After installation

Solar panel maintenance and lifespan: what to actually expect.

Solar is about as close to "set and forget" as home investments get — but not entirely hands-off. Here's the honest picture: how long panels last, how much output they lose over time, and the small amount of upkeep that protects your investment.

How long do panels actually last?

Panels carry a performance warranty of around 25 years, guaranteeing a minimum output level (commonly around 80% of original capacity) by year 25. That's a contractual floor, not an expiry date — many real-world installations keep generating usable power well beyond it. Quality monocrystalline panels typically degrade at roughly 0.3–0.8% per year, meaning after 25 years they're still producing somewhere around 80–90% of their original output.

What that means in practice: a 3 kW system generating ~4,500 units in year one might still generate roughly 3,800–4,200 units in year 25. The "long tail" of a solar investment is genuinely long.

The maintenance that actually matters

What shortens a system's life

Plan your system with real numbers

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The bottom line

Budget for occasional cleaning and, ideally, a light annual check-up — that's genuinely most of it. There's no monthly bill for solar maintenance the way there is for, say, an AC service contract. Choose ALMM-approved equipment and a competent installer up front, and a rooftop system is a low-effort asset for two decades or more.

A note on the numbers: figures here are typical ranges as of June 2026 and change often. The PM Surya Ghar subsidy structure, your state's top-up, per-kW prices and electricity tariffs all vary — always confirm current rates on the official portal (pmsuryaghar.gov.in) and get written quotes before you buy. This is planning information, not financial advice.