North East England
Solar Panel Installation in Stockton-on-Tees
We connect you with MCS-certified installers covering Stockton-on-Tees and the surrounding County Durham area. Stockton-on-Tees's mix of inter-war semis and newer-build estates means many homes have generous unobstructed roof space — ideal for a 10–14 panel array.
Solar generation in Stockton-on-Tees
Based on PVGIS irradiance data for North East England, a 4 kWp south-facing system in Stockton-on-Tees generates around 3,720 kWh per year. At the April 2026 Ofgem price cap of 24.50p/kWh, that covers £911 of electricity you would otherwise buy from the grid.
On top of bill savings, surplus energy exported to the grid earns Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) payments — typically 4–6p/kWh with the main suppliers, or up to 15p/kWh with specialist tariffs like Octopus Outgoing.
A typical 4 kWp system with a 5 kWh battery costs £7,000–£11,000 installed in North East England. At current energy prices, most Stockton-on-Tees homeowners break even within 9–11 years.
Why Stockton-on-Tees is well suited to solar
The generous roof areas common on Stockton's newer estates mean many homes can comfortably fit a larger array than the 4 kWp reference system — and a bigger array paired with a battery captures more of the daytime generation for use in the evening, when grid prices bite hardest.
Local grid: Northern Powergrid (Northeast)
Solar installations in Stockton-on-Tees connect to the grid via Northern Powergrid (Northeast). Systems up to 3.68 kW require a G98 notification; larger systems need G99 approval, which can take 45 working days. Your MCS-certified installer handles both — it's included in the installation package, not an extra cost.
How to get quotes in Stockton-on-Tees
- 1
Tell us about your home
Submit a quick quote request — roof type, energy use, and whether you want a battery. Takes about 2 minutes.
- 2
Your installer reviews your roof remotely
Most installers will assess your roof using Google Maps or Google Earth — checking orientation, pitch, shading, and available area — before giving you a preliminary quote. No site visit needed at this stage.
- 3
Receive an itemised quote, then a site survey
You get a written quote breaking out every cost: panels, inverter, battery, mounting, scaffolding, labour, and certification. A brief site visit happens before work begins to confirm the details and finalise the design.
Also covered nearby
Frequently asked questions — Stockton-on-Tees
Do you install solar panels in Stockton-on-Tees?+
We connect you with MCS-certified installers covering Stockton-on-Tees and the wider County Durham area — we're a matching service, not a single fixed contractor, so you're introduced to vetted installers who work in North East England. Submit a quote request and we'll be in touch within 2 working days.
How much electricity will solar panels generate in Stockton-on-Tees?+
Based on PVGIS irradiance data for North East England, a 4 kWp south-facing system in Stockton-on-Tees generates around 3,720 kWh per year — worth roughly £911 at the April 2026 Ofgem price cap of 24.50p/kWh. The generous roof areas common on Stockton's newer estates mean many homes can comfortably fit a larger array than the 4 kWp reference system — and a bigger array paired with a battery captures more of the daytime generation for use in the evening, when grid prices bite hardest.
How long is the payback period for solar in Stockton-on-Tees?+
A typical 4 kWp system with a 5 kWh battery costs £7,000–£11,000 installed in North East England. On Stockton-on-Tees's 930 kWh-per-kWp yield and current energy prices, most homeowners break even within 9–11 years, and Smart Export Guarantee (SEG) payments on surplus exported energy reduce that further.
Do I need planning permission for solar panels in Stockton-on-Tees?+
In most cases, no — pitched-roof solar falls under permitted development in England, with no planning application required. Exceptions include listed buildings and conservation areas with Article 4 Directions. Connection to the grid is handled for you: systems up to 3.68 kW need a G98 notification to Northern Powergrid (Northeast), while larger arrays need G99 approval (up to 45 working days), and your MCS-certified installer files both.