Solar sizing

How much solar do I need for a campervan?

Solar is the difference between watching your battery monitor and forgetting it exists. The trick is matching the panels to what you use, not the roof space you happen to have. Work out your daily power use, know what a panel realistically makes in the UK, and the wattage you need is straightforward. Here is how it works.

The method in three steps

Solar sizing comes down to covering your daily use with a sensible margin for cloudy days.

STEP 1
Know your daily use

Total the amp hours you get through in a day. A fridge, lights and charging is around 40 to 60Ah. Add heating, water and a TV and you are nearer 75 to 90Ah.

STEP 2
Know what a panel makes

In the UK, a flat-mounted 100W panel with a good MPPT puts back around 25Ah a day on average between April and October. High summer is more, the shoulder months less.

STEP 3
Cover your use, plus a margin

Divide your daily use by what 100W gives you, then add a panel for cloudy days. Aim to replace most of what you use, and let the battery carry you through the dull spells.

How much panel for your use

A practical starting point for the UK in the touring season. Figures assume flat roof mounting and a Victron-style MPPT.

Your daily useSolar gives backPanel to aim for
Light weekenderFridge, lights, charging, around 40Ah a day~25Ah from 100W150 to 200W
Typical touringHeater, water, TV, around 75Ah a day~50Ah from 200W300 to 400W
Heavy or full-timeInverter cooking, around 120Ah a day~75Ah from 300W500W+ or hook-up
Winter useShort days, low sun, any setupA fraction of summerPlan to drive or hook up

Solar in a British winter does very little, so size your battery for the dark months and treat solar as a strong April-to-October bonus. Run your exact panels and month in the solar calculator.

What changes your real yield

Two identical vans with the same panel can get very different results. The things that matter most:

  • Time of year. A panel in June can make four or five times what it makes in December. Most of your solar happens between April and October.
  • Shading. Even a small shadow from a roof vent, aerial or overhanging branch can knock a panel right down. Keep them clear.
  • Mounting. Flat on the roof is convenient and what most vans use. A panel tilted towards the sun makes noticeably more, especially in the shoulder months.
  • Controller. An MPPT controller harvests more than an older PWM type, particularly in cooler, brighter conditions. It is worth the extra.

The calculator accounts for the season and conditions so you get a realistic figure rather than the optimistic number on the panel box.

Solar and battery work together

Solar and battery size are two halves of the same question. Solar replaces what you use during the day. The battery carries you through the night and the dull spells when the panels are not keeping up. Undersize either one and the system disappoints.

The sensible approach is to size the battery for the worst conditions you expect, then add enough solar to keep it topped up in normal use. Start with the battery size calculator, then the solar calculator, and the two numbers will tell you whether you are balanced.

Common questions

How much solar do I need for a campervan?
For a typical van using 40 to 60Ah a day, 150 to 200W of solar replaces most of it across the touring season. Add heating and more devices and 300 to 400W is a better match. Heavy inverter users want 500W or more, or to rely on driving and hook-up. Check your exact figure in the solar calculator.
How many amp hours does a 100W panel produce a day?
In the UK, a flat-mounted 100W panel with an MPPT controller gives around 25Ah a day on average between April and October. High summer can reach 30 to 35Ah, while the shoulder months are lower and winter is only a fraction of that.
Will solar alone keep my battery charged?
In summer, for many setups, yes. Match the panel to your daily use and the battery rarely runs down. In winter, solar does little in the UK, so you should size the battery for the dark months and treat solar as a seasonal bonus.
Do I need an MPPT controller?
It is strongly recommended. An MPPT controller harvests more energy than an older PWM type, especially in cooler, brighter conditions, and it pairs cleanly with a TITAN lithium battery. Our yield figures assume a Victron-style MPPT.
Flat or tilted panels?
Flat on the roof is what most vans use and it works well in summer when the sun is high. A panel you can tilt towards the sun makes noticeably more, particularly in spring and autumn, at the cost of a bit of faff each stop.