The headline numbers — 50 kW farm solar install in 2026
A 50 kW commercial solar PV installation on a UK farm building typically costs £35,000 to £55,000 fully installed. The range reflects variation in roof condition, electrical complexity, and DNO grid works. The system covers roughly 300 square metres of roof area, deploys around 90 panels at 540W rated output, and generates approximately 45,000 kWh per year. Simple payback is around 4.7 years before tax relief and roughly 2.7–3.7 years after 100% Annual Investment Allowance for incorporated farms.
What's included in the £35,000–£55,000 range
Our standard fixed-price proposal for a 50 kW farm install includes: all panels (typically JA Solar, LONGi, Jinko, REC, Q-Cells or Trina at modern 540W rating), inverters (SolarEdge, SMA, Huawei, Fronius or Goodwe with 10-year warranty extendable to 20), racking and mounting (Schletter, Renusol or K2 systems), DC and AC cabling, electrical isolation and protection equipment, structural survey, G99 grid connection submission, MCS commissioning paperwork, monitoring portal access for the system life, and 10-year IWA insurance-backed workmanship warranty.
What's NOT included (and when these costs apply)
- Re-roofing on asbestos cement buildings — pre-2000 farm buildings commonly need HSE-licensed asbestos removal (£30–£50/sqm) and profiled steel re-cladding (£45–£80/sqm) before PV. For a 300 sqm roof, that's an additional £22,500–£39,000 on top of PV capex.
- DNO grid connection works — for a 50 kW system, expect £1,500–£4,000 of DNO works including study, contestable works, and metering. We submit G99 immediately to lock in pricing.
- Three-phase electrical upgrade — if the building only has single-phase supply, upgrading to three-phase costs £4,000–£18,000 depending on cable run.
- Battery storage — optional add-on, £400–£700 per kWh installed. A 100 kWh battery alongside the 50 kW system would add roughly £50,000–£70,000.
- EV charging infrastructure — workplace chargers for farm fleet, typically £1,500–£3,500 per 7–22 kW socket installed (often 75% covered by OZEV Workplace Charging Scheme).
Worked financial example — 50 kW dairy parlour install
Take a representative scenario: a 50 kW PV install on a dairy parlour and adjacent livestock building in the Midlands or South of England, on existing profiled steel cladding (no re-roof required), with three-phase supply already in place. Total project cost: £45,000 including DNO connection (£2,500), structural assessment, panels and inverters, MCS commissioning, monitoring portal, and 10-year IWA warranty. Annual generation: 45,000 kWh. Self-consumption at a typical dairy: 88% — meaning 39,600 kWh used on-farm at the grid retail price of 24p/kWh = £9,504 of cost avoidance. Remaining 12% exported under SEG at 11p/kWh average = £594. Total year-one saving: £10,098. With 100% AIA against trading profit at 25% corporation tax, year-one tax relief is approximately £11,250. Net effective payback: around 2.5 years.
How farm load profile affects payback for a 50 kW system
Payback varies meaningfully by farm type and load profile. Dairy parlours (24/7 cooling baseload): 80–95% self-consumption, fastest payback. Intensive livestock houses (continuous ventilation, lighting): 75–90% self-consumption. Poultry sheds with continuous lighting and ventilation: 70–85%. Pig units with climate control: 80–90%. Grain stores with seasonal drying peak: 30–55% self-consumption — pair with battery for better economics. Equestrian and workshops with moderate daytime activity: 50–70%. The right 50 kW install for your specific farm requires reviewing your half-hourly meter data — we provide free desk feasibility analysis within 7 working days.
Comparison with smaller and larger system sizes
Cost-per-kW falls as system size increases. Sub-50 kW systems sit at £900–£1,100/kW (small dairy parlour, equestrian, workshop). The 50 kW range sits in the £800-1,000/kW band. Larger systems above 500 kW reach £700–£800/kW for multi-building installs. If you're scoping a project, consider whether splitting capacity across multiple buildings under a single G99 application might unlock both better unit economics and a faster overall delivery timeline.
What to do next
Send us your half-hourly meter data (or the past 12 months of electricity invoices), a building dimension sketch or aerial photo, and a brief on which buildings you're considering for solar. We deliver a meaningful indicative cost within 48 hours and a full desk feasibility study within 7 working days. If the numbers don't stack up, we'll tell you honestly — we'd rather walk away than push a marginal project.
Compare this 50 kW guide against our main farm-building solar cost page, see 2026 grants and tax reliefs, or read about combined re-roof + PV economics.
Common questions
How much does a 50 kW farm solar install cost?
A 50 kW commercial solar PV install on UK farm buildings typically costs £35,000 to £55,000 fully installed including panels, inverters, racking, cabling, DNO grid commissioning, MCS certificate, and 10-year IWA workmanship warranty. The variance depends on roof condition (asbestos cement requires re-roofing first, adding £25–£45/sqm), electrical infrastructure (single-phase to three-phase upgrade if required), and access complexity.
How much energy will a 50 kW farm install generate?
Approximately 45,000 kWh per year across most UK regions (slightly more in southern England, slightly less in northern Scotland). Self-consumption varies by farm type: dairy parlours and intensive livestock typically 80–95% self-consumed; grain stores and seasonal-load buildings 30–55%; equestrian and workshops 50–70%.
What is the simple payback period for a 50 kW install?
Typical simple payback is around 4.7 years before tax relief, pulled to roughly 2.7–3.7 years after 100% Annual Investment Allowance for incorporated farms at 25% corporation tax. 25-year IRR typically runs 13–17%.
How many solar panels does a 50 kW system need?
Approximately 90 panels at modern 540W rated output. Total roof area required is roughly 300 sqm of south-facing or east-west-facing roof with adequate purlin spacing (typically post-1995 build for retrofit).
Can I finance a 50 kW farm install?
Yes — asset finance over 5–10 years is the most common route, typically EBITDA-positive from month one for farms with strong daytime baseload. PPA (third-party developer ownership) is available for systems above 250 kW. Capital purchase with 100% AIA tax relief is the simplest for farms with capital available.
How long does a 50 kW install take?
From contract to commissioning: 4–6 months for rooftop, 6–9 months for combined re-roof + PV. The longest item is typically the G99 grid connection (6–14 months on most rural DNO feeders) — we submit immediately to compress timeline. Physical install on site: 1–2 weeks.