Solar vs Wind for UK Farms: 2026 Comparison

Detailed comparison of UK farm renewable energy options. Solar vs alternatives in 2026.

  • MCS
  • NICEIC
  • IWA-Backed

The comparison in 2026

Two renewable energy options dominate UK farm decisions: solar PV (rooftop on farm buildings or ground-mount on land) and wind (typically single-turbine 11-50 kW or shared community wind). Each has distinct characteristics.

Detailed comparison

Solar PV: 4.5-7 year payback typical; predictable yield based on irradiance models; planning Permitted Development under Class A Part 14 GPDO 2015 for most rooftop installs; G99 grid connection 6-14 months; visual impact minimal on rooftop; no moving parts so minimal maintenance. Wind turbines: 6-9 year payback typical; more variable yield based on local wind patterns; planning permission required for almost all wind installations (typically 12-24 months including ecological survey); G99/G100 grid connection similar to solar; visual impact significant; mechanical components require periodic overhaul. For most UK farms in 2026, solar wins on speed-to-commissioning, predictability, and planning simplicity. Wind wins on consistent year-round generation profile (vs solar's seasonal pattern) and per-MWh value where local wind resource is exceptional. Hybrid solar+wind installations are increasingly common on larger holdings.

How to decide for your farm

The right answer depends on the farm's specific electrical and heat demand profile, available capital, planning context, and long-term strategic priorities. We model multi-technology scenarios as part of any farm feasibility study where the farm is considering more than just solar PV. Send us your half-hourly meter data, fuel-use history, and a brief on planned operational changes β€” we deliver a multi-technology comparison within 10 working days.

For most UK farms in 2026 with primarily electrical demand, solar PV is the clear winner on speed-to-commissioning, planning simplicity, and payback. Other technologies (wind, biomass, heat pumps, AD) make sense in specific scenarios. The hybrid case β€” solar PV plus complementary technology β€” is increasingly common as farms decarbonise both electrical and heat-intensive operations.

Common questions

Can we install solar AND wind?

Yes β€” hybrid solar+wind is increasingly common on larger holdings. The technologies complement each other (solar peaks during day with high irradiance; wind generates throughout day and night based on wind conditions). Combined hybrid economics are usually stronger than either technology standalone for farms with appropriate scale.

Which technology has the easiest planning approval?

Solar rooftop PV on agricultural buildings β€” typically Permitted Development under Class A Part 14 GPDO 2015. No formal planning permission required for most installations. Wind, biomass, and AD all typically require full planning permission.

Does solar work for high-temperature heat applications?

Solar PV generates electricity; for high-temperature heat (above 80Β°C β€” beyond heat pump capability), direct heat technologies (biomass, gas, oil) are more economic. For typical farm heat applications (60-80Β°C β€” dairy parlour washdown, building space heating), solar PV + heat pump combination is increasingly the standard approach.

What's the simplest farm decarbonisation route in 2026?

For most UK farms, the simplest route is: 1. Rooftop solar PV on farm buildings (covers electrical baseload). 2. Battery storage if seasonal/peak demand mismatch (covers operational timing). 3. EV charging infrastructure for farm fleet (replaces diesel). 4. Heat pump for any direct-heat applications. This sequence delivers strong economics, planning simplicity, and progressive decarbonisation.

Accredited and certified for UK commercial work

  • MCS Certified
  • NICEIC Approved
  • RECC Member
  • TrustMark Licensed
  • IWA Insurance-Backed
  • ISO 9001 / 14001