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UK solar installer guide

MCS Certified Solar Installers UK

Choosing the right installer is one of the most important parts of buying solar panels. MCS certification, clear warranties, product choice, survey quality, and aftercare can matter just as much as the headline price.

Last updated: May 2026

Quick answer

For most UK solar buyers, choosing an MCS certified installer is a sensible starting point. It can help with installation standards, documentation, consumer confidence, and eligibility for export payments.

Certification alone is not enough. You should still compare the full quote, product list, warranties, survey detail, expected generation, and aftercare before choosing an installer.

Why certification matters

Solar panels are a long-term investment, so installation quality matters. A certified installer should provide proper paperwork, system design information, warranty details, and handover documents.

Why quotes still need comparing

Two certified installers can still offer different products, prices, warranty terms, generation estimates, battery options, and aftercare. The best quote is not always the cheapest quote.

What to check before choosing an installer

Before accepting a solar quote, ask for the details in writing. A good installer should explain the system clearly and avoid pressure selling.

Check whether the installer is MCS certified.

Ask what solar panels, inverter, battery, and mounting system are included.

Check the product warranty and workmanship warranty.

Ask whether the quote includes scaffolding, monitoring, and handover documents.

Ask for the expected annual generation estimate.

Check whether DNO notification is included.

Ask whether the system is eligible for Smart Export Guarantee payments.

Compare more than one quote before choosing an installer.

Warning signs when comparing solar quotes

Be careful if a quote is vague, rushed, or difficult to compare. Solar should be explained clearly before you sign anything.

Pressure to sign immediately

No clear company details

No clear MCS certification information

Very vague equipment list

No generation estimate

No written warranty details

Unclear deposit or finance terms

No proper roof survey explanation

Certification, SEG, and export payments

If you want to receive payments for exported solar electricity, check that your installer explains the Smart Export Guarantee, required documents, and whether your installation will meet the requirements of your chosen export supplier.

Export payments are not the same as a grant. They are ongoing payments for eligible electricity exported back to the grid after installation.

Estimate savings before comparing quotes

Use SolarCal to estimate likely system size, installation cost range, annual savings, payback period, battery benefit, and EV charging potential before speaking to installers.

Planning to buy solar soon?

The free SolarCal guide helps you understand savings, quote comparison, installer questions, warranties, roof suitability, and common buying mistakes. The Buyer’s Pack gives you extra checklist support before choosing a supplier.

Frequently asked questions

What is an MCS certified solar installer?

An MCS certified solar installer is an installer certified under the Microgeneration Certification Scheme for installing low-carbon technologies such as solar PV. Certification can matter for quality assurance, documentation, and export tariff eligibility.

Do I need an MCS installer for solar panels?

For many UK homeowners, using an MCS certified installer is important because it can affect documentation, consumer protection, and eligibility for Smart Export Guarantee export payments.

Should I choose the cheapest solar installer?

Not automatically. Compare certification, equipment, warranty, generation estimate, aftercare, survey detail, and the full quote rather than only the headline price.

What should a solar installer quote include?

A good quote should explain system size, panels, inverter, battery if included, estimated generation, installation cost, scaffolding, warranties, monitoring, certification, and any assumptions about shading or roof suitability.

How many solar quotes should I compare?

It is sensible to compare more than one quote so you can understand the difference in price, equipment, warranty, installation design, and aftercare.

Sources and further reading

Important note

This guide is for general information only. Installer certification, scheme requirements, export tariff rules, product suitability, costs, warranties, and eligibility can change. Always check current details with the installer, supplier, certification body, and official scheme provider before making a decision.