Fuel & Power

Solar Panel Output Calculator

Estimate practical solar output for portable power, RVs, sheds, and backup charging.

Updated May 2026No signup requiredBuilt for mobile

Watt-hours--

Kilowatt-hours--

Formula or method

Daily Wh = panel watts x sun hours x efficiency.

Real output depends on shade, angle, heat, wiring, and controller losses.

Worked examples

RV charging example

A 400 watt panel array with 5 peak sun hours and 75 percent efficiency can produce about 1,500 watt-hours on a good planning day.

Cloudy-season check

Lower the sun-hour or efficiency input for winter, shade, heat, roof angle, dirty panels, and cloudy weather before relying on the estimate.

Practical use cases

  • Estimating daily watt-hours for RVs, cabins, sheds, and battery charging.
  • Comparing panel wattage with daily appliance or charger loads.
  • Checking whether battery storage and solar production are balanced.
  • Testing summer and winter sun-hour assumptions separately.
  • Planning portable backup charging before buying panels.

Common mistakes

  • Using rated panel watts as if they occur all day.
  • Ignoring shade, panel angle, heat, wiring, controller, and inverter losses.
  • Forgetting that winter output can be far lower than summer output.
  • Sizing panels without checking daily load and battery capacity.
FAQ

Solar Panel Output Calculator questions

How accurate is this calculator?

It is a planning estimate based on the values you enter. Real-world conditions can change the result.

Why do results vary?

Overhead, rounding, equipment limits, supplier units, network conditions, and user behavior can all affect the final number.

Should I round up?

Round conservatively when running short would interrupt a project, backup, stream, trip, or outage plan.

What should I do next?

Use the result card and checklist, then compare related calculators or guides before making a final decision.

Does this replace official documentation?

No. Use manufacturer documentation, platform guidance, or professional advice for critical decisions.

How to use this estimate

The solar panel output calculator estimates daily or monthly production from panel wattage, sun hours, system losses, tilt, shade, and weather. It is useful for RVs, cabins, battery charging, emergency backup planning, and early screening before a full solar design.

Inputs that matter most

Formula and method

Solar output = panel watts x peak sun hours x system efficiency. For multiple panels, multiply rated watts by panel count first. Then reduce the result for realistic losses, because nameplate output usually assumes ideal lab conditions.

Solar output is seasonal and weather dependent. A result that works in June may fall short in December, especially with low sun angle, shade, snow, or heavy cloud cover.

Worked example

Example: four 200 watt panels provide 800 watts of rated capacity. With five peak sun hours, ideal production is 4,000 watt-hours per day. If real-world losses are 25 percent, expected production becomes about 3,000 watt-hours. That can be compared with the battery bank calculator to see whether storage and charging are balanced.

Common planning mistakes

Safety and disclaimer note

Solar estimates are planning numbers, not electrical design advice. Follow panel, inverter, battery, and charge-controller manufacturer specs; follow local electrical and building code; and consult a qualified solar installer or electrician for roof, grid-tied, battery, and permanent wiring decisions.

FAQ

Practical questions

What are peak sun hours?

Peak sun hours convert changing sunlight into an equivalent number of full-power sunlight hours for estimating production.

Why is real output lower than panel rating?

Heat, shade, angle, wiring, inverter losses, dirt, clouds, and controller limits reduce actual production.

Can I use this for an RV?

Yes for planning. Confirm roof space, mounting, controller limits, battery chemistry, fusing, and wiring before installation.

Should I size solar from battery capacity or daily load?

Start with daily load, then check whether battery capacity and solar production can support that load together.

Does this replace a solar design?

No. Use it for early estimates and consult a qualified installer for code-compliant systems.