Is Solar Worth It in China?
For many rooftop owners yes, especially when self-consumption is above 40%. But 2026 changed the assumptions: province, settlement rule, and self-use ratio now drive most of the answer.
What changed in China solar in 2026
China residential and distributed solar entered a new phase in 2026. Three changes matter most for rooftop ROI:
- The Measures for the Administration of Distributed Photovoltaic Power Generation took effect, formalizing project classification, grid connection, and settlement rules.
- From July 1, 2026, the Southern region (Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan, Guizhou, Hainan) settles distributed solar exports at the nodal price instead of a fixed benchmark. Location and time-of-day value now flow into export revenue.
- Q1 2026 household solar additions reached 9.526 GW, up 89% year-on-year, with household share of new PV jumping from 8.5% to 23.1%. Module prices kept falling, and residential turnkey EPC is now around 3.0 CNY/W.
The growth figure reflects the policy pipeline (整县推进 county-level programs entering harvest) and lower costs, not a guaranteed return for every roof. Individual ROI still depends on self-use and tariff.
What drives China rooftop solar ROI
- Self-consumption ratio — usually the single most sensitive input.
- Turnkey EPC cost, including mounting, inverter, electrical work, and permits.
- Retail electricity price, which varies by province and customer class (residential default around 0.62 CNY/kWh).
- Export settlement — province-dependent; the 0.38 CNY/kWh benchmark is an estimate, not a guaranteed tariff.
- Roof type, orientation, tilt, and shading.
Example IRR scenarios
Using the PV Yield model with China residential defaults, 25-year project life, and no leverage, three example rooftop scenarios produce the results below. They are model outputs, not promises.
| Example scenario | Main assumptions | Model IRR | Static payback |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative Shanghai case | 100 m² roof, EPC 3.3 CNY/W, self-use 35% | 8.5% | 10.0 years |
| Base Shanghai case | 100 m² roof, EPC 3.0 CNY/W, self-use 45% | 10.5% | 8.6 years |
| Higher self-use Shenzhen case | 100 m² roof, EPC 3.0 CNY/W, self-use 60% | 15.8% | 6.1 years |
Even the conservative case sits well above current Chinese bank fixed-deposit rates. For a deeper comparison, see solar vs bank savings.
Why self-consumption matters more under 2026 rules
Under nodal pricing, export revenue inherits the volatility of the local wholesale price. Self-consumed energy, by contrast, still offsets the retail tariff, which is more stable and usually two to three times higher per kilowatt-hour than the export benchmark. Households with daytime load — electric vehicles, air conditioning, a small workshop, or a heat pump — capture the most value. Pure export-oriented projects are more exposed to policy and price risk than they were under the old fixed benchmark.
What users should watch
- Do not reuse outdated feed-in assumptions. Confirm the current province-level settlement rule before trusting any quote.
- Use a complete turnkey EPC cost, not module price alone. Mounting, inverter, cabling, and permitting are a large share of the total.
- Check roof load capacity, orientation, and shading before sizing the system.
- Ask for IRR and NPV, not only payback. Two projects with the same payback can have very different 25-year cashflows.
- If a quote only shows upside under optimistic assumptions, ask the installer to rerun with self-use 30% and current export value.
FAQ
Does the 89% Q1 2026 household growth mean solar is guaranteed profitable in China?
No. The growth reflects falling module costs and the 整县推进 county-level pipeline entering harvest. Individual project ROI still depends on self-consumption ratio, EPC cost, and the local settlement rule. A boom does not protect any single roof from a bad quote.
Can I still install after the July 1, 2026 nodal pricing change in Southern China?
Yes. The change affects how export energy is valued, not whether you can install. Model export revenue at the local nodal price signal rather than the old fixed benchmark, and weight self-consumption more heavily when sizing the system.
What is the difference between 整县推进 and a household rooftop system?
整县推进 (county-level promotion) is a program framework for aggregating distributed PV across villages and townships, often with a developer or state-owned partner. A household rooftop system is self-built or contractor-built on your own roof, and its economics depend on your own consumption, tariff, and contract, not on the county-level total.
Which provinces currently look best for residential solar in China?
Provinces with high retail tariffs, good irradiation, and supportive self-consumption rules tend to screen well. Run the calculator with your province, real EPC quote, and expected self-use ratio before comparing.
Start with the China solar ROI calculator and replace default tariff and EPC assumptions with current local quotes. For methodology details, see how PV Yield calculates returns.