Key Points
  • 1Solar panels lose efficiency above 25°C – the standard test temperature. Every degree above that costs you about 0.3-0.5% of output, depending on the panel’s temperature coefficient. On a hot UK day with panels at 65°C, that’s roughly a 14% loss.
  • 2Panel temperature is much higher than air temperature – typically 20-35°C above ambient in direct sun. A 30°C summer day means panels at 55-65°C, not 30. That’s why your absolute best generation often comes on bright, cool spring days, not the hottest of summer.
  • 3For most UK homes, heat losses average 3-6% over a year – moderate, not severe. Modern HJT and TOPCon panels handle heat better than older PERC mono or polycrystalline, but the difference is rarely the deciding factor in UK panel choice.
  • 4The real heat danger isn’t whole-panel warming – it’s localised hot spots from shading, debris or cell damage, which can exceed 150°C and cause encapsulant burn or fire. Bypass diodes mitigate this, but keeping panels clean and unshaded matters.

Here’s a counterintuitive truth about solar panels: they love light but hate heat. While you might assume a scorching summer day would be peak solar weather, your panels are actually working harder and producing less efficiently than on a bright, cool spring day.

Solar panels are tested at 25°C, but panel temperatures can reach 65°C or higher on hot days. Every degree above that test temperature costs you output. In extreme heat, efficiency drops can reach 10-25% compared to ideal conditions.

For UK homeowners, this is rarely a serious problem – our climate is generally kind to solar panels. But understanding how heat affects performance helps you set realistic expectations, explains why your best generation days aren’t always the hottest, and guides decisions about installation and panel choice.

Heat and Solar Panels at a Glance

Do panels get too hot?They lose efficiency but rarely “fail” from heat
Optimal panel temperature25°C (test conditions); real-world often 40-65°C
Temperature coefficientTypically -0.3% to -0.5% per °C above 25°C
Hot day efficiency loss10-20% compared to cool conditions
UK relevanceModerate – heatwaves cause noticeable but not severe losses
Can heat damage panels?Extreme/prolonged heat can accelerate degradation

Why Heat Reduces Solar Panel Output

The Physics

Solar cells convert light into electricity through the photovoltaic effect. Heat interferes with this process:

EffectWhat Happens
Increased electron energyHeat gives electrons more random energy, reducing the orderly flow that creates current
Reduced voltageHigher temperatures lower the voltage the cell can produce
Bandgap narrowingThe energy gap that enables conversion shrinks, reducing efficiency
Increased resistanceInternal resistance rises, causing more energy lost as heat

The result: for every degree Celsius above the standard test temperature of 25°C, your panels produce slightly less power. The dominant effect is on open-circuit voltage – PVEducation’s reference page on temperature effects walks through the underlying semiconductor physics in detail if you want the equations.

Panel Temperature vs Air Temperature

Crucially, it’s panel temperature that matters, not air temperature:

Air TemperatureTypical Panel TemperatureDifference
15°C30-40°C+15-25°C
25°C45-55°C+20-30°C
30°C55-65°C+25-35°C
35°C (heatwave)60-75°C+25-40°C

Panels absorb sunlight and heat up significantly above ambient temperature. On a 30°C day, your panels might be running at 60°C – that’s 35°C above the test temperature.

Temperature Coefficient Explained

What It Means

The temperature coefficient tells you how much power output changes per degree of temperature change:

Expressed asPercentage per °C (e.g., -0.35%/°C)
Reference point25°C (Standard Test Conditions)
Negative valueOutput decreases as temperature rises
Lower is better-0.30%/°C loses less than -0.45%/°C

Typical Temperature Coefficients

Panel TypeTemperature Coefficient (Pmax)
Standard monocrystalline-0.35% to -0.40%/°C
PERC monocrystalline-0.34% to -0.38%/°C
Polycrystalline-0.40% to -0.45%/°C
TOPCon/N-type-0.29% to -0.34%/°C
HJT (Heterojunction)-0.26% to -0.30%/°C
Thin-film (CdTe)-0.25% to -0.32%/°C
Thin-film (CIGS)-0.30% to -0.36%/°C

Calculating the Loss

Example: 400W panel with -0.35%/°C coefficient

Panel TempAbove 25°CPower LossActual Output
25°C0°C0%400W
45°C20°C7%372W
55°C30°C10.5%358W
65°C40°C14%344W
75°C50°C17.5%330W

On a very hot day with panels at 65°C, you’re losing about 14% of potential output – that 400W panel is effectively a 344W panel.

Real-World Impact in the UK

UK Climate Context

The UK’s temperate climate means heat losses are moderate:

SeasonTypical Air TempTypical Panel TempEfficiency Loss
Winter0-10°C15-35°CMinimal or gain
Spring10-18°C30-45°C2-7%
Summer (normal)18-25°C40-55°C5-10%
Heatwave30-40°C55-75°C10-18%

UK heatwaves are getting more frequent and more intense – the country first recorded an air temperature above 40°C in July 2022 (40.3°C at Coningsby, Lincolnshire), and summer 2025 was the warmest on record. The Met Office’s heatwave reference page tracks the trend, which matters for solar planning because heat-related losses are likely to be a slightly larger annual factor in 2030 than they were in 2010.

When It Matters Most

Heat losses are most noticeable on summer heatwaves with air temperatures above 30°C, on still windless days with no cooling airflow, around the midday peak when sun intensity and heat are both maximal, and on south-facing low-pitch roofs that catch maximum sun exposure.

The Summer Paradox

This creates an interesting situation:

Day TypeLight LevelPanel TempEfficiencyOutput
Cool, bright spring dayHighLow-moderateHighExcellent
Hot summer dayVery highHighReducedGood (not best)
Scorching heatwaveVery highVery highSignificantly reducedModerate

Your absolute best generation days are often bright, cool days in late spring or early autumn – not the hottest days of summer. For more on choosing panels suited to typical UK weather – including cloud, low light and mild temperatures – see our best solar panels for the UK climate guide.

UK Annual Impact

Across a full year in the UK:

Average temperature-related loss3-6% annually
Peak summer loss8-15% on hot days
Winter bonus2-5% gain on cold, bright days
Overall significanceModerate – not a major concern

Can Heat Actually Damage Panels?

Normal Operating Range

Solar panels are designed for high temperatures:

Rated operating range-40°C to +85°C (typical)
NOCT (Nominal Operating Cell Temperature)42-48°C (specified by manufacturer)
UK maximum panel temperatureRarely exceeds 70-75°C
Damage thresholdGenerally above 85-90°C sustained

In normal UK conditions, panels won’t reach temperatures that cause immediate damage.

Long-Term Heat Effects

However, prolonged heat exposure can accelerate degradation:

EffectCauseImpact
Faster degradationThermal cycling; material stressSlightly faster annual output decline
Encapsulant yellowingEVA degradation from heat + UVReduced light transmission over years
Solder joint stressExpansion/contraction cyclesPotential microcracks over time
Backsheet degradationHeat + UV exposureReduced protection; moisture ingress risk

Thermal cycling – the daily expansion-and-contraction stress that comes with hot days and cool nights – is one of the main contributors to microcracks in solar cells, the invisible damage that gradually drags down output over a panel’s life. These effects are more significant in hot climates (Middle East, Australia) than in the UK.

Hot Spots

Localised heating is far more dangerous than overall panel temperature:

What causes hot spotsPartial shading; cell damage; debris; bird droppings
What happensShaded/damaged cells become resistors; heat intensely
TemperatureCan exceed 150°C locally
ConsequencesCell damage; encapsulant burn; potential fire risk
PreventionAvoid shading; keep panels clean; use bypass diodes

Modern panels include bypass diodes specifically to mitigate hot-spot risk by routing current around shaded or damaged cells. For the full mechanics of how hot spots form and what they look like in thermal images, see our solar panel hotspots guide. Keeping panels clean and unshaded is the simplest hot-spot prevention you can do.

Factors Affecting Panel Temperature

Installation Factors

FactorCoolerHotter
Mounting gapLarge gap (100mm+) allows airflowSmall gap traps heat
Mounting typeRaised/rack mount with air gapBuilding-integrated (BIPV); no gap
Roof colourLight coloured roofDark roof radiates heat
Roof materialTiles; slate (some airflow)Metal; flat membrane
LocationExposed; windy siteSheltered; enclosed
PitchSteeper pitch (better convection)Flat (heat pools)

The Importance of Ventilation

The gap beneath panels is crucial:

Recommended gapMinimum 100mm; 150mm+ better
What it doesAllows air circulation; convective cooling
Temperature differenceWell-ventilated panels can be 10-15°C cooler
Output difference3-5% higher output from better cooling

In-Roof vs On-Roof

TypeTemperatureNotes
On-roof (raised)CoolerAir gap beneath; convective cooling
In-roof (integrated)HotterNo air gap; relies on roof void ventilation
BIPV (building integrated)HottestNo dedicated cooling path

In-roof systems can run 5-15°C hotter than on-roof, resulting in 2-5% lower output in summer. This is one of the trade-offs to weigh up when choosing the integrated approach – see our guide to building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) for the full picture, including aesthetics, planning advantages and cost.

Panel Types and Heat Performance

Best Performers in Heat

TechnologyTemperature CoefficientHeat Performance
HJT (Heterojunction)-0.26% to -0.30%/°CExcellent
TOPCon/N-type-0.29% to -0.34%/°CVery good
Thin-film (CdTe)-0.25% to -0.32%/°CExcellent
IBC (Interdigitated Back Contact)-0.29% to -0.32%/°CVery good
PERC Mono-0.34% to -0.38%/°CGood
Polycrystalline-0.40% to -0.45%/°CAverage

What This Means in Practice

Example: Panel at 65°C (40°C above test conditions)

Panel TypeCoefficientPower Loss
HJT panel (-0.28%/°C)40 × 0.28%11.2%
TOPCon panel (-0.32%/°C)40 × 0.32%12.8%
PERC mono (-0.36%/°C)40 × 0.36%14.4%
Poly panel (-0.42%/°C)40 × 0.42%16.8%

The HJT panel retains 5.6% more of its output than the poly panel at the same temperature.

Is It Worth Choosing for Heat Performance?

In the UK:

FactorConsideration
ClimateUK rarely has extreme heat; moderate benefit
CostBetter temp coefficients often on premium panels
Annual impact1-3% more generation from better coefficient
RecommendationNice to have; not essential for UK

If you’re in a hotter climate (southern Europe, Middle East), temperature coefficient matters much more. For homeowners specifically prioritising heat resilience – or planning for a warming UK climate – our list of the best solar panels for high temperatures ranks the leading low-coefficient options.

Cooling Solutions

Passive Cooling (Most Common)

MethodHow It WorksEffectiveness
Air gapSpace beneath panels allows convectionEssential; standard practice
Proper mountingRaised mounting systemsHighly effective
Light-coloured frameReflects some heatMinor benefit
OrientationEast/west split can reduce peak tempsModerate benefit

Active Cooling (Rare for Residential)

MethodHow It WorksPracticality
Water coolingWater sprayed on or piped behind panelsEffective but complex; commercial use
Forced airFans blow air beneath panelsUses power; rarely worthwhile
PVT (hybrid)Panels with water heating; removes heatWorks; but expensive; niche

For typical UK residential installations, passive cooling through proper mounting is sufficient.

What You Can Do

Practical steps for UK homeowners:

ActionBenefitWhen
Ensure proper air gapBetter cooling; higher outputAt installation
Don’t block airflowMaintain convective coolingOngoing
Keep panels cleanReduces hot spotsAnnually or as needed
Check for shadingPrevents hot spotsRegularly
Consider panel typeBetter coefficient if availableAt purchase

Monitoring Temperature Effects

What to Watch For

IndicatorWhat It Tells You
Output vs temperatureGeneration dips on very hot days
Peak generation timeMay shift earlier (cooler morning) on hot days
Comparison to forecastUnderperformance on hot days is normal
Panel-level dataIdentifies hot spots (if optimisers installed)

Normal vs Concerning

ObservationStatus
10-15% less output on 35°C day vs 20°C dayNormal
Morning output higher than midday on very hot daysNormal
Best generation on bright cool days not hottestNormal
One panel consistently underperformingInvestigate (could be hot spot)
Dramatic sudden dropsInvestigate (fault, not heat)
Visible damage or discolourationConcern – get inspection

Inverters and Heat

Inverters Also Suffer from Heat

It’s not just panels – inverters are affected too:

Operating rangeTypically -25°C to +60°C
Optimal temperatureBelow 45°C for best efficiency and lifespan
DeratingInverters reduce output to protect themselves when hot
Lifespan impactConsistently hot inverters may fail earlier

Protecting Your Inverter

ActionBenefit
Install in cool locationGarage; shaded area; not south-facing wall
Ensure ventilationDon’t enclose; allow airflow
Keep clear of heat sourcesNot next to boiler; hot pipes
Clean filtersSome inverters have air filters; clean periodically

Batteries and Heat

Battery Temperature Sensitivity

Batteries are even more sensitive to heat than panels:

Battery TypeOptimal RangeHeat Tolerance
Lithium-ion (NMC)15-25°CModerate – accelerated degradation when hot
LiFePO4 (LFP)15-35°CBetter – more tolerant but still affected
Lead-acid20-25°CPoor – significantly shortened life when hot

Protecting Battery Storage

Install in temperature-stable locationAvoid lofts; choose insulated rooms
Garage better than loftLess temperature swing across the year
Ensure adequate ventilationAllow airflow around the cabinet
Built-in thermal managementSome batteries have active heating/cooling
Monitor battery temperatureIf your system reports it, watch for outliers

For more on choosing a battery suited to UK conditions and household demand, see our best solar batteries guide.

Comparing UK to Hotter Climates

Heat Impact by Location

LocationSummer Air TempPanel TempHeat-Related Loss
UK18-30°C40-65°C5-15%
Southern Spain30-42°C55-80°C12-22%
Middle East40-50°C70-90°C18-28%
Australia (outback)35-45°C60-85°C15-25%

UK Perspective

Heat is a relatively minor concern for UK solar owners. Our moderate climate limits extreme temperatures, cool winters balance hot summer losses, heatwaves are still relatively rare and short, and proper installation handles normal conditions well.

If you were installing in Dubai or Arizona, temperature coefficient would be a major factor. In the UK, it’s worth knowing about but shouldn’t drive major decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do solar panels work better in summer or winter?

Overall, summer – more daylight hours and sun means much more total generation despite heat losses. But efficiency per unit of sunlight is higher in winter/cool weather. Best absolute output: long, bright, cool days in late spring.

Should I hose down my panels on hot days?

Not recommended. Thermal shock (cold water on hot panels) can stress the glass. The brief cooling benefit is minimal. UK heat rarely justifies the effort or risk.

Do black panels get hotter than blue ones?

Very slightly. Black backsheets absorb marginally more heat. The difference is minimal (1-3°C) and rarely matters in practice. Choose aesthetics over this concern.

Will climate change make this worse?

Possibly. More frequent UK heatwaves could increase heat-related losses. However, increased sunlight may offset this. Solar remains beneficial regardless.

At what temperature do panels stop working?

They don’t stop – they just become less efficient. Even at 85°C (extreme), panels still generate; they’re just 20%+ below rated output. Actual shutdown only occurs at extreme temperatures beyond normal conditions.

Summary

AspectKey Points
Do panels get too hot?They lose efficiency but don’t fail from UK heat
Temperature coefficient-0.3% to -0.5% per °C above 25°C
UK hot day losses10-18% on very hot days
Annual UK impact3-6% average loss; not major
Best generation daysBright and cool, not hottest
ProtectionProper mounting; air gap; ventilation
Panel choiceLower coefficient nice but not essential for UK
Hot spotsReal concern – keep panels clean, unshaded

Yes, solar panels can get too hot – in the sense that heat reduces their efficiency. But in the UK, this is a modest effect rather than a serious problem. You’ll notice your system produces somewhat less on scorching days than you might expect, but it’s still producing plenty of electricity.

The counterintuitive reality is that your panels’ best efficiency comes on bright, cool days. That crisp April morning with clear skies might outperform a sweltering August afternoon. Summer still wins on total generation because of longer days and more sun hours, but don’t be surprised when your heatwave output disappoints slightly.

Practical UK takeaways. Heat is real but not a deal-breaker – expect a 3-6% annual loss on average. The single biggest installation factor you can control is the air gap beneath the panels: 100mm or more lets convective cooling do its work and is essentially free. After that, keeping panels clean and unshaded prevents the localised hot spots that actually do damage.

If you’re spec-shopping, look at the temperature coefficient on the data sheet (lower negative is better – HJT and TOPCon panels typically beat PERC mono). And know that if your inverter is mounted in a hot loft or against a sunny south-facing wall, it’ll derate on the days you most want output – shaded garage or north-facing wall is the better location.