11 5 min read Guide

Solar warranties explained: the three layers

A solar system has three warranties, not one: workmanship, inverter, and panel product plus performance. What each covers and for how long, why a single "full system warranty" line is a red flag, and why a local installer makes a warranty far easier to claim.

"Ten year warranty" sounds reassuring on a solar quote until you ask what it actually covers. A solar system does not have one warranty, it has three, and a quote that blends them into a single line is hiding which part is protected and for how long. This guide breaks the three layers apart so you can compare quotes on what matters and know who to call when something goes wrong.

The three layers

Every solar system carries three distinct warranties, and they cover different things for different lengths of time. The workmanship warranty is your installer\'s cover on the install itself, the cabling, mounting and board work. The inverter warranty comes from the inverter manufacturer. The panel warranty comes from the panel manufacturer and splits again into two parts. A complete quote lists all of these separately with their terms, so you can see exactly what is covered by whom.

Product versus performance, the panel\'s two warranties

The panel warranty is the one most often misread. The product warranty covers the panel against manufacturing defects, while the performance warranty guarantees it still produces a set percentage of its rated output after a given number of years. Both matter, because a panel can keep running yet quietly underproduce, and only the performance warranty protects you against that slow fade. A strong panel will still hold a high percentage of its rating at 25 years, and that figure is worth comparing across quotes.

We list all three layers in writing with their terms and exclusions, so you know who covers what and for how long. Vague "full system warranty" lines are exactly where buyers get caught.

A warranty is only as good as who stands behind it

Here is the part the paperwork does not say: a manufacturer warranty is far easier to claim when a local installer is coordinating it for you, and far harder when the company that installed your system has disappeared. Solar earned its mixed reputation partly because cheap installers vanish, leaving owners to chase overseas manufacturers alone. So the installer\'s track record and whether they can actually turn up are part of the warranty, not separate from it. For more on choosing one that will last, read how to spot a cheap solar quote.

Three layers, listed separately, with a local installer standing behind them. That is what a real warranty looks like, and it is worth more than a bigger number on a single vague line.

Common questions

How many warranties does a solar system actually have?
Three separate ones: workmanship on the install, the inverter warranty, and the panel warranty, which itself splits into product and performance. The reason a single "full system warranty" line is a red flag is that it hides which part is covered for how long. Next step: ask for all three layers listed separately with their terms.
What is the difference between panel product and performance warranty?
The product warranty covers the panel itself against defects, while the performance warranty guarantees it still produces a set percentage of its rating after a given number of years. The reason both matter is that a panel can keep working but quietly underproduce. Next step: check both figures, a strong panel holds a high output percentage at 25 years.
Who do I call if something goes wrong?
Your installer first, which is why a local one matters. The reason is that workmanship claims are theirs, and they coordinate the manufacturer claims for the panel or inverter on your behalf. Next step: choose an installer who will still be around and can turn up, not an interstate call centre.
Why does the installer being local affect the warranty?
Because a warranty is only as good as the company standing behind it. The reason solar has a poor reputation here is that many cheap installers vanish, leaving manufacturer warranties that are hard to claim alone. Next step: weigh the installer's track record and local presence as part of the warranty, not separately from it.
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