NC · solar resource

Peak sun hours in North Carolina

North Carolina averages 4.7 peak sun hours a day across the year, 19th of the 50 states. At that figure a 400-watt panel produces about 1.45 kWh a day after real-world losses, and covering the 900 kWh average US bill takes about 21 panels. Charlotte, the state's biggest city, sits at 4.8 hours, close to the statewide figure, though microclimates and elevation still move the local number.

solid mid-pack sun: 4.7 of a possible ~6.5 hours

Panel counts for North Carolina bills

Computed at North Carolina's 4.7 hours with 400W panels and the 0.77 derate; the US-average column shows what the same bill takes at 4.5 hours, so you can see what your state's sun is worth in hardware.

Monthly usageNorth CarolinaSystem sizeUS average
500 kWh/mo12 panels4.8 kW12 panels
750 kWh/mo18 panels7.2 kW18 panels
900 kWh/mo21 panels8.4 kW22 panels
1,000 kWh/mo23 panels9.2 kW24 panels
1,500 kWh/mo35 panels14 kW36 panels
2,000 kWh/mo46 panels18.4 kW48 panels

Your bill, North Carolina sun

From your bill; how to find it.
System size (DC)
Roof area, with racking gaps
Expected output per month

What 4.7 hours means in practice

North Carolina is mid-pack American sun: 19th of 50 at 4.7 peak sun hours, within 4% of the national average. The 900 kWh average bill lands at 21 panels against 22 nationally. At this tier the resource neither makes nor breaks the project. Electricity rates and net-metering terms decide whether solar pencils here, and those change by utility, not by state.

For a location-exact figure, run your address through NREL's free PVWatts; it uses measured weather for your grid cell and will also model roof tilt and direction, which statewide numbers cannot. Then compare its annual kWh against a quote's promise before you sign anything.

Questions people ask

How many solar panels do I need in North Carolina?

About 21 400-watt panels (8.4 kW) for the 900 kWh a month an average US home uses, at North Carolina's 4.7 peak sun hours. Your bill is the variable that matters: the table on this page covers 500 to 2,000 kWh, and the calculator takes any figure.

Is 4.7 peak sun hours good for solar?

It is solidly workable. North Carolina sits near the national average of 4.5 hours, so panel counts here match the US-typical figures, and project economics turn on your utility's rates and net-metering terms rather than on the sun.

Do peak sun hours change with the seasons in North Carolina?

Yes, everywhere: the figure on this page is the annual average of a curve that peaks in June and bottoms out in December. In North Carolina the swing is meaningful but manageable; summer typically runs half again the annual figure and December two-thirds or less of it. Grid-tied homes bank summer overproduction as credit; off-grid designs must size for the trough, not the average.

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