Many UK households installed solar panels between 2010 and 2019, attracted by the generous Feed-in Tariff rates available at the time. These systems were designed purely to generate electricity and export surplus to the grid. They typically lack battery storage, have basic or no monitoring, and were sized for household energy needs that may have changed significantly since installation. Adding an electric vehicle, heat pump, home office, or simply wanting to use more of your own generation rather than exporting it are all common reasons to consider upgrading.
The good news is that upgrading an older system does not necessarily mean replacing everything. Depending on what you want to achieve, you might add a battery to an existing system, expand with additional panels, replace an aging inverter with a modern hybrid unit, or simply add monitoring to understand your system better. Each upgrade has different costs, compatibility requirements, and implications for any Feed-in Tariff payments you receive.
This guide explains the main upgrade options available, how to assess whether your existing equipment is compatible, what each upgrade costs, and critically for FiT recipients, how to make changes without jeopardising your tariff payments. We also cover the technical considerations around inverter types, DNO notifications, and when it makes sense to install a completely separate system alongside your existing one rather than modifying it.
Quick Overview
| Most common upgrade | Adding battery storage to existing solar-only system |
| Battery retrofit cost | £3,000 to £5,500 depending on inverter type |
| Adding panels cost | £800 to £1,500 per panel including installation |
| Inverter replacement cost | £800 to £2,500 (string to hybrid upgrade) |
| FiT-safe upgrades | Battery addition, monitoring, like-for-like repairs |
| FiT risk upgrades | Increasing capacity, changing inverter rating |
| Best time to upgrade | When inverter needs replacing (10 to 15 years) |
| DNO notification required | If total inverter capacity exceeds 3.68kW per phase |
Why Upgrade an Older Solar System
Common Reasons for Upgrading
| Reason | Typical Situation | Best Upgrade Option |
|---|---|---|
| Want to use more self-generated power | Exporting 50%+ of generation; high evening usage | Add battery storage |
| Energy needs have increased | Added EV, heat pump, home office, family grown | Add panels or second system |
| Inverter has failed or is failing | System 10 to 15 years old; error codes appearing | Replace with hybrid inverter |
| No monitoring or poor monitoring | Cannot see what system is producing | Add monitoring system |
| Want backup power | Concerned about power cuts | Add battery with EPS capability |
| Maximise time-of-use tariffs | On Octopus Flux or similar tariff | Add battery for arbitrage |
| System underperforming | Shading issues or panel mismatch | Add optimisers or microinverters |
If your existing system is underperforming and you’re not sure whether an upgrade will actually help, diagnose the cause first. See our guide to why solar is producing less than expected to rule out shading, soiling or faults before committing to an upgrade.
How Energy Needs Change Over Time
| Change | Additional Annual Consumption | Impact on Solar System |
|---|---|---|
| Electric vehicle | 2,000 to 4,000 kWh | May need 2x to 3x original system size |
| Air source heat pump | 3,000 to 6,000 kWh | Significant increase; winter demand high |
| Home office (full time) | 500 to 1,500 kWh | More daytime use matches solar better |
| Hot tub | 2,000 to 3,000 kWh | High demand; battery helps |
| Additional family members | 1,000 to 2,000 kWh per person | Gradual increase in baseline |
Older System Limitations
| Era | Typical System | Common Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 to 2012 | 2 to 4kWp; polycrystalline; basic string inverter | No battery support; limited monitoring; panels 180 to 250W |
| 2013 to 2015 | 3 to 4kWp; poly or mono; string inverter | No battery support; basic monitoring; panels 250 to 300W |
| 2016 to 2019 | 3 to 5kWp; monocrystalline; some hybrid options | May have hybrid inverter; better monitoring; panels 300 to 350W |
Upgrade Option 1: Adding Battery Storage
Adding a battery is the most popular upgrade for existing solar systems. It allows you to store surplus daytime generation for evening use instead of exporting it to the grid. For most households, this is the single most valuable upgrade, particularly if you are on a standard tariff where export payments (typically 4p to 15p per kWh) are much lower than import costs (25p to 30p per kWh). For a comprehensive treatment of the retrofit process itself, see our dedicated retrofitting batteries to existing solar guide.
How Battery Retrofit Works
| Existing Inverter Type | Retrofit Method | Complexity | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid inverter (battery-ready) | DC-coupled: connect battery directly to inverter | Straightforward | £3,000 to £4,000 (5kWh) |
| String inverter (solar-only) | AC-coupled: add battery with own inverter | Moderate | £4,000 to £5,500 (5kWh) |
| String inverter (aging) | Replace inverter with hybrid + add battery | More involved | £4,500 to £6,000 (5kWh) |
| Microinverters | AC-coupled battery only option | Straightforward | £4,000 to £5,500 (5kWh) |
AC-Coupled vs DC-Coupled Batteries
| Aspect | AC-Coupled | DC-Coupled |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Battery has own inverter; connects to AC circuit | Battery connects directly to hybrid inverter DC side |
| Compatibility | Works with any existing system | Requires hybrid inverter |
| Efficiency | Slightly lower (double conversion) | Higher (single conversion) |
| Round-trip efficiency | 85% to 90% | 90% to 95% |
| Cost | Higher (includes battery inverter) | Lower (uses existing inverter) |
| Best for | Retrofit to string inverter systems | New installs or hybrid inverter upgrades |
Popular AC-Coupled Battery Options
For detailed reviews of each battery model including real-world UK experience, see our best solar batteries guide.
| Battery | Capacity | Key Features | Typical Installed Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Powerwall 3 | 13.5 kWh | Integrated inverter; backup power; excellent app | £8,000 to £10,000 |
| GivEnergy All-in-One | 5 to 9.5 kWh | AC-coupled version; good monitoring | £4,000 to £6,500 |
| Enphase IQ Battery | 3.5 to 10.5 kWh | Modular; works with Enphase microinverters | £5,000 to £8,000 |
| SolarEdge Home Battery | 4.6 to 9.2 kWh | Optimised for SolarEdge systems | £4,500 to £7,000 |
Battery Retrofit Savings
| Scenario | Current Export | Battery Shift | Annual Saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| High exporter, low evening use | 60% of generation | 1,500 kWh shifted | £225 to £300 |
| Moderate exporter, high evening use | 40% of generation | 1,200 kWh shifted | £180 to £250 |
| Already high self-consumption | 20% of generation | 600 kWh shifted | £90 to £150 |
| Plus time-of-use tariff arbitrage | Variable | Additional grid charging | £100 to £200 extra |
Note: Savings assume import rate of 28p/kWh, export rate of 10p/kWh, giving 18p value per kWh shifted. Actual savings depend on your tariff and usage patterns. If power-cut resilience is the main driver rather than bill savings, see our solar battery backup for power cuts guide – most basic batteries don’t provide backup without the EPS feature specified at install.
Upgrade Option 2: Adding More Panels
If your energy needs have grown beyond what your existing system can provide, adding more panels may be the answer. This is more complex than adding a battery because it involves compatibility with your existing inverter and potentially DNO notification requirements. Our adding more panels to existing system guide covers the compatibility and DNO side in depth.
Methods for Adding Panels
| Method | When Suitable | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Add to existing inverter | Inverter has spare capacity; roof space available | Must match panel specifications; stay within inverter limits |
| Add second string to multi-MPPT inverter | Inverter has unused MPPT input | Can use different panel type on separate MPPT |
| Replace inverter with larger capacity | Current inverter maxed out or aging | May affect FiT; DNO notification if over 3.68kW |
| Add microinverters for new panels | Want to add panels without touching existing system | Each panel independent; AC-coupled to main circuit |
| Install completely separate system | FiT system; want to keep original untouched | New inverter; separate monitoring; preserves FiT |
Inverter Capacity Considerations
| Scenario | Example | Can You Add Panels? |
|---|---|---|
| Inverter undersized vs panels | 3kW inverter with 3.5kWp panels | Usually yes; overpanelling up to 30% is normal |
| Inverter matched to panels | 4kW inverter with 4kWp panels | Limited; can add 10% to 20% more panels |
| Inverter at maximum | 3.6kW inverter with 4.5kWp panels | No; need larger inverter or separate system |
| Multiple MPPT inputs available | Hybrid with 2 MPPTs, only 1 used | Yes; add new string to unused MPPT |
Panel Matching Requirements
| Inverter Type | Matching Requirement | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|
| String inverter, single MPPT | New panels must match voltage and current of existing | Low; finding matching old panels difficult |
| String inverter, multiple MPPTs | New string can be different; connect to separate MPPT | Moderate; each MPPT handles own string |
| Microinverters | Each panel independent; no matching needed | High; add any panels with compatible microinverters |
| Optimiser-based (SolarEdge) | New panels need optimisers; can mix panel types | High; optimisers handle mismatch |
Using Microinverters to Expand
Microinverters offer the most flexible way to add panels to an existing system. Each panel gets its own small inverter that converts DC to AC independently. The AC output connects to your main electrical circuit, completely bypassing your existing inverter. This means you can add panels without any compatibility issues with your original system. Our microinverters for residential solar guide covers the full options.
| Advantage | Explanation |
|---|---|
| No inverter capacity limits | New panels have their own conversion; do not load existing inverter |
| Any panel type | No matching required; each panel operates independently |
| Flexible placement | Can add panels on different roof faces, outbuildings |
| Panel-level monitoring | See production from each individual panel |
| Does not affect FiT system | Original system unchanged; new panels on SEG |
| Microinverter | Panel Compatibility | Cost per Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Enphase IQ7 | Up to 380W panels | £115 to £140 |
| Enphase IQ7+ | Up to 460W panels | £130 to £160 |
| Enphase IQ8 | Up to 540W panels | £140 to £170 |
| Hoymiles HMS series | Various capacities | £80 to £120 |
Upgrade Option 3: Replacing the Inverter
String inverters typically last 10 to 15 years, significantly shorter than the 25 to 30 year lifespan of panels. Research shows approximately 34% of inverters fail by year 15. When your inverter needs replacing, this is an ideal opportunity to upgrade to a hybrid inverter that supports battery storage, even if you do not add a battery immediately. For brand reviews and current UK pricing, see our best solar inverters guide.
Inverter Replacement Options
| Current Inverter | Replacement Option | Benefits | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Old string inverter | New string inverter (like-for-like) | Cheapest; maintains FiT; no new features | £800 to £1,200 |
| Old string inverter | Hybrid inverter (battery-ready) | Future battery option; better monitoring | £1,200 to £2,000 |
| Old string inverter | Hybrid inverter + battery | Complete upgrade in one visit | £3,500 to £5,500 |
| Microinverters | Replace failed unit only | Only fix what is broken | £150 to £250 per unit |
Popular Hybrid Inverters for Retrofit
| Brand/Model | Capacity Range | Battery Compatibility | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| GivEnergy Gen 3 | 3.6 to 6kW | GivEnergy batteries | Excellent app; UK support; popular choice |
| Solis S6 | 3 to 6kW | Multiple brands | Good value; reliable; wide compatibility |
| Huawei SUN2000 | 3 to 10kW | Huawei LUNA | High efficiency; good monitoring |
| Fox ESS | 3.7 to 6kW | Fox ESS batteries | Competitive price; integrated solution |
| SolarEdge | 3 to 10kW | SolarEdge Home Battery | Optimiser-based; panel-level monitoring |
| Sunsynk | 3.6 to 8kW | Multiple brands | Flexible; off-grid capable |
When to Upgrade vs Like-for-Like Replace
| Situation | Recommendation | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Inverter failed; want battery soon | Upgrade to hybrid | Only pay for installation once |
| Inverter failed; no battery plans | Like-for-like or basic hybrid | Hybrid costs only £200 to £300 more |
| On FiT; inverter working | Keep current inverter | Changing may affect FiT generation payment |
| On FiT; inverter failed | Like-for-like if possible | Match original spec to protect FiT |
| Want to add panels significantly | Upgrade to larger hybrid | New inverter can handle expanded array |
Upgrade Option 4: Adding Monitoring
Many older systems have no monitoring at all, or only basic inverter displays that show current production. Adding modern monitoring lets you see generation, consumption, export, and battery state (if applicable) in real time via a smartphone app. This helps identify problems, optimise usage, and understand your system better.
Monitoring Options
| Option | What It Shows | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Inverter manufacturer app | Generation only (most older inverters) | Usually free if WiFi dongle added |
| WiFi dongle for existing inverter | Generation; possibly consumption with CT clamp | £50 to £150 |
| Third-party energy monitor | Generation, consumption, export, import | £150 to £300 |
| Smart meter integration | Import and export (not generation) | Free (via energy supplier) |
| New hybrid inverter | Full monitoring including battery | Included with inverter upgrade |
Third-Party Monitoring Systems
| System | Features | Compatible With | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| myenergi Hub + CT clamps | Solar, grid, consumption monitoring | Any inverter | £150 to £200 |
| Solar Assistant (Raspberry Pi) | DIY solution; highly customisable | Many inverters via RS485 | £50 to £100 |
| Sense Energy Monitor | Device-level consumption tracking | Any system | £250 to £300 |
| Emporia Vue | Circuit-level monitoring | Any system | £150 to £200 |
Upgrade Option 5: Adding Optimisers
If your system suffers from shading issues or you have panels with mismatched characteristics, adding power optimisers can improve performance. Optimisers attach to each panel (or pair of panels) and perform maximum power point tracking at the module level, preventing one underperforming panel from dragging down the whole string. See our solar panel optimiser guide for brand comparison and retrofit specifics.
When Optimisers Help
| Situation | Benefit of Optimisers | Expected Improvement |
|---|---|---|
| Partial shading from chimney/trees | Shaded panels do not affect unshaded panels | 10% to 25% more generation |
| Mixed panel orientations | Each panel optimised independently | 5% to 15% more generation |
| Mismatched or degraded panels | Weak panels do not limit strong panels | 5% to 10% more generation |
| Want panel-level monitoring | See individual panel production | Better fault detection |
| Optimiser Brand | Compatible Inverters | Cost per Unit |
|---|---|---|
| SolarEdge Power Optimisers | SolarEdge inverters only | £40 to £60 |
| Tigo TS4-A-O | Most string inverters | £50 to £70 |
| Huawei Smart PV Optimisers | Huawei inverters | £40 to £60 |
Feed-in Tariff Considerations
If you receive Feed-in Tariff payments, protecting your tariff is essential when making any changes to your system. The FiT scheme closed to new applicants in 2019, but existing recipients continue receiving payments at their original rate, which for early adopters can be over 40p per kWh. Making the wrong changes can jeopardise these valuable payments.
FiT-Safe Upgrades
| Upgrade | FiT Impact | Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Add battery storage | No effect on generation or export tariff | No notification required |
| Add monitoring | No effect | No notification required |
| Like-for-like panel replacement | Generally permitted | Notify FiT licensee; MCS certification |
| Like-for-like inverter replacement | Should be fine if same capacity | Match original spec; notify FiT licensee |
| Add completely separate new system | Original FiT unaffected | New system goes on SEG, not FiT |
FiT-Risk Upgrades
| Upgrade | Potential FiT Impact | How to Mitigate |
|---|---|---|
| Increase system capacity | May lose FiT or require re-registration | Add separate system instead |
| Replace inverter with higher rating | May affect generation tariff | Match original inverter capacity exactly |
| Replace panels with higher wattage | May exceed registered capacity | Remove panels to stay within limit, or match wattage |
| Switch to metered export | Lose deemed export (50%) | Only switch if actual export exceeds 50% |
Best Approach for FiT System Owners
| Goal | Recommended Approach | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Want battery storage | Add AC-coupled battery | Does not touch original system at all |
| Need more generation | Install completely separate second system | Original FiT untouched; new panels on SEG |
| Inverter has failed | Replace with same capacity unit | Like-for-like preserves FiT |
| Panels damaged | Source matching panels if possible | Or notify FiT licensee before using different panels |
The Second System Strategy
For FiT recipients who want significantly more generation, the safest approach is to install a completely separate second system alongside the original. This keeps the FiT system exactly as registered while adding new capacity that registers for the Smart Export Guarantee. The two systems operate independently with separate inverters and monitoring.
| Aspect | Original FiT System | New Second System |
|---|---|---|
| Tariff | Original FiT rate (e.g., 40p+ for early adopters) | Smart Export Guarantee (4p to 15p) |
| Generation payment | Paid for all generation | No generation payment; export only |
| Export payment | Deemed 50% or metered | Must be metered separately |
| Inverter | Keep original unchanged | New hybrid inverter (can support battery) |
| Monitoring | Original monitoring continues | Modern app-based monitoring |
DNO and Grid Connection Requirements
G98 vs G99 Requirements
| Regulation | Applies To | Process |
|---|---|---|
| G98 | Total inverter capacity up to 3.68kW per phase | Notification only; can proceed with install |
| G99 | Total inverter capacity over 3.68kW per phase | Application required; wait for DNO approval |
When DNO Notification Is Required
| Scenario | Notification Needed? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Existing 3kW system; add 2kW | Yes; G99 application | Total exceeds 3.68kW |
| Existing 3kW system; add AC-coupled battery | May be required | Depends on battery inverter capacity |
| Replace 3kW inverter with 3kW hybrid | Usually not | No capacity change; inform DNO of equipment change |
| Add microinverters to existing system | If total exceeds 3.68kW | All inverter capacity counts |
Upgrade Costs Summary
| Upgrade Type | Typical Cost Range | Annual Benefit | Payback Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Add 5kWh battery (AC-coupled) | £4,000 to £5,500 | £150 to £300 | 13 to 37 years |
| Add 5kWh battery (DC-coupled) | £3,000 to £4,000 | £150 to £300 | 10 to 27 years |
| Replace string inverter with hybrid | £1,200 to £2,000 | Enables battery | N/A (enabling investment) |
| Add 2 panels with microinverters | £1,500 to £2,500 | £150 to £250 | 6 to 17 years |
| Add monitoring system | £100 to £300 | Fault detection; optimisation | N/A (information value) |
| Add optimisers (10 panels) | £500 to £700 + install | 5% to 25% more generation | 3 to 10 years |
| Full second system (4kWp + battery) | £8,000 to £12,000 | £600 to £900 | 9 to 20 years |
Choosing the Right Upgrade
Decision Guide
| Your Situation | Recommended Upgrade | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Exporting lots; want to use more | Add battery storage | Store daytime surplus for evening use |
| Need much more generation | Add panels or second system | Battery cannot create energy; need more panels |
| Inverter old or failing | Replace with hybrid inverter | Future-proofs for battery; one installation |
| On FiT; want more capacity | Install separate second system | Protects valuable FiT payments |
| Shading affecting output | Add optimisers or microinverters | Panel-level MPPT prevents string losses |
| Do not know what system is producing | Add monitoring | Understand performance before other upgrades |
| Want backup power | Battery with EPS capability | Not all batteries provide backup; specify this |
Summary
| Topic | Key Point |
|---|---|
| Most valuable upgrade | Battery storage for high exporters (saves £150 to £300/year) |
| Best time to upgrade | When inverter needs replacing (saves double installation costs) |
| FiT system approach | Add separate second system to protect original tariff |
| Battery retrofit method | AC-coupled works with any system; DC-coupled needs hybrid inverter |
| Adding panels | Microinverters offer most flexibility; no matching required |
| DNO requirements | G99 application needed if total inverter capacity exceeds 3.68kW |
Upgrading an older solar system can significantly improve its value, but the right upgrade depends on what you want to achieve. For most households, adding battery storage offers the best return if you are currently exporting significant amounts of generation. A 5kWh battery can shift 1,000 to 1,500 kWh per year from export to self-consumption, saving £150 to £300 annually depending on your tariff. However, payback periods are typically 10 to 20 years, so this is a long-term investment rather than a quick win.
If your energy needs have grown substantially, perhaps due to adding an electric vehicle or heat pump, a battery alone will not solve the problem. You cannot store energy you do not generate, so expanding your panel array or installing a second system may be necessary. For FiT recipients, the second system approach is strongly recommended to avoid any risk to your valuable tariff payments.
The best time to upgrade is often when your inverter needs replacing. String inverters typically last 10 to 15 years, and if yours is approaching this age, replacing it with a hybrid inverter makes sense even if you do not add a battery immediately. The extra cost of a hybrid over a basic string inverter is only £200 to £400, but it future-proofs your system for battery storage and typically includes much better monitoring capabilities.
Before any upgrade, understanding what your system currently produces is essential. If you lack monitoring, adding this first helps you identify whether underperformance is due to a fault that should be fixed, shading that might benefit from optimisers, or simply normal operation that a battery could enhance. Making informed decisions based on real data will ensure your upgrade delivers the benefits you expect.
If you’re on an early Feed-in Tariff (30p+/kWh), resist the temptation to make major changes to your registered system. Those FiT payments have several years to run and the value of protecting them usually exceeds the upgrade benefit. The second-system strategy lets you add modern capacity (new panels + hybrid inverter + battery) while keeping the original setup exactly as registered. Slightly more expensive, considerably safer.
For everyone else, the biggest practical question is: are you exporting more than 40% of your generation? If yes, a battery will save you meaningful money. If you’re already using 80%+ of what you generate, a battery buys very little – your money is better spent adding panels if you need more energy overall. Check your last 12 months of monitoring data before making the call.