How to Calculate Solar EV Charging
What is Solar EV Charging?
The Solar Panel EV Charging Calculator estimates how many solar panels you need to fully offset the electricity used to charge your electric vehicle at home, turning your EV into a truly zero-emission vehicle.
Formula
Panels Needed = Annual EV kWh Consumption / (Panel Wattage x Peak Sun Hours x 365 x 0.80)
- Eev
- Annual EV Energy Use (kWh/year) — Total electricity your EV consumes per year
- Wp
- Panel Wattage (watts (W)) — Rated output of each solar panel under standard test conditions
- PSH
- Peak Sun Hours (hours/day) — Equivalent hours of full-strength sunlight per day at your location
- SF
- System Factor (dimensionless) — Efficiency multiplier accounting for inverter, wiring, and soiling losses (typically 0.75-0.85)
Step-by-Step Guide
- 1Calculate your annual EV energy consumption from miles driven and efficiency
- 2Enter your location peak sun hours (3-6 hours/day depending on region)
- 3Input solar panel wattage (typically 370-430W per panel)
- 4The calculator determines panels needed after accounting for 20% system losses
Worked Examples
Input
12,000 mi/yr, 3.5 mi/kWh, 400W panels, 5 peak sun hours (Arizona)
Result
3,429 kWh needed / (400 x 5 x 365 x 0.80) = 5.9 panels, round up to 6 panels
Input
12,000 mi/yr, 3.5 mi/kWh, 400W panels, 3.5 peak sun hours (Seattle)
Result
3,429 kWh needed / (400 x 3.5 x 365 x 0.80) = 8.4 panels, round up to 9 panels
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ✕Forgetting to account for system losses (inverter efficiency, wiring, soiling) which reduce output by 15-25%
- ✕Using global peak sun hours instead of your specific location and roof orientation values
- ✕Not considering that solar generation peaks midday while EV charging typically happens overnight — net metering or battery storage is needed
Frequently Asked Questions
How many solar panels do I need to charge my EV?
Typically 5-10 panels (2-4 kW system) depending on your location and driving habits. The average US driver (12,000 mi/yr) needs about 3,400 kWh/year, which requires 6-9 standard 400W panels.
Can I charge my EV directly from solar panels?
Not directly in most setups. Solar panels feed the grid or a home battery during the day, and your EV charges from the grid at night. Net metering credits offset the cost, making it effectively solar-powered.
Ready to calculate? Try the free Solar EV Charging Calculator
Try it yourself →