A 3-bed semi-detached house is one of the most common homes in the UK — and one of the best candidates for solar. The typical south or southwest-facing roof has 25–35m² of usable space, which is ideal for a 4–6kW system. Electricity bills averaging £120–£180/month mean significant savings are possible. This guide shows you exactly what system you need, what it costs, how much you'll save, and what the installation process looks like.
What Size Solar System Does a 3-Bed Semi Need?
A typical 3-bed semi has approximately 25–35m² of south or southwest-facing roof space available for solar panels. Modern panels are highly efficient and occupy about 1.7m² per kW of capacity.
For a 3-bed semi, we recommend:
- 4kW system (8–10 panels): Covers ~25m² of roof. Best for homes with average electricity bills (£100–£150/month) or those with limited south-facing roof space.
- 5kW system (10–12 panels): Covers ~28m² of roof. A balanced choice for most 3-bed semis, offering good generation with room on the roof for a future battery.
- 6kW system (12–15 panels): Covers ~35m² of roof. Best for homes with high electricity consumption (£150+/month) or those planning an EV.
How to estimate your roof space: Measure your main roof face from edge to edge. If you can fit 25–35m² of unshaded panels, you can accommodate a 4–6kW system. Trees, chimneys, dormers, and shading will reduce usable space — this is why a professional survey is essential.
How Much Does It Cost?
Solar costs in 2026 depend on system size and whether you add a battery. Here's a realistic pricing table for a standard 3-bed semi installation:
| System Size | Without Battery | With 5kWh Battery |
|---|---|---|
| 4kW | £7,000 | £10,000 |
| 4kW (with installer financing) | £0 upfront, then from £100/month | £0 upfront, then from £150/month |
| 6kW | £8,500 | £11,500 |
| 6kW (with installer financing) | £0 upfront, then from £125/month | £0 upfront, then from £175/month |
What's included: all panels, inverters, battery (if chosen), wiring, labour, and MCS certification. 0% VAT applies to residential solar until at least March 2027, so you're not paying 20% on top.
What's not included: upgrading your electrical consumer unit (necessary on ~20% of homes, costs £500–£1,500), or a new roof section if existing roof is damaged.
How Much Will You Save?
Let's model a realistic scenario: a 4kW system in South England (one of the most common configurations):
4kW System — South England Savings
Key factors that affect your savings:
- Location: South England receives ~15% more annual sunlight than Scotland. Adjust savings accordingly.
- Battery: With a battery, self-consumption rises from 35% to 75%, nearly doubling savings. Without one, expect ~£300/year on a 4kW system.
- Electricity rate: These calculations use Ofgem's Q2 2026 rate of 24.5p/kWh. If your supplier charges more, savings are higher. If you're on a fixed cheaper rate, they're lower.
- Roof orientation: Southwest-facing = ~95% of south-facing output. West-facing = ~85%. Every 15° deviation from south reduces generation by ~5%.
- Shading: Even partial shading (tree, chimney, neighbouring building) can cut generation by 10–30%. A survey will identify this.
What about in 10, 20, and 30 years? Your panels degrade very slowly (~0.5%/year), so a 4kW system generating £769/year in 2026 will still generate ~£720/year in 2040 and ~£670/year in 2056. Meanwhile, electricity prices historically rise faster than inflation — so your actual savings increase over time.
Do You Need Planning Permission?
Short answer: No, not in most cases.
Residential solar panels fall under permitted development in England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. This means you can install them without submitting a planning application, provided you meet these criteria:
- The panels don't protrude more than 200mm above the roof plane
- They're mounted flush against the roof surface (not on a tilted frame)
- They're not on a heritage property, in a conservation area, or on a listed building
- You own or have written permission from the property owner
You DO need planning permission if: your home is listed, in a conservation area, or you're mounting panels on a tilted frame/tracker. Even then, planning committees rarely refuse solar — the trend is strongly in favour of renewables.
Tip: Check your local planning authority's website or ask your installer to confirm. It's a 5-minute step that saves hassle later.
The Installation Process — 7 Steps
Here's exactly what happens from the moment you say "yes" to the moment you switch on:
Step 1: Quote & Site Survey
You request a free quote, and SolarFoundry's surveyor visits your home. They measure your roof, photograph it, assess shading and orientation, check your electrical setup, and provide a detailed quote within 48 hours. No obligation.
Step 2: Accept Quote & Deposit
You review the quote, ask any questions, and sign the contract. You'll typically pay a deposit (usually £500–£1,000) to secure your installation date. The balance is due before installation starts (or you can arrange a 0% finance option).
Step 3: Final Site Survey & Planning
Our engineers schedule a detailed pre-installation survey. They confirm roof access, check the electrical consumer unit, plan the wiring route, and order any custom parts (like longer cables or a new isolator switch). This typically takes 1–2 weeks after you accept the quote.
Step 4: Final Payment
The balance of your invoice is due 1–2 days before installation. If you're on 0% finance, you won't pay anything — the monthly payments start after installation is complete and working.
Step 5: Installation Day
Our MCS-certified installers arrive (typically 2–4 people for a 4kW system). Installation takes 1–2 days: mounting the rails, fitting the panels, installing the inverter (and battery if applicable), wiring everything together, and running safety tests. You'll be able to watch the process. By day 2, your system should be generating power.
Step 6: MCS Certificate & Building Control
After installation, our surveyors issue your MCS (Microgeneration Certification Scheme) certificate. This proves your system was installed to British standards and is eligible for SEG payments. We submit this to your energy supplier and building control. Takes 1–2 weeks.
Step 7: SEG Registration & First Bill
You register with your energy supplier's SEG scheme (or your chosen exporter). You'll start earning for exported power immediately, though payments are usually monthly or quarterly. Your first energy bill (showing solar reduction) arrives 4–6 weeks after installation.
Total time from quote to first generation: 6–8 weeks in most cases. Some installers can turn this around in 3–4 weeks during quieter periods.
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