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Spain Independent Solar Advice

Bifacial Solar Panels in Spain: Are They Worth It?

Bifacial solar panels can produce electricity from the front and rear of the panel. They can be genuinely useful on raised structures, white flat roofs, carports or reflective surfaces — but they are often oversold on standard tiled roof installations where the rear side generates almost nothing. This guide explains how bifacial technology works, when it adds real value in Spain, and what to check on your quote.

Réponse Rapide

Bifacial solar panels can produce electricity from the front and rear of the panel. La configuration optimale dépend de votre consommation réelle, de l'orientation du toit, des besoins en batterie et du choix du bon tarif d'exportation.

What is a bifacial panel?

A bifacial solar panel generates electricity from both its front and rear surfaces. Standard panels have an opaque backsheet that blocks light from reaching the rear. Bifacial panels replace this with either a transparent backsheet or a second layer of glass, allowing light to pass through and reach solar cells on both sides.

The front side works exactly like any conventional panel — absorbing direct sunlight. The rear side captures albedo light: sunlight that has bounced off the ground, roof surface, or nearby walls. The amount of rear-side generation depends almost entirely on the reflectivity (albedo) of the surface beneath the panel and the gap between the panel and that surface.

Most bifacial panels use a glass-glass construction (glass on both front and back instead of glass-backsheet). This makes them heavier but also more durable — glass-glass panels are more resistant to moisture ingress, UV degradation, and mechanical stress. Many manufacturers offer longer warranties on glass-glass bifacial panels (30 years vs 25 years) because of this increased durability.

How much extra energy do bifacial panels actually produce?

This is where marketing claims and reality often diverge. Manufacturers may advertise "up to 30% bifacial gain", but this refers to laboratory conditions with perfect reflective surfaces and optimal tilt angles.

In real-world residential installations, the actual bifacial gain depends on several factors:

  • White flat roof, panels raised 30cm+: 8–15% extra production. This is the sweet spot for bifacial in Spain.
  • Light-coloured gravel or concrete surface: 5–10% extra production.
  • Dark tiled roof, panels close-mounted: 2–4% extra production — barely worth the premium.
  • Ground-mounted on grass or earth: 3–7% extra, depending on grass colour and soil type.
  • Pergola/carport over white paving: 10–20% extra — the best residential scenario.

The key question is always: does the extra energy produced justify the extra cost? If bifacial panels cost 10% more but only produce 3% more energy on your specific roof, the economics do not work.

Where bifacial panels work well in Spain

Southern Spain, and the Costa del Sol in particular, has several characteristics that can make bifacial panels genuinely useful:

  • White flat terraces: Many Andalucían villas have white-painted flat rooftops (azoteas). These reflective surfaces are ideal for bouncing light back to the rear of bifacial panels.
  • Pergola and carport installations: Solar pergolas over swimming pools or car parking areas are increasingly popular. When mounted above light-coloured paving or pool decking, bifacial panels can capture significant reflected light from below.
  • Ground-mounted arrays on fincas: Rural properties (fincas) often have space for ground-mounted systems. If the ground is covered with light-coloured gravel or concrete, bifacial panels will outperform standard panels.
  • Raised mounting on flat roofs: If panels are tilted at 15–30° on a flat white roof using elevated frames (at least 30cm clearance underneath), the reflected light from the white surface reaches the rear cells effectively.

The common thread is: reflective surface + air gap = bifacial benefit. Without both of these conditions, the technology adds cost without meaningful benefit.

Where bifacial panels add little value

Do not assume bifacial is automatically better. In many typical residential installations, the extra cost is wasted:

  • Traditional clay tile roofs: When panels are mounted close to dark terracotta or slate tiles using standard flush-mount brackets, almost no light reaches the rear surface. The air gap is typically only 5–10cm — far too small for meaningful rear-side generation.
  • Shaded rear surfaces: If the underside of the panel is in shadow (for example, mounted on a North-facing slope or under overhanging eaves), bifacial gain is negligible.
  • Limited airflow: Bifacial panels actually perform slightly worse than standard panels when airflow is restricted, because the glass-glass construction can trap more heat. In hot Spanish summers, this thermal penalty can partially offset the rear-side gain.

If your installer is quoting bifacial panels for a standard tiled roof installation, ask them to quantify the expected rear-side gain in kWh/year. If they cannot provide a specific number based on your roof conditions, they may simply be upselling a more expensive product.

Bifacial panels and inverter sizing

An important technical detail that installers sometimes overlook: if your bifacial panels genuinely produce 10–15% more energy than their front-side rating suggests, your inverter needs to be sized accordingly.

For example, if you have 10 × 500 Wp bifacial panels (5 kWp front-side rating) and expect 10% rear-side gain, the actual peak output could reach 5.5 kWp. If your inverter is only rated at 5 kW, it will clip (waste) the excess production during peak hours.

This is not always a problem — some degree of clipping is normal and acceptable in system design. But if an installer is charging you extra for bifacial panels and then pairing them with an undersized inverter, you are paying for energy you will never actually use.

Ask your installer:"Have you accounted for the bifacial gain when sizing the inverter?"

Questions to ask your installer about bifacial panels

If bifacial panels appear on your solar quote, ask these specific questions:

  • What is the expected rear-side gain in kWh/year for my specific roof?
  • What is the price difference compared to using equivalent monofacial panels?
  • What is the mounting height above the roof surface? (Below 20cm, bifacial gain is minimal.)
  • What colour and material is the surface underneath the panels?
  • Is the inverter appropriately sized to handle the extra production?
  • What is the payback period on the bifacial premium specifically?

If the installer cannot clearly answer these questions with numbers specific to your property, consider requesting a quote with standard monofacial panels for comparison. You may find the savings are better spent on upgrading your inverter or adding more panels instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does bifacial mean?
Bifacial means the panel generates electricity from both its front and rear surfaces. The front absorbs direct sunlight normally. The rear captures reflected light bouncing off the surface below the panel. This requires a transparent backsheet or glass-glass construction.
Are bifacial panels better than normal panels?
Not automatically. Bifacial panels can produce more energy in the right conditions (white reflective surfaces, raised mounting, pergolas), but on dark tiled roofs with close mounting, the rear-side gain is minimal and does not justify the higher price. The installation context matters more than the panel type.
Do bifacial panels work on tiled roofs?
They will work, but you will get very little benefit from the bifacial feature. On a standard tiled roof with flush mounting, the dark tiles and small air gap mean almost no reflected light reaches the rear cells. You would be paying extra for a feature that produces only 2–4% more energy.
Are bifacial panels good for flat roofs in Spain?
Yes, flat roofs are one of the best applications for bifacial panels in Spain — especially white-painted or light-coloured flat roofs. With panels raised on tilted frames at 20–30cm clearance, the white surface reflects significant light to the rear cells, producing 8–15% additional energy.
Are bifacial panels worth the extra money in Spain?
It depends on your specific installation. On white flat roofs, pergolas, or carports over light surfaces, the 8–15% extra production can justify the 5–10% price premium. On standard tiled roofs, the extra cost is rarely worthwhile. Always ask your installer to quantify the expected bifacial gain in kWh/year for your specific property.