The 9-5 Alignment: Why Offices and Solar Are a Perfect Match

Offices and commercial solar PV systems are a near-perfect match. The core working day — 9am to 5pm — aligns almost exactly with peak solar generation. Air conditioning runs hardest on sunny summer days when panels produce the most. And unlike homes that sit empty during daylight hours, offices are full of computers, lighting, and equipment consuming electricity precisely when the sun is shining.

This alignment means offices can achieve 70-90% self-consumption — among the highest of any building type. That translates to substantial savings: a medium-sized office can cut £10,000-£30,000 from annual electricity bills while demonstrating environmental leadership to staff, clients, and stakeholders.

This guide covers everything you need to know — from system sizing and costs to the complexities of multi-tenant buildings, landlord vs tenant decisions, and how solar affects your EPC rating.

Why Offices Are Ideal for Solar

FactorWhy It Helps
9-5 operationCore hours match peak solar generation almost exactly
High daytime loadIT equipment, lighting, HVAC running throughout working hours
Air conditioning demandCooling peaks on hot sunny days — exactly when solar output peaks
Large flat roofsModern office buildings often have extensive flat roof areas
High electricity costsCommercial rates of 25-35p/kWh make savings substantial
ESG requirementsGrowing pressure for measurable environmental commitments
EPC regulationsSolar improves EPC rating, helping meet MEES requirements
Staff expectationsEmployees increasingly expect sustainable workplaces
Client requirementsMany corporate clients assess supplier environmental credentials

Solar for Offices at a Glance

Typical system size20-200kW (small to large office)
Cost range£15,000-£180,000
Cost per kW£700-£1,000 installed
Annual savings£4,000-£60,000
Payback period4-7 years
Self-consumption rate70-90%
CO₂ savings5-100+ tonnes per year
Lifespan25-30 years
EPC improvementTypically 1-3 bands

Understanding Office Energy Use

Typical Electricity Consumption

Office TypeFloor AreaAnnual Electricity UseAnnual Bill (at 30p/kWh)
Small office200-500m²20,000-50,000 kWh£6,000-£15,000
Medium office500-2,000m²50,000-150,000 kWh£15,000-£45,000
Large office2,000-5,000m²150,000-400,000 kWh£45,000-£120,000
Corporate HQ/campus5,000-20,000m²400,000-1,500,000 kWh£120,000-£450,000

Where Office Electricity Goes

Equipment% of Office ElectricityWhen It Runs
HVAC (heating, cooling, ventilation)30-45%Working hours (cooling peaks with sun)
Lighting15-25%Working hours
IT equipment (computers, servers)20-30%Working hours + some baseload
Small power (desk equipment)10-15%Working hours
Lifts and escalators3-8%Working hours
Catering/kitchen3-8%Morning and lunchtime
Other (security, external)5-10%Various/24/7

The Perfect Alignment

Office electricity demand peaks between 10am and 4pm — precisely when solar panels generate most. This creates exceptional self-consumption rates:

Building TypeTypical Self-ConsumptionWhy
Residential home30-50%Occupants often out during peak solar
Retail50-70%Good daytime use, but varies by sector
School60-75%Good match, but holidays reduce average
Office70-90%Near-perfect alignment with 9-5
Industrial (day shift)65-85%Good match if single-shift operation

Higher self-consumption means more value per kWh generated. Electricity used on-site saves 25-35p/kWh; exported electricity earns only 4-15p/kWh.

System Sizes and Costs by Office Type

Small Office (200-500m²)

Typical electricity use20,000-50,000 kWh/year
Recommended system size15-35kW
Number of panels36-84
Roof area needed75-180m²
Installed cost£12,000-£32,000
Annual generation12,750-29,750 kWh
Annual savings (80% self-use)£3,500-£8,500
Payback period4-5 years

Medium Office (500-2,000m²)

Typical electricity use50,000-150,000 kWh/year
Recommended system size35-100kW
Number of panels84-240
Roof area needed180-520m²
Installed cost£28,000-£85,000
Annual generation29,750-85,000 kWh
Annual savings (80% self-use)£8,000-£24,000
Payback period4-5 years

Large Office (2,000-5,000m²)

Typical electricity use150,000-400,000 kWh/year
Recommended system size100-250kW
Number of panels240-600
Roof area needed520-1,300m²
Installed cost£75,000-£200,000
Annual generation85,000-212,500 kWh
Annual savings (80% self-use)£22,000-£58,000
Payback period4-5 years

Corporate Campus (5,000m²+)

Typical electricity use400,000-1,500,000+ kWh/year
Recommended system size250kW-1MW+
Number of panels600-2,400+
Roof area needed1,300-5,200m²+
Installed cost£180,000-£750,000+
Annual generation212,500-850,000+ kWh
Annual savings (75% self-use)£52,000-£210,000+
Payback period4-5 years

Cost Breakdown

Here’s what a typical 75kW office installation includes (for more detailed pricing information, see our commercial solar costs guide):

ComponentCost
Solar panels (180 x 420W)£18,000-£24,000
Inverter(s)£5,000-£8,000
Flat roof mounting system£8,000-£12,000
Cabling, switchgear, metering£3,000-£5,000
Installation labour£10,000-£15,000
Scaffolding/access equipment£1,500-£3,000
DNO application and connection£500-£2,500
Structural survey£500-£1,000
Design and project management£2,000-£4,000
Total£48,500-£74,500

Cost per kW by System Size

System SizeCost per kWTotal Cost
20kW£850-£1,000£17,000-£20,000
50kW£780-£920£39,000-£46,000
75kW£720-£870£54,000-£65,000
100kW£700-£850£70,000-£85,000
150kW£680-£820£102,000-£123,000
250kW£650-£780£162,500-£195,000
500kW+£620-£750£310,000+

Larger systems benefit significantly from economies of scale — cost per kW drops by 25-35% from small to large installations.

Worked Example: Medium Office Building

Riverside Business Centre is a 1,200m² three-storey office building housing 80 employees across multiple tenants.

Current Situation

Annual electricity use95,000 kWh
Current electricity rate30p/kWh
Annual electricity bill£28,500
Roof area available450m² flat roof
Current EPC ratingD

Proposed System

System size65kW
Panels156 x 420W
LayoutEast-west dual tilt on flat roof
Annual generation55,250 kWh
Self-consumption estimate85% (46,960 kWh used on-site)
Export15% (8,290 kWh)

Financial Analysis

Installation cost£52,000
Less: AIA tax relief (25%)-£13,000
Effective cost after tax£39,000
Avoided electricity (46,960 kWh × 30p)£14,088
Export income (8,290 kWh × 8p)£663
Total annual benefit£14,751
Simple payback (before tax relief)3.5 years
Payback after tax relief2.6 years
Annual bill reduction52%
New annual bill£13,750 (vs £28,500 previously)

25-Year Value

Total generation (25 years)1,330,000 kWh
Total savings (with 3% inflation)£520,000+
Net profit after system cost£465,000+
EPC improvementD → B

Landlord vs Tenant: Who Should Install?

Office buildings are often leased rather than owner-occupied, creating the classic “split incentive” problem: the landlord owns the building but the tenant pays the electricity bill.

Single-Tenant Building (Owner-Occupied)

If you own and occupy the building, the decision is simple:

  • You pay for installation
  • You receive all savings
  • You benefit from improved EPC and asset value
  • Payback: 3-5 years after tax relief

Recommendation: Install solar. The business case is compelling.

Landlord-Owned, Single Tenant

OptionWho PaysWho BenefitsConsiderations
Landlord installs, landlord benefitsLandlordLandlord (via rent increase or service charge)Tenant needs to agree; improves EPC and asset value
Landlord installs, tenant benefitsLandlordTenant (lower bills)Landlord can justify rent premium; demonstrates green credentials
Tenant installs (with permission)TenantTenantNeed landlord consent; what happens at lease end?
Shared investmentBothBothProportional share of savings; works with long leases

Multi-Tenant Building

Multi-tenant offices add complexity:

  • Landlord common areas: Solar can power landlord-controlled areas (reception, lifts, corridors, external lighting) — landlord benefits directly
  • Tenant allocation: Solar benefits can be allocated to tenants via service charge reduction
  • Sub-metering: Complex arrangements needed if tenants are to benefit directly

Common Approaches

ApproachHow It WorksBest For
Landlord takes all benefitSolar offsets common area electricity; tenants unaffectedBuildings with high common area loads
Service charge reductionSolar savings passed to tenants via reduced service chargeFull-service leases
Green lease premiumLandlord invests in solar; charges “green premium” on rentESG-focused tenants willing to pay more
PPA with tenantsLandlord sells solar electricity to tenants at discount to gridLarge buildings with sub-metering

Tenant Considerations

If you’re a tenant considering funding solar installation yourself:

  1. Check your lease: Does it permit alterations? Who owns fixtures at lease end?
  2. Lease length: Is there enough time remaining to recover your investment?
  3. Landlord consent: Get written permission before proceeding
  4. End-of-lease terms: Negotiate whether system stays, is removed, or you receive compensation
  5. Dilapidations: Clarify that solar won’t trigger dilapidations claims

Generally, tenant-funded solar only makes sense with 7+ years remaining on the lease.

EPC Ratings and MEES Compliance

Solar panels significantly improve Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) ratings — increasingly important given tightening regulations.

Current and Future MEES Requirements

DateMinimum EPC for Commercial Lettings
Current (2024)E
2027 (proposed)C
2030 (proposed)B

Many office buildings currently rated D or E will need significant improvements to remain lettable. Solar is one of the most cost-effective ways to jump multiple EPC bands.

Typical EPC Improvement from Solar

System Size (relative to building)Typical EPC Improvement
Small system (10-20% of demand)5-15 points (may improve 1 band)
Medium system (30-50% of demand)15-25 points (typically 1-2 bands)
Large system (50%+ of demand)25-40+ points (2-3 bands possible)

A D-rated office with solar can often achieve B or even A, making the building more attractive to tenants and future-proofing against regulations.

Asset Value Impact

Beyond EPC compliance, solar adds tangible asset value:

  • Higher rents: Green-certified buildings command 3-10% rental premium
  • Lower void periods: ESG-focused tenants prioritise sustainable buildings
  • Future-proofing: Avoids costly retrofit before 2027/2030 deadlines
  • Exit value: Buyers pay premium for buildings with solar and strong EPC

Air Conditioning: The Perfect Partner

Air-conditioned offices have particularly strong solar economics because cooling demand peaks precisely when solar output peaks:

FactorHow It Helps
Hot sunny days = high cooling demandAC runs hardest when panels generate most
Midday peak coolingCoincides with midday solar peak
Summer intensityHighest AC use in months with highest solar output
Baseload even on mild daysServer rooms, IT areas need cooling year-round

An air-conditioned office might achieve 85-95% self-consumption on hot summer days — almost perfect alignment.

Example: AC Load vs Solar Generation

A typical air-conditioned office on a hot July day:

TimeSolar Output (50kW system)AC + Other LoadGrid Import
9am25kW30kW5kW
11am42kW38kW0kW (exporting 4kW)
1pm48kW45kW0kW (exporting 3kW)
3pm44kW42kW0kW (exporting 2kW)
5pm28kW25kW0kW (exporting 3kW)

On this day, the office runs almost entirely on solar — grid import near zero during working hours.

Battery Storage for Offices

Given offices’ high self-consumption, batteries are less critical than for other building types. However, they can still add value:

When Batteries Make Sense

  • Evening use: If significant work happens after 6pm
  • Demand charge reduction: Some commercial tariffs have expensive peak demand charges that batteries can shave
  • Power resilience: Critical operations need backup power
  • Grid constraints: If export is limited, batteries store surplus for later use
  • Weekend use: Buildings with weekend activity can use stored weekday surplus

When to Skip Batteries

  • High daytime self-consumption: If you’re already using 85%+ of generation, batteries add cost with limited benefit
  • Standard 9-5 operation: Daytime solar already matches usage well
  • Budget constraints: Solar alone delivers better returns than smaller solar + battery

Battery Costs for Offices

Battery SizeCostBest For
30kWh£14,000-£22,000Small office, peak shaving
50kWh£22,000-£35,000Medium office, demand management
100kWh£40,000-£65,000Large office, significant evening use
200kWh+£75,000-£130,000+Campus, resilience requirements

For most standard offices, we recommend installing solar first without batteries. Monitor actual consumption patterns for 6-12 months, then assess whether batteries would add value.

EV Charging Integration

Office car parks are ideal locations for EV charging, and solar integration makes them even more attractive:

Benefits of Solar + EV Charging

  • Staff benefit: Employees arrive with low batteries, leave fully charged — using solar generated during their workday
  • Visitor charging: Client and visitor charging as an amenity
  • Surplus absorption: EV chargers use any surplus solar that would otherwise export
  • Fleet charging: Company vehicles can charge on free solar electricity
  • Staff attraction/retention: Free or subsidised workplace charging is increasingly valued

Typical Setup

Charger type7-22kW AC (ideal for all-day parking)
Number of chargers5-20% of parking spaces initially
Cost per charger£800-£2,500 installed
Smart featuresLoad management, solar integration, payment systems
Workplace Charging Scheme grantUp to £350 per socket (check eligibility)

Staff parking for 8+ hours means even 7kW chargers deliver meaningful charge — perfect alignment with working day and solar generation.

Car Park Solar Canopies

If roof space is limited but car parking is available, solar canopies offer an alternative:

What it isElevated structure over parking spaces with solar panels as the roof
Typical cost£1,000-£1,500 per kW (including structure)
Premium vs roof-mount40-70% more expensive
Additional benefitsWeather protection for vehicles, natural EV charger location, visible green statement
PlanningUsually requires planning permission

Car park canopies make sense when:

  • Roof space is insufficient or unsuitable
  • Visible demonstration of sustainability is valued
  • EV charging infrastructure is planned anyway
  • Premium cost is acceptable for additional benefits

Tax Benefits and Incentives

Capital Allowances

Solar panels qualify for valuable tax relief:

  • Annual Investment Allowance (AIA): 100% first-year deduction against taxable profits (up to £1 million)
  • Full expensing: For incorporated companies, 100% deduction (through March 2026)
  • Effect: A £75,000 solar system reduces taxable profit by £75,000 in year one

Tax Relief Example

Solar system cost£75,000
Corporation tax rate25%
Tax saving (AIA)£18,750
Effective cost after tax relief£56,250
Annual savings£17,500
Payback (after tax relief)3.2 years

VAT

  • Installation VAT: 20% standard rate for commercial properties
  • VAT recovery: VAT-registered businesses reclaim input VAT
  • Net effect: VAT-neutral for most commercial occupiers

Smart Export Guarantee

Exported electricity (the 10-30% not used on-site) earns 4-15p/kWh under SEG. While a small portion of overall savings, it ensures no generated electricity is wasted.

ESG Reporting and Sustainability

Solar delivers measurable ESG metrics that matter to stakeholders:

Scope 2 Emissions Reduction

On-site solar directly reduces Scope 2 (purchased electricity) emissions:

Grid electricity carbon intensity (2026)~180g CO₂/kWh (UK average, declining)
Solar electricity carbon intensity~20-40g CO₂/kWh (lifecycle)
Reduction per kWh~140-160g CO₂

Example Emissions Savings

75kW system annual generation63,750 kWh
Annual CO₂ saving9-10 tonnes
25-year CO₂ saving225-250 tonnes
Equivalent~55 cars off the road for a year

Reporting Frameworks

Solar supports compliance and reporting under:

  • SECR (Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting): Reduces reported emissions
  • TCFD (Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures): Demonstrates climate action
  • CDP (Carbon Disclosure Project): Improves scores for renewable energy use
  • Science-Based Targets: Contributes to verified emissions reduction pathways
  • Net Zero commitments: Tangible progress towards stated goals

Marketing and Communication

Solar provides compelling content for sustainability communications:

  • Real-time generation displays in reception
  • Monthly/annual statistics for reports
  • Visual imagery of panels for marketing materials
  • Staff engagement around sustainability
  • Client communications demonstrating environmental leadership

Installation Process

Timeline

StageDurationNotes
Initial assessment and quotes2-4 weeksSite visits, usage analysis, proposals
Internal approvalVariableBoard approval, landlord consent if applicable
Detailed design2-3 weeksStructural survey, electrical design
DNO application4-10 weeksDepends on local network and system size
Planning (if required)8-12 weeksUsually not required for roof-mount
Procurement and scheduling2-4 weeksEquipment ordering, installation booking
Installation1-3 weeksDepends on system size
Commissioning and handover1-2 daysTesting, metering, documentation

Total timeline: typically 3-6 months from decision to generation.

Minimising Disruption

  • Roof work: Almost entirely external — no disruption to office operations
  • Electrical connection: May require brief power outage (2-4 hours) — schedule for weekend or evening
  • Access: Installer needs roof access route — coordinate to minimise impact
  • Noise: Some drilling/construction noise — warn occupants in advance

Procurement Options

Direct Purchase

  • Pros: Best long-term returns, own the asset, full control
  • Cons: Capital outlay required
  • Typical returns: 15-25% IRR

Lease/Hire Purchase

  • Pros: Spread payments, preserve capital, still own asset at end
  • Cons: Finance costs reduce overall returns
  • Typical terms: 5-7 years

Power Purchase Agreement (PPA)

  • Pros: Zero upfront cost, immediate savings, no maintenance responsibility
  • Cons: Lower savings (10-25% vs 40-60% for owned), long contract (15-25 years)
  • Best for: Organisations unable or unwilling to invest capital

Operating Lease

  • Pros: Off balance sheet, predictable costs
  • Cons: Never own the asset, lower overall benefit
  • Best for: Short-term occupancy or balance sheet considerations

Summary

AspectDetails
Typical system size20-200kW (scales with building size)
Cost range£15,000-£180,000
Cost per kW£650-£1,000 (lower for larger systems)
Annual savings£4,000-£60,000
Payback period4-7 years (3-5 years after tax relief)
Self-consumption70-90% (near-perfect 9-5 alignment)
EPC improvement1-3 bands (helps meet MEES requirements)
CO₂ savings5-100+ tonnes per year
Tax benefit100% AIA reduces effective cost by 19-25%
Key advantage9-5 operation matches solar generation perfectly

Office buildings and commercial solar PV systems are an ideal match. The alignment between standard working hours and solar generation creates self-consumption rates of 70-90% — among the highest of any building type. Combined with substantial tax benefits, improving EPC ratings, and growing stakeholder expectations for sustainability, the case for office solar is compelling.

Payback periods of 3-5 years after tax relief, followed by 20+ years of savings, deliver exceptional returns. Whether you’re an owner-occupier, institutional landlord, or commercial tenant, solar makes financial and strategic sense.

For more information on solar PV system types, or to understand typical solar installation costs, see our comprehensive guides. Commercial property owners should also review our detailed commercial solar cost breakdown.