- 1Leased panels mean a third party owns the kit on your roof under a long-term contract (typically 20-25 years from a “rent-a-roof” install in 2010-2016). They keep the Feed-in Tariff income; you usually get free electricity in return.
- 2Mortgage lenders apply UK Finance Mortgage Lenders’ Handbook clause 5.20 when assessing leased solar. Roughly 30% of lenders decline outright, ~60% accept if the lease meets minimum requirements, and ~10% are case-by-case. A specialist broker is essential.
- 3Buyouts typically cost £3,000-£8,000 depending on years remaining and FIT value. Negotiate with the seller to buy out before completion – it’s the cleanest fix and often the easiest to fund through a price reduction on the property.
- 4Watch for onerous terms in the lease: uncapped RPI escalation on PPA payments, you-pay-removal-and-reinstall clauses for roof work, restrictive transfer provisions, or a lease company in administration. These are the deals worth walking away from.
Buying a house with leased solar panels requires careful consideration. Unlike owned panels, which transfer to you as part of the property, leased panels mean inheriting a long-term agreement with a third-party company. You’ll be taking on their contract – typically 20-25 years – which involves ongoing obligations, potential mortgage complications, and limitations on what you can do with your own roof.
This doesn’t mean you should automatically avoid properties with leased panels, but you do need to understand what you’re taking on. The lease terms vary significantly between providers and time periods, and some agreements are far more favourable than others. Your decision should be based on a thorough review of the specific agreement, not assumptions about solar leases generally.
This guide covers what leased solar panels mean for buyers, how to evaluate lease agreements, mortgage implications, negotiating strategies, buyout options, and how to decide whether a property with leased panels is right for you.
Leased Panels at a Glance
| What it means | Third party owns panels on the roof |
| Your obligation | Take over the lease agreement |
| Typical term | 20-25 years (may have years remaining) |
| Mortgage impact | Some lenders decline; others accept |
| Buyout option | Usually available; £3,000-£8,000 |
| Can you refuse? | Yes – but seller must resolve |
Understanding Solar Leases
How They Work
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Panel ownership | Company owns; installed on your roof |
| Your benefit | Free electricity while panels generate |
| Company benefit | Keeps Feed-in Tariff payments |
| Roof lease | You’re leasing roof space to them |
| Duration | Typically 20-25 years from installation |
Types of Agreements
| Type | Description | Your Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Rent-a-roof / Free solar | Panels installed free; company keeps FIT | Usually £0 |
| Power Purchase Agreement | Buy electricity from panels at set rate | Per kWh rate |
| Lease purchase | Monthly payments; own at end | Monthly fee |
| Hybrid arrangements | Combinations of above | Varies |
Why These Schemes Existed
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Feed-in Tariff | High rates made panels profitable |
| Business model | Company installs; claims FIT; profits |
| Homeowner appeal | Free panels; free electricity |
| Peak period | 2010-2016 before FIT rates dropped |
| Now | FIT closed; existing agreements continue |
What You’re Taking On
Your Obligations
| Obligation | Typical Requirement |
|---|---|
| Allow roof access | Company can access for maintenance |
| Maintain roof | Keep roof in good condition |
| Not remove panels | Cannot remove without permission |
| Transfer on sale | Must transfer lease to future buyer |
| Pay for electricity (PPA) | If agreement includes this |
| Notify of issues | Report damage or problems |
Your Rights
| Right | Details |
|---|---|
| Free electricity | Use what panels generate (usually) |
| Maintenance by company | They maintain their equipment |
| Buyout option | Can purchase panels (at a price) |
| Transfer right | Can transfer to next buyer |
| End of term | Panels usually become yours or removed |
Potential Downsides
| Issue | Impact |
|---|---|
| Roof work complications | Must coordinate with company |
| Moving company | May need to pay for panel removal/reinstall |
| Mortgage limitations | Some lenders won’t lend |
| Resale concerns | Future buyers face same issues |
| No FIT income | Company keeps the payments |
| Long commitment | May outlast your ownership |
Reviewing the Lease Agreement
Critical Terms to Check
| Term | What to Look For | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Duration | How many years remain | 15+ years remaining |
| Transfer provisions | Can it transfer to you? | Restrictions or fees |
| Buyout formula | How price is calculated | High or unclear pricing |
| Roof access | Notice required | Unrestricted access |
| Maintenance responsibility | Who pays for what | Ambiguous clauses |
| End of term | What happens when lease ends | You pay for removal |
Payment Terms (If Applicable)
| Check | Concern |
|---|---|
| Current rate | What you pay per kWh |
| RPI escalation | Annual increase clause |
| Cap on increases | Is there a maximum? |
| Current vs grid price | Still cheaper than grid? |
| Future projections | Will it become expensive? |
RPI Escalation Example
| Year | PPA Rate (3% RPI) | Grid Rate (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| Now | 12p/kWh | 24p/kWh |
| +5 years | 14p/kWh | 28p/kWh |
| +10 years | 16p/kWh | 33p/kWh |
| +15 years | 19p/kWh | 39p/kWh |
Roof Work Provisions
| Scenario | What Agreement Says |
|---|---|
| Roof repair needed | Who removes/reinstalls panels? |
| Cost of removal | Who pays? (Often you) |
| Roof replacement | May cost £1,000-£3,000 extra |
| Notice required | How much notice to company? |
Mortgage Implications
Lender Positions
| Position | Proportion | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Accept with conditions | ~60% | Review terms; may add conditions |
| Decline | ~30% | Policy against third-party interests |
| Case-by-case | ~10% | Depends on specific agreement |
Lenders apply the rules in UK Finance’s Mortgage Lenders’ Handbook clause 5.20, which sets out the minimum requirements roof-space leases must meet for lender consent. Your conveyancer will check the lease against this handbook plus any additional Part 2 requirements specific to your chosen lender.
Why Some Lenders Decline
| Concern | Lender’s View |
|---|---|
| Third-party interest | Complicates their security |
| Roof access rights | Others can access property |
| Long-term commitment | Outlasts typical mortgage |
| Resale risk | Harder to sell if repossessed |
| Valuation impact | May reduce property value |
Getting a Mortgage
| Approach | Details |
|---|---|
| Use a broker | Knows which lenders accept |
| Declare upfront | Don’t hide the lease |
| Provide full agreement | Lender will review |
| Allow extra time | May take longer to process |
| Have backup lenders | In case first declines |
If Lender Declines
| Option | Action |
|---|---|
| Try different lender | Broker can find alternatives |
| Negotiate buyout | Ask seller to buy out lease |
| Adjust offer | Reduce price to fund your buyout |
| Walk away | If no acceptable solution |
Valuation Impact
How Valuers View Leased Panels
| Factor | Valuer’s Consideration |
|---|---|
| Third-party interest | May reduce marketability |
| Lease terms | Onerous terms may reduce value |
| Years remaining | Longer = more concern |
| Buyout cost | May deduct from value |
| Free electricity benefit | Some positive offset |
Typical Valuation Adjustments
| Scenario | Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Favourable terms; few years left | Neutral |
| Reasonable terms; 10+ years left | Neutral to -£2,000 |
| Poor terms; 15+ years left | -£3,000 to -£5,000 |
| Very onerous terms | May flag as concern |
For the wider impact of solar on UK home values – both leased and owned – see our guide to solar panels and home value.
Buyout Options
How Buyouts Work
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| What it is | Purchase panels from lease company |
| Result | You own panels; lease ends |
| Typical cost | £3,000-£8,000 |
| Price factors | Years remaining; FIT value; system size |
| Negotiable? | Often yes; especially pre-sale |
Buyout Pricing
| Years Remaining | Typical Buyout Cost |
|---|---|
| 5 years or less | £1,500-£3,000 |
| 6-10 years | £3,000-£5,000 |
| 11-15 years | £4,500-£7,000 |
| 16-20 years | £5,500-£8,000 |
Buyout Negotiation Strategies
| Approach | Leverage |
|---|---|
| Sale falling through | Company loses ongoing arrangement |
| Quick payment | Cash now vs years of small payments |
| Multiple quotes | If company has sold debt to another |
| End of financial year | May need to close deals |
Who Should Pay?
| Scenario | Negotiation Position |
|---|---|
| Strong market; seller keen | Ask seller to buy out |
| Buyer’s market | You have leverage |
| Competitive situation | May need to accept lease |
| Split the cost | Compromise solution |
| Reduce offer | You buy out from savings |
Due Diligence Checklist
Documents to Request
| Document | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Full lease agreement | All terms; no missing pages |
| Any amendments | Changes since original |
| Assignment provisions | How transfer works |
| Payment history | If PPA; payments made |
| Buyout quote | Current price to purchase |
| Company details | Who to contact |
| MCS certificate | Proper installation |
Questions to Ask
| Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| How many years remain? | Duration of commitment |
| What’s the buyout cost? | Exit option pricing |
| Is buyout negotiable? | May reduce price |
| What are roof work provisions? | Your costs if roof needs work |
| What happens at end of term? | Own panels or removed? |
| Any payment escalation? | Future cost increases |
| Is company still trading? | Ongoing support |
Red Flags
| Warning Sign | Concern |
|---|---|
| Missing documentation | Can’t verify terms |
| Company not responding | Support issues |
| Very high buyout | Expensive to exit |
| Uncapped RPI | Costs could soar |
| You pay removal costs | Expensive at end of term |
| Restrictive transfer terms | Hard to sell on |
| Company in administration | Uncertain future |
Making the Decision
When to Accept the Lease
| Favourable Factor | Why It’s OK |
|---|---|
| Few years remaining | Commitment ending soon |
| Good terms | Reasonable provisions |
| Free electricity | Genuine benefit |
| Mortgage approved | Lender accepts |
| Low/no payment | No ongoing cost |
| Clear end of term | Panels become yours |
When to Push for Buyout
| Concerning Factor | Why Buyout Better |
|---|---|
| 15+ years remaining | Very long commitment |
| Mortgage difficulties | Limited lenders available |
| Poor terms | Onerous obligations |
| High RPI escalation | Costs will rise significantly |
| You pay removal | Hidden future cost |
| Buyout reasonable | Affordable to resolve |
When to Walk Away
| Deal-Breaker | Why |
|---|---|
| Can’t get mortgage | No viable financing |
| Seller won’t buyout | You’re stuck with bad terms |
| Buyout unaffordable | Can’t resolve the issue |
| Terms truly onerous | Risk not worth benefit |
| Company problematic | Ongoing issues likely |
Negotiating with Sellers
Approaches
| Strategy | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Request seller buyout | They purchase before completion |
| Reduce your offer | By buyout cost amount |
| Split the cost | Each pay half |
| Accept with discount | Lower price; keep lease |
| Walk away threat | Leverage if they’re keen to sell |
What to Say
| Situation | Approach |
|---|---|
| Mortgage declined | “Our lender won’t accept the lease” |
| High buyout | “We need to factor in £X to exit” |
| Bad terms | “The agreement terms are concerning” |
| Long term | “20 years is a significant commitment” |
Seller’s Options
| They Can | Implication for You |
|---|---|
| Buy out lease | Clean purchase; full lender choice |
| Reduce price | You buy out post-purchase |
| Find different buyer | You lose the property |
| Refuse to negotiate | Accept lease or walk |
After Purchase
If You Accept the Lease
| Action | Timing |
|---|---|
| Confirm transfer complete | Check with company |
| Update contact details | Your details registered |
| Understand system | How it works; monitoring |
| Note end date | When lease expires |
| Review buyout periodically | Price may reduce over time |
If Buyout Happens
| Action | Details |
|---|---|
| Get ownership documents | Proof panels now yours |
| Transfer warranties | If still valid |
| Register for SEG | Get paid for exports |
| Update insurance | Declare owned panels |
| Enjoy the benefits | Free electricity; potential income |
After a buyout, your panels are functionally identical to any owned system. For the wider buying-with-owned-panels checklist, see our guide to buying a house with solar panels.
Company Issues
If Lease Company Has Problems
| Situation | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Company sold debt | New company takes over |
| Company in administration | Administrator may sell contracts |
| Company wound up | May simplify your situation |
| No one claims ownership | Seek legal advice |
Finding Current Owner
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| Original company | Check if still trading |
| Companies House | Check status; find successors |
| Land Registry | Check for registered interests |
| FIT licensee | Ask who receives FIT payments |
Summary
| Aspect | Key Points |
|---|---|
| What you’re taking on | Long-term agreement; third-party interest |
| Mortgage impact | ~30% of lenders decline |
| Buyout option | £3,000-£8,000 typically |
| Key documents | Full agreement; buyout quote |
| Negotiation | Ask seller to buyout or reduce price |
| Decision factors | Years remaining; terms; mortgage options |
Buying a house with leased solar panels requires careful due diligence. You’re not just buying a property – you’re inheriting a long-term legal agreement with ongoing obligations. The lease terms, years remaining, and buyout costs vary significantly, so don’t make assumptions based on what you’ve heard about solar leases generally. Review the specific agreement thoroughly.
Mortgage availability is the first practical hurdle. Around 30% of lenders decline properties with leased panels, so use a broker who knows which lenders accept them. If your preferred lender declines, you have options: try different lenders, negotiate for the seller to buy out the lease, or reduce your offer to cover a buyout you’ll complete after purchase.
The buyout option is often the cleanest solution. If the seller is motivated, push for them to purchase the panels before completion. If that’s not possible, reducing your offer by the buyout amount achieves the same result financially. Owning the panels outright removes mortgage restrictions, simplifies future sales, and means you keep any ongoing benefits.
Don’t automatically walk away from a property with leased panels, but don’t accept poor terms either. If the lease has favourable conditions and few years remaining, it may be a non-issue. If terms are onerous and decades remain, it’s reasonable to insist on resolution before proceeding.
Pre-offer checklist for leased solar. Before you make an offer, get from the seller (via the estate agent): the full lease document, a current buyout quote from the lease company, and confirmation of who currently receives the FIT payments. Send these to a conveyancer experienced in roof-space leases – not all are – and ask them to check the lease against UK Finance Mortgage Lenders’ Handbook clause 5.20.
Three things to confirm before exchange: (1) your chosen mortgage lender will accept this specific lease, in writing; (2) the lease can transfer cleanly without restrictive consent fees; (3) the buyout price is what you were quoted, not a higher figure once contracts are exchanged. The cleanest deal is one where the seller buys out before completion – but a price reduction equal to the buyout cost gets you to the same place.