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Spain Independent Solar Advice

Solar Basics in Spain: What to Understand Before You Sign a Quote

A solar installation is more than panels on a roof. Before accepting a quote in Spain, you should understand how panels generate electricity, what the inverter does, whether a battery is worthwhile, how legalisation and export compensation work, and why your electricity tariff still matters after solar.

Réponse Rapide

A solar installation is more than panels on a roof. 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.

Solar is a system, not just panels

When most people think of solar energy, they picture panels on a roof. But a successful solar installation is an entire ecosystem working together. If any part of this system is incorrectly sized or poorly chosen, the overall efficiency and your financial return will drop significantly.

Here is the basic flow of how solar energy works in a typical Spanish home (read our full guide to how solar works):

  • Generation: The solar panels on your roof capture sunlight and generate Direct Current (DC) electricity.
  • Conversion: Your home runs on Alternating Current (AC). An Inverter (the "brain" of the system) converts the DC from the panels into usable AC electricity.
  • Consumption: Your home appliances will always automatically consume the free solar energy first, before pulling anything from the national grid.
  • Export or Storage: If your panels are generating more power than your home is currently using, that "surplus" energy has to go somewhere. It is either sent into a physical battery (if you have one) or exported back out to the electricity grid.
  • Compensation: In Spain, you are compensated for the surplus energy you send to the grid through a mechanism called Compensación de Excedentes, but only if your system is properly legalised.

Main parts of a solar installation

Before speaking with an installer, you should be familiar with the core components you will see on your quote:

  • Solar Panels: The visible part of the system. Most modern installations use highly efficient monocrystalline panels. Learn about panel types.
  • The Inverter: Arguably the most important component. You will choose between a single central "String Inverter" or individual "Microinverters" placed under each panel. Compare inverter types.
  • Mounting System: The aluminium framing that attaches the panels securely to your roof. In coastal areas of Spain (like the Costa del Sol), these must be rated for high winds and treated to resist salt corrosion.
  • Battery (Optional): Physical storage for surplus daytime energy, allowing you to use your own solar power at night. Read our battery guide.
  • Bi-directional Meter: Your smart meter will be updated remotely by your distributor (e.g., e-distribución) to count both the electricity you import and the electricity you export.
  • Legalisation Paperwork (Boletín): The crucial administrative documentation that registers your system with the Ministry of Industry. Without this, you cannot get paid for your surplus energy.

Key decisions before signing

When comparing solar quotes, these are the primary design choices you need to evaluate:

  • How many panels do you actually need? System size should be based on your historical kilowatt-hour (kWh) consumption, not just how many panels fit on your roof. An oversized system will generate surplus that you may not be fully compensated for.
  • Which inverter technology is best? If your roof has complex angles or gets partial shade from chimneys or trees, Microinverters or Power Optimisers are highly recommended. If you have a simple, unshaded South-facing roof, a standard String Inverter is more cost-effective.
  • Should you buy a physical battery? Batteries are expensive. They make sense for homes with high nighttime consumption, but they rarely make financial sense for holiday homes or villas that primarily use electricity during the day for pool pumps and air conditioning.
  • Do you need backup during power cuts? By default, standard grid-tied solar systems shut down during a grid power cut for safety reasons (anti-islanding). If you suffer from frequent blackouts, you must specifically request a "hybrid" system with a backup circuit. Read our power cut guide.

Spain-specific solar issues

Installing solar in Spain involves several unique regulatory and administrative hurdles that you must be aware of:

  • CUPS Number: The Código Universal de Punto de Suministro is the unique identifier for your electricity connection. You will find it on your electricity bill. Every piece of solar paperwork revolves around this number.
  • Autoconsumo Registration: Your installer must legally register the installation with your regional government (e.g., the Junta de Andalucía). This process can sometimes take months, during which time you will generate solar power but will not be paid for your exports.
  • Export Compensation vs Cash: The Spanish system does not pay you cash for your surplus energy. Instead, your electricity retailer gives you a financial credit on your bill for the energy you export. This credit can offset the cost of the energy you import, but it typically cannot offset the fixed grid connection charges (Potencia).
  • Virtual Batteries (Batería Virtual): Many Spanish electricity suppliers offer a "Virtual Battery". This is not a real battery; it is an accounting mechanism that lets you store the financial value of excess summer exports to use against your winter bills. Learn more about Virtual Batteries.
  • Tariff Changes: The electricity tariff you have before solar is almost never the best tariff to have after solar. You will need to switch to a tariff specifically designed for solar owners (tarifa de autoconsumo).

How Costa Solar Guide can help

Navigating solar technology, Spanish regulations, and aggressive sales tactics can be overwhelming. Costa Solar Guide provides independent, unbiased analysis to ensure you get the right system for your specific property on the Costa del Sol.

If you have already received a quote, we strongly recommend using our independent quote review service before you sign anything. We will check the system sizing, the equipment quality, the inverter design, and ensure that the financial projections are realistic.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main parts of a solar system?
A standard grid-tied solar system consists of Solar Panels (to capture sunlight and generate DC power), an Inverter (to convert DC to usable AC power), a mounting system to secure the panels, and a bi-directional smart meter to track your imports and exports.
Do solar panels work during a power cut in Spain?
No, standard grid-tied solar systems automatically shut down during a power cut. This is a mandatory safety feature to prevent your panels from sending electricity into the grid while repair crews are working on the lines. If you want power during an outage, you must install a specific 'hybrid' inverter with an 'EPS' (Emergency Power Supply) circuit and a physical battery.
Do I need a battery with solar panels in Spain?
A physical battery is not mandatory. Without a battery, you use solar power directly during the day, and any surplus is exported to the grid for a financial credit on your bill. Batteries are highly recommended if you consume a lot of electricity at night, but they may not be cost-effective for holiday homes or villas with high daytime usage (like pool pumps).
What is export compensation (Compensación de Excedentes)?
In Spain, when your panels generate more power than your home is using, the excess is sent to the grid. Your electricity retailer will give you a financial credit for this exported energy, which offsets the cost of the energy you buy from them at night. To receive this, your system must be fully legalised with a Boletín Eléctrico.
Can I change electricity supplier after installing solar?
Yes, you can and you absolutely should! Once your system is legalised, you are free to switch to any electricity supplier. You will want to shop around for a 'Tarifa de Autoconsumo' (Solar Tariff) that offers a good balance between low import rates and high export compensation rates, and ideally includes a Virtual Battery service.