Solar panel installation in the UK must comply with Part P of the Building Regulations, which covers electrical safety in dwellings. This means the electrical work involved – connecting panels to inverters and connecting inverters to your consumer unit – is “notifiable work” that must either be done by a registered competent person or be approved by your local authority building control.

In practice, using an MCS-certified installer handles all Part P compliance automatically. MCS installers are registered with competent person schemes that allow them to self-certify their electrical work, issue the required certificates, and notify building control on your behalf. You receive the documentation needed for SEG registration, insurance, and future property sale.

This guide explains Part P requirements, how they apply to solar installations, what certificates you should receive, other relevant building regulations, and the different rules in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

Quick Overview

Part P applies?Yes – solar is notifiable electrical work
Who can install?Competent person scheme member
MCS installer covered?Yes – self-certifies
Certificate requiredElectrical Installation Certificate
Building control notificationInstaller handles this
DIY possible?Technically yes; practically difficult

What Is Part P?

Part P Basics

AspectDetails
Full nameApproved Document P: Electrical Safety
Applies toDwellings in England
PurposeEnsure electrical work is safe
Introduced2005
Enforced byLocal authority building control

The full text of the regulation – what counts as notifiable work, the three certification routes, the technical requirements – is published on GOV.UK as Approved Document P: Electrical Safety. It’s the authoritative source for England (and is also applied to “excepted energy buildings” in Wales).

Why It Applies to Solar

Work TypePart P Status
New circuit from consumer unitNotifiable
Work in special locationsNotifiable
Connection to existing circuitNotifiable if new circuit added
Solar PV installationNotifiable – involves all above

What “Notifiable” Means

RequirementDetails
Building control must knowEither notified or self-certified
Work must be inspectedOr done by competent person
Certificate requiredProof of compliance
Records keptLocal authority holds record

Competent Person Schemes

What Are They?

AspectDetails
PurposeAllow self-certification of work
MembersAssessed as competent
BenefitNo building control inspection needed
NotificationScheme notifies building control

Electrical Competent Person Schemes

SchemeNotes
NICEICLargest scheme
NAPITMajor scheme
ELECSAEstablished scheme
STROMAAlso covers other trades
OthersSeveral approved schemes exist

How It Works for Solar

StepWho Does It
InstallationCompetent person (installer)
TestingInstaller tests to BS 7671
CertificationInstaller issues EIC
NotificationScheme notifies building control
RecordBuilding control holds record

MCS and Part P

MCS Certification Includes Part P

RequirementMCS Status
Competent person membershipRequired for MCS
Electrical qualificationRequired for MCS
Part P complianceAutomatic with MCS
Self-certificationIncluded

Why MCS Handles Everything

MCS RequirementPart P Benefit
Qualified electriciansCompetent to BS 7671
Scheme membershipCan self-certify
Quality managementAudited regularly
Insurance requirementsWork is covered

Documentation From MCS Installer

DocumentPurpose
MCS certificateSystem registered; SEG eligible
Electrical Installation CertificatePart P compliance
Building control notificationAutomatic via scheme
DNO notificationGrid connection registered
Warranty documentsProduct and workmanship

For more on what MCS actually means and why almost every UK installer is signed up to it, see our quote-checking guide which covers verifying installer credentials before signing.

Electrical Installation Certificate

What It Contains

SectionInformation
Details of installationAddress; description
DesignWho designed the system
ConstructionWho installed it
Inspection and testingWho tested it
Test resultsSchedule of test results
DeclarationComplies with BS 7671

Why It Matters

UseWhy Required
SEG registrationProves compliant installation
InsuranceMay be requested
Selling propertyConveyancing requirement
Building controlPart of notification
Future workReference for additions

Keeping Your Certificate

AdviceReason
Keep original safeMay be only copy
Make copiesFor different purposes
Include with property deedsFor sale
Digital backupPhoto or scan

BS 7671 Wiring Regulations

What Is BS 7671?

AspectDetails
Full nameRequirements for Electrical Installations
Also known asIET Wiring Regulations
Current edition18th Edition (Amendment 2)
PurposeTechnical standard for safety
Legal statusCompliance = Part P compliance

Solar-Specific Requirements

SectionCovers
Section 712Solar PV power supply systems
ProtectionOvercurrent; fault; isolation
DisconnectionDC and AC isolation requirements
LabellingWarning labels required
DocumentationSystem documentation

Key Safety Requirements

RequirementPurpose
DC isolatorDisconnect panels from inverter
AC isolatorDisconnect inverter from grid
RCD protectionEarth fault protection
Overcurrent protectionCircuit breakers
Surge protectionRequired in many cases
Fire safety labelsWarning of DC presence

Some of these protective devices have specific evolving requirements – for example, DC arc-fault detection is increasingly being added to new installations. See our guide to arc-fault detection in solar systems.

Other Building Regulations

Part A: Structure

ConsiderationDetails
Roof loadingRoof must support panel weight
Typical panel weight20-25kg each; 15-20kg/m²
Most roofsNo problem
Concern areasVery old; lightweight; damaged roofs
AssessmentInstaller checks; structural survey if doubt

Part L: Energy Conservation

ApplicationDetails
New buildsSolar may be required
ExtensionsMay trigger requirements
Existing homesAdding solar = improvement; encouraged
SAP calculationsSolar improves energy rating

Part B: Fire Safety

ConsiderationDetails
Escape routesNot usually affected
Fire service accessLabels warn of solar presence
Rapid shutdownNot currently required in UK
Battery installationsMay have specific requirements

Planning vs Building Regulations

Key Differences

AspectPlanning PermissionBuilding Regulations
PurposeLand use; appearanceSafety; construction standards
AuthorityPlanning departmentBuilding control
Solar usuallyPermitted developmentPart P notifiable
Approval neededUsually notVia competent person scheme

When Planning Applies

SituationPlanning Required?
Standard roof mountNo – permitted development
Listed buildingYes – listed building consent
Conservation area (visible)Possibly – check with council
Ground mount (large)Possibly – if over 9m²
FlatsYes – not permitted development

DIY Installation

Is DIY Legal?

AspectDetails
Mechanical installationNo regulations prevent
Electrical workNotifiable under Part P
DIY electrical allowed?Yes – but must notify
Building control routeApply; pay fee; inspection

DIY Building Control Route

StepDetails
1. Apply to building controlBefore work starts
2. Pay fee£200-500 typical
3. Do the workTo BS 7671 standard
4. Arrange inspectionBuilding control inspects
5. TestingMay need qualified tester
6. CertificationIf passes; certificate issued

The Planning Portal’s summary of Approved Document P is a useful plain-English overview if you’re considering this route, including the third-party certifier alternative introduced in the 2013 edition.

Why DIY Is Problematic

IssueConsequence
No MCS certificateNo SEG payments
No DNO notificationMay need to arrange yourself
Insurance concernsMay affect home insurance
Warranty issuesMay void equipment warranty
Selling propertyQuestions about compliance
Safety riskIf not competent

Non-Compliance Consequences

Risks of Non-Compliant Installation

RiskConsequence
SafetyElectrical fire; shock hazard
InsuranceClaim may be refused
Selling propertyMust regularise or disclose
EnforcementCouncil can require remediation
SEG paymentsCannot register without MCS

Regularisation

AspectDetails
What it isRetrospective building control approval
When neededWork done without notification
ProcessApply; inspection; testing
CostHigher than standard fee
OutcomeCertificate if passes
If failsWork must be remediated

When Selling Property

ScenarioImpact
Proper certificationNo issue
Missing certificatesBuyer/solicitor will query
No Part P complianceMay need regularisation
Indemnity insuranceSometimes accepted instead

From the buyer’s perspective, certificate gaps are the single most common conveyancing snag with solar-equipped homes. See our guides to buying a house with solar panels and buying a house with leased solar panels for more on what to check.

Scotland

Scottish Building Standards

AspectDetails
Equivalent to Part PSection 4: Safety
Technical standard4.5: Electrical safety
Building warrantNot usually required for solar
CertificationSELECT scheme common

Key Differences

AspectScotland
Building warrantOnly for certain work
Solar PV typicallyNo warrant needed
Electrical certificationStill required
MCS appliesYes – UK-wide

Wales

Welsh Building Regulations

AspectDetails
Part P applies?Yes – same as England
Approved Document PSame document
Competent person schemesSame schemes apply
Building controlWelsh local authorities

Key Points

AspectWales
Same as EnglandPart P identical
MCS appliesYes
Welsh languageDocuments available in Welsh
Planning differencesSome permitted development variations

Northern Ireland

NI Building Regulations

AspectDetails
Equivalent to Part PPart P (NI) – Technical Booklet P
Competent person schemesDifferent schemes operate
Building controlDistrict councils
MCS appliesYes – UK-wide

Key Differences

AspectNorthern Ireland
Self-certificationThrough approved schemes
SchemesMay be different to GB
Same principlesElectrical safety; notification
Check locallyConfirm current requirements

Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas

Additional Requirements

Property TypeExtra Requirements
Listed buildingListed building consent needed
Conservation areaMay need planning permission
AONBCheck local rules
National ParkCheck local rules

Building Regulations Still Apply

AspectStatus
Part PStill applies
Competent personStill required
CertificationStill required
Additional consentsOn top of building regs

If you live near or share a boundary with an objector, see our guide to whether neighbours can object to your solar panels.

New Build Properties

Solar on New Builds

AspectDetails
Part L requirementsMay require renewables
Future Homes StandardComing 2025 – higher requirements
SAP calculationsSolar improves rating
Builder responsibilityCompliance during build

Buying New Build With Solar

CheckWhy Important
MCS certificateSEG eligibility
System ownershipEnsure it transfers to you
WarrantiesCheck coverage
DocumentationGet all certificates

Checklist: What You Should Receive

Essential Documents

DocumentPurpose
MCS certificateSystem registration; SEG
Electrical Installation CertificatePart P compliance; BS 7671
DNO notificationGrid connection registered
Product warrantiesPanel; inverter; battery
Workmanship warrantyInstaller guarantee

Additional Useful Documents

DocumentPurpose
System schematicShows installation layout
User manualOperation instructions
Commissioning dataInitial performance
Maintenance guideCare instructions

Frequently Asked Questions

Compliance Questions

QuestionAnswer
Do I need to apply for anything?No – MCS installer handles all
Will building control inspect?No – competent person self-certifies
Do I pay building control fees?No – covered by installer
What if I don’t get certificates?Insist – you’re entitled to them

Practical Questions

QuestionAnswer
Can any electrician install solar?Must be MCS certified for SEG
What about battery additions?Same rules apply
Do I need planning too?Usually no – permitted development
What about EV charger?Also Part P notifiable

If you’re adding a battery later, the rules are essentially the same as for the original install – see our guide to adding a battery to existing solar panels.

Summary

AspectKey Point
Part P appliesYes – solar is notifiable work
MCS installerHandles all compliance
Self-certificationVia competent person scheme
CertificateElectrical Installation Certificate
Building controlNotified automatically
DIY routePossible but problematic
Scotland/Wales/NISimilar requirements

Part P of the Building Regulations applies to solar panel installations because they involve electrical work in dwellings. The regulations require that this work either be done by a member of a competent person scheme (who can self-certify) or be approved by local authority building control through formal application and inspection.

In practice, using an MCS-certified installer makes Part P compliance automatic. MCS installers must be members of competent person schemes and qualified to BS 7671 standards. They install, test, and certify the work, then notify building control through their scheme. You receive an Electrical Installation Certificate as proof of compliance, along with your MCS certificate for SEG registration.

The key action for homeowners is simple: use an MCS-certified installer and ensure you receive all documentation after installation. Keep your Electrical Installation Certificate safe – you’ll need it for SEG registration, may need it for insurance, and will definitely need it when selling your property.

DIY installation is technically possible but creates significant complications: no MCS certificate means no SEG payments, you must arrange your own building control application and inspection, and future property sales may be complicated by questions about compliance. For almost all homeowners, professional MCS installation is the only practical route.

Document checklist on handover day. Don’t sign off on the installation until you have, in writing: the MCS certificate, the Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC), the DNO notification (G98 or G99), product warranties for panels and inverter, and the installer’s workmanship warranty. If anything is missing, ask before paying the final invoice – chasing later is much harder.

If you’ve inherited a solar system without paperwork (e.g. bought a house with panels), call the original installer if known, or your local building control office to check the notification record. If the system was never notified, your options are regularisation (apply retrospectively, pay a higher fee, get an inspection) or – in property transactions – indemnity insurance to satisfy the buyer’s solicitor.