Solar panels require remarkably little maintenance — that's one of the biggest selling points of the technology. Unlike a gas furnace or HVAC system, there are no moving parts, no filters to replace, and no annual tune-ups required. Most homeowners spend under $200/year maintaining their solar system, and many spend nothing at all for years at a time.
That said, "low maintenance" doesn't mean "no maintenance." Dirty panels lose 5–25% of their output, inverter errors left unaddressed can halt your entire system, and missing a warranty claim deadline can cost you thousands. This guide covers everything you need to know.
The One Thing That Actually Matters: Keeping Panels Clean
Solar panels lose efficiency when covered with dust, bird droppings, pollen, and debris. The amount of loss depends on your location:
Low-Dust Environments
- Pacific Northwest, New England
- Frequent rain naturally cleans panels
- Typical loss: 2–5% from soiling
- Clean 1–2× per year
High-Dust Environments
- Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, parts of TX/CA
- Dust storms can coat panels overnight
- Typical loss: 10–25% from soiling
- Clean 4–6× per year minimum
How Often Should You Clean Solar Panels?
The standard recommendation is 2–4 times per year for most US homeowners. Here's a practical cleaning schedule:
- Spring (April): Clear winter debris, pollen, and tree sap from spring blooming
- Summer (July): Mid-summer dust and bird activity peak in most regions
- Fall (October): Leaf debris and agricultural dust from harvest season
- After any major dust storm: Clean within 1 week — fine dust bakes onto panels in sunlight
DIY Cleaning vs. Professional Service
You have two realistic options for keeping panels clean:
DIY Solar Panel Cleaning
Cost: $0–$50 (soft brush/squeegee)
DIY cleaning works well for single-story homes with safely accessible roof sections. The process:
- Use a soft-bristle brush or sponge mop — never abrasive pads
- Use plain water or a mild, non-abrasive soap (avoid detergents with wax)
- Clean early morning or evening — cold water on hot panels can cause thermal shock and micro-cracks
- Rinse thoroughly — soap residue attracts new dirt faster
- Never use a pressure washer — high pressure can damage seals and wiring
Safety note: If your roof is steep or above one story, don't risk it. The panels will generate during the year — a fall isn't worth the cleaning savings.
Professional Cleaning Service
Cost: $150–$300 per visit
Professional solar cleaning companies use deionized water systems and soft-brush tools designed specifically for photovoltaic panels. Deionized water leaves no mineral spots, which is especially important in hard-water states like Arizona and Nevada. Annual service contracts range from $250–$500 and often include a basic visual inspection of wiring and mounting hardware.
Monitoring Your System — What to Watch For
Every modern solar installation comes with a monitoring app (SolarEdge, Enphase Enlighten, SMA Sunny Portal, Fronius Solar.web). Check yours monthly at minimum. Here's what the numbers mean:
Daily kWh Output
Compare to the same date last year. Expect seasonal variation — summer produces 2–3× more than winter in most states. A 15%+ drop on a clear day (vs. same day last year) warrants investigation.
Panel-Level Data
Systems with microinverters (Enphase) or power optimizers (SolarEdge) show per-panel output. If one panel is producing 30%+ less than neighbors on a clear day, check for shading, bird droppings, or a faulty optimizer.
Inverter Status
Your monitoring app shows inverter status. "Off" or error states during daylight hours mean your whole system (or one string) is offline. Check the inverter display for error codes immediately.
Common Inverter Error Codes and What They Mean
String inverters (SMA, Fronius, SolarEdge central units) and microinverters display error codes that tell you exactly what's wrong. The most common:
Grid Fault / Grid Error
The inverter detected grid voltage or frequency outside acceptable range. This is usually a utility issue. The inverter shuts down for safety (required by code) and automatically restarts when grid power stabilizes. No action needed unless it happens repeatedly — call your utility.
Isolation Fault / Ground Fault
Moisture has entered the wiring system, creating an unintended electrical path. Shut down the system and call a certified solar technician immediately. This can be a fire and shock hazard if ignored.
Arc Fault Detection
The inverter detected arcing in the DC wiring — loose connections or damaged insulation. System shuts down automatically. Do not restart — call a pro. Arc faults are a known fire risk in solar systems.
Over Temperature
Inverter is running too hot. Check that ventilation around the inverter is clear. Inverters should be mounted in shaded, ventilated locations — not in attics or direct sun. Usually self-resolves when temperature drops.
Annual Inspection Checklist
Once per year — ideally in spring — do a systematic walkthrough of your system. Here's what to check:
Visual Roof Inspection
- Look for cracked or discolored panel glass (discoloration = potential delamination)
- Check for gaps or lifted edges in panel frames
- Inspect mounting hardware — look for rust, loose bolts, or gaps in roof flashing
- Check conduit and junction boxes for damage, animal nesting, or water ingress
- Look for bird nesting under panels (pigeons love the heat — mesh guards prevent this)
Inverter and Electrical Check
- Note inverter hours of operation and any logged faults in the monitoring history
- Check that all AC/DC disconnect switches are in proper position
- Inspect inverter enclosure for moisture or insect intrusion
- Verify production data matches your monitoring app (spot-check utility bill)
Production vs. Baseline
- Pull annual kWh production from your monitoring app
- Compare year-over-year — normal degradation is 0.4–0.7% per year
- A 3%+ drop warrants professional thermal imaging to identify failed cells
Solar Panel Degradation — What to Expect Over 25 Years
All solar panels degrade over time. The industry-standard degradation rate is approximately 0.5% per year, though premium Tier 1 panels (LG, Panasonic, REC, SunPower) often degrade at only 0.3–0.4% per year.
What this means in practice for a 10kW system producing 14,000 kWh in year 1:
Year 1
14,000 kWh annual production at 100% output
Year 10
13,300 kWh — still 95% of original output (0.5%/yr)
Year 25
12,250 kWh — still 87.5% of original output. Most warranties guarantee ≥80%.
This gradual decline is already factored into the ROI calculations your installer provided. Over 25 years, the cumulative production loss from degradation is relatively minor — roughly 12–15% of total lifetime energy production.
Expected Lifespan: 25–30 Years
Modern monocrystalline silicon panels are highly durable. The glass and silicon degrade slowly; the most vulnerable components are the inverter and the wiring. Typical component lifespans:
- Solar panels: 25–30+ years (many 1990s-era panels still producing)
- String inverter: 10–15 years ($1,500–$3,000 replacement)
- Microinverters (Enphase IQ8): 25-year warranty, designed to match panel lifespan
- Mounting hardware: 20–30 years (aluminum rails with stainless hardware)
- Battery storage (if installed): 10–15 years (lithium-ion warranty typically 10yr)
When to Call a Professional
Beyond the DIY cleaning and annual visual inspection, these situations require a certified solar technician:
- Persistent inverter error codes — any fault that doesn't self-clear within 24 hours
- Isolation fault or arc fault — potential fire/safety hazard, do not restart system
- Physical damage to panels — hail damage, fallen tree limb, cracked glass
- Production drop exceeding 15% year-over-year — could indicate failed optimizers, defective panels, or wiring issue
- Roof leak near penetrations — solar mounts create roof penetrations; any leak nearby needs pro assessment
- Warranty claim investigation — manufacturers often require a certified inspection before honoring claims
Filing a Warranty Claim
Most quality solar panels carry two warranties: a product warranty (covering defects, typically 12–25 years) and a performance warranty (guaranteeing minimum output, typically 25 years at 80–87% original power).
To file a successful claim:
- Document the issue with photos and monitoring data screenshots
- Note the date the problem appeared and how production has been affected
- Contact your installer first — they often handle warranty claims as part of their service
- If the installer is no longer in business, contact the panel manufacturer directly with your purchase documents and system specs
- Keep all original paperwork: installation contract, product serial numbers, monitoring history exports
Most panel warranties are backed by the manufacturer directly and transfer with the home if you sell — an important selling point to document for future buyers.