifacial |
For UK flat-roof installations where elevation is more flexible and white membranes are common, see our flat-roof solar panels guide – flat-roof systems are typically the residential setup where bifacial pays off best.
When Monofacial May Be Better
| Scenario | Reason |
|---|---|
| Very dark roof | Minimal rear gain |
| In-roof mounting | No rear exposure |
| Tight budget | Bifacial may cost more |
| Weight limitations | Glass-glass is heavier |
UK Ground Mount
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Garden installation | Grass has moderate albedo |
| White gravel possible | Can increase reflection |
| Height flexibility | Can optimise mounting |
| Typical gain | 8-15% over grass |
Bifacial Panel Ratings
How Bifacial Panels Are Rated
| Rating | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Front-side rating | Standard STC power (e.g., 440W) |
| Bifaciality factor | Rear efficiency ratio (e.g., 85%) |
| Rear irradiance not specified | Depends on installation |
| Additional power | Calculated for specific site |
Understanding the Datasheet
| Specification | Example |
|---|---|
| Pmax (front) | 440W |
| Module efficiency | 22.0% |
| Bifaciality | 85% ± 5% |
| Additional power | Up to 25% (site dependent) |
Calculating Expected Output
| Factor | Example Calculation |
|---|---|
| Front power | 440W |
| Rear irradiance | 150 W/m² (estimated) |
| Front irradiance (STC) | 1000 W/m² |
| Rear ratio | 150/1000 = 15% |
| Bifaciality | 85% |
| Rear contribution | 440W × 15% × 85% = 56W |
| Total output | 440W + 56W = 496W |
| Bifacial gain | 12.7% |
For a comprehensive academic and industry treatment of these calculations – covering test standards, system topologies and field-validated bifacial gain – the IEA-PVPS Task 13 report on Bifacial Photovoltaic Modules and Systems is the reference document.
Installation Considerations
Mounting System Requirements
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Frame clamping | Standard systems work |
| Clamp placement | Avoid excessive rear shading |
| Rails | Minimise rear obstruction |
| Junction box | Usually centred; some rear shading |
Reducing Rear Shading
| Issue | Solution |
|---|---|
| Wide mounting rails | Use narrower profiles |
| Cable trays | Route cables to minimise shadow |
| Junction box | Accept small loss; unavoidable |
| Dense packing | Allow some spacing |
Weight Considerations
| Panel Type | Typical Weight |
|---|---|
| Standard glass-backsheet | 20-22kg |
| Bifacial glass-glass | 25-32kg |
| Difference | ~25-50% heavier |
| Roof check | Structural assessment may be needed |
Electrical Considerations
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Higher output possible | String design must allow |
| Current increase | Rear adds to current |
| Inverter sizing | May need slightly larger |
| Or accept clipping | Peak output limited by inverter |
Bifacial vs Monofacial Comparison
Performance Comparison
| Aspect | Monofacial | Bifacial |
|---|---|---|
| Front efficiency | 20-22% | 20-22% |
| Rear contribution | 0% | 5-30% |
| Total output | Base | Base + 5-30% |
| Diffuse light | Good | Better (both sides) |
For more on what efficiency numbers actually mean and how they translate to UK output, see our solar panel efficiency guide.
Cost Comparison
| Factor | Monofacial | Bifacial |
|---|---|---|
| Panel cost | Base | 0-10% premium typical |
| Installation | Standard | Similar (may need stronger mount) |
| Mounting | Standard | May need elevated for benefit |
| Overall premium | – | 5-15% typically |
When Bifacial Wins
| Condition | Bifacial Advantage |
|---|---|
| Ground mount + light surface | 15-25% more energy |
| Carport/pergola | 15-25% more energy |
| Vertical mount | Both sides productive |
| Snow regions | High winter boost |
When Monofacial Is Fine
| Condition | Why Monofacial OK |
|---|---|
| Dark roof, low mount | Minimal bifacial gain anyway |
| In-roof installation | No rear exposure |
| Budget priority | Lower panel cost |
| Weight restriction | Glass-glass too heavy |
For more on the quality tier discussion – and where bifacial sits within it – see our premium vs budget solar panels guide.
Durability and Warranty
Glass-Glass Advantages
| Benefit | Explanation |
|---|---|
| No backsheet degradation | Glass doesn’t yellow or crack |
| Better moisture resistance | Glass seals both sides |
| Lower degradation | Often 0.4%/year or less |
| Longer warranties | Often 30 years |
Typical Warranties
| Warranty Type | Bifacial Glass-Glass |
|---|---|
| Product warranty | 25-30 years |
| Performance year 1 | 97-98% |
| Performance year 25 | 87-90% |
| Performance year 30 | 84-87% |
| Annual degradation | 0.35-0.45% |
Fire Safety
| Aspect | Glass-Glass Bifacial |
|---|---|
| Fire rating | Often Class A or equivalent |
| No combustible backsheet | Glass is non-combustible |
| Building requirements | May meet stricter codes |
Popular Bifacial Panels
Leading Manufacturers
| Brand | Bifacial Range |
|---|---|
| Jinko | Tiger Neo series |
| JA Solar | DeepBlue 4.0 Pro |
| Trina | Vertex N series |
| LONGi | Hi-MO 6/7 |
| Canadian Solar | BiHiKu series |
| REC | Alpha Pure series |
| Meyer Burger | HJT panels |
Typical Specifications (2026)
| Spec | Typical Value |
|---|---|
| Power (front) | 430-450W |
| Efficiency | 21-23% |
| Bifaciality | 80-90% |
| Technology | TOPCon or HJT |
| Construction | Glass-glass |
Market Trend
| Trend | Observation |
|---|---|
| Premium panels | Increasingly bifacial by default |
| TOPCon adoption | Naturally bifacial cell structure |
| Price premium | Decreasing – becoming standard |
| Availability | Wide range now available |
For Fraunhofer ISE’s industry-standard data on bifacial market share within the broader PV technology mix, see the Fraunhofer ISE Photovoltaics Report – bifacial PERC, TOPCon and HJT have moved from research curiosities to the dominant technology mix in new utility deployments.
Modelling Bifacial Gain
Factors in Simulation
| Input | Needed For |
|---|---|
| Ground albedo | Reflection calculation |
| Mount height | View factor |
| Tilt angle | Rear exposure |
| Row spacing | Self-shading |
| Bifaciality factor | Rear efficiency |
Simulation Tools
| Tool | Bifacial Capability |
|---|---|
| PVsyst | Full bifacial modelling |
| SAM | Bifacial modelling |
| HelioScope | Bifacial support |
| Online calculators | Often simplified |
Rule of Thumb Estimates
| Installation Type | Estimated Gain |
|---|---|
| UK dark roof, low mount | 3-5% |
| UK light roof, low mount | 5-8% |
| UK ground mount, grass | 8-12% |
| Ground mount, white surface | 15-25% |
| Carport over concrete | 12-20% |
Frequently Asked Questions
Basic Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| How much extra power? | 5-30% depending on conditions |
| Worth it on dark roof? | Limited benefit – maybe 5% |
| Do I need special inverter? | No – standard inverters work |
| Are they heavier? | Yes – glass-glass is heavier |
For related cell technology questions – particularly why monocrystalline panels appear black or blue and how that relates to coatings – see our guides to blue vs black solar panels and anti-reflective coatings.
Technical Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| What’s bifaciality factor? | Rear efficiency as % of front |
| Can I paint ground white? | Yes – increases reflection |
| Does tilt affect rear gain? | Yes – vertical sees both sides equally |
| Work in cloudy weather? | Yes – diffuse light from both sides |
Summary
| Aspect | Key Point |
|---|---|
| What bifacial does | Generates from front and rear |
| Potential gain | 5-30% additional output |
| Key factors | Ground albedo; mounting height |
| UK roof reality | 3-8% gain typical |
| Best applications | Ground mount; carports; light surfaces |
| Construction | Usually glass-glass |
| Weight | Heavier than standard panels |
| Market trend | Becoming standard in premium panels |
Bifacial solar panels offer genuine performance advantages in the right conditions. By capturing light on both sides, they can generate significantly more energy than traditional panels – with gains of 15-25% possible in optimal ground-mount installations with light-coloured surfaces beneath. The technology particularly shines in applications like carports, pergolas, and vertical façade installations where both sides receive good light exposure.
For UK residential roof installations, the reality is more modest. Dark roofing tiles provide minimal reflection, and low mounting heights limit the rear side’s view of reflecting surfaces. A typical UK roof installation might see 3-8% additional output from bifacial panels – worthwhile, but not transformative. The best case for residential bifacial in the UK is flat roofs with light membranes, or ground-mount systems where you can control the surface beneath.
The good news is that bifacial technology is rapidly becoming standard in premium panels. Most TOPCon and HJT panels are naturally bifacial due to their cell structure, and the price premium has shrunk considerably. If you’re choosing a quality N-type panel anyway, it will likely be bifacial – giving you some rear-side gain as a bonus even if conditions aren’t optimal.
The glass-glass construction of most bifacial panels also brings durability advantages: better moisture resistance, lower degradation rates, and often longer warranties. For installations where the extra weight isn’t a concern, these benefits may justify choosing bifacial even when rear-side gain is modest.
Quick decision guide. If you’re installing on a standard pitched roof with dark tiles, don’t pay a premium for bifacial – the rear-side gain will be small. But if you’re getting a premium TOPCon or HJT panel anyway, you’ll likely get bifacial as standard with no real cost penalty – take the modest 3-8% bonus.
If you have a flat roof with white membrane, a garden ground mount, or a carport over light concrete, bifacial earns its premium. Ask your installer for the bifaciality factor on the datasheet (look for 80%+) and budget for elevated mounting (0.5m+ where possible) and a light-coloured surface below the array – these two design choices do more for rear-side gain than the panel choice itself.