Before your first solar panel is ordered, your roof undergoes scrutiny that most homeowners never anticipate. Solar installers evaluate at least eight distinct roof characteristics—and deficiencies in any one of them can delay installation, increase cost, or disqualify a roof section entirely. Understanding what installers look for puts you in control of your project and eliminates expensive surprises.
The good news: most homes are suitable for solar after addressing any structural or condition issues. And for homes where the main roof isn't ideal, alternatives like ground-mounted systems or solar carports can achieve the same energy goals. This guide walks through every evaluation dimension in detail.
Factor 1 — Roof Orientation (Azimuth)
Roof orientation—the compass direction a roof slope faces—is the single most impactful factor in your solar system's annual production. In the Northern Hemisphere, south-facing surfaces receive the most direct sunlight throughout the year.
| Roof Orientation | Production vs. South-Facing | Solar Viability |
|---|---|---|
| South (170°–190°) | 100% (baseline) | Optimal |
| South-Southwest / South-Southeast (150°–210°) | 97–99% | Excellent |
| Southwest / Southeast (135°–225°) | 90–95% | Very Good |
| West / East (90°–135° / 225°–270°) | 75–85% | Good |
| North-West / North-East (315°–359° / 0°–45°) | 55–70% | Fair — upsize system |
| True North (350°–10°) | 40–60% | Poor — consider alternatives |
If your primary roof faces east or west, don't give up. An east-west split installation (panels on both faces) captures morning and afternoon sun, achieving 80–90% of a south-facing system's output with better self-consumption alignment to morning/evening household usage patterns. Installers increasingly recommend this approach for east-west roofs.
Factor 2 — Roof Pitch (Tilt Angle)
Optimal tilt angle equals your latitude. For a home at 35°N latitude, a 35° roof pitch is theoretically ideal. However, the production difference between optimal and non-optimal pitch is smaller than most people expect:
| Roof Pitch | Degrees | Production Impact | Common Roof Types |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flat (0°–5°) | 0–5° | -10 to -15% | Commercial, some modern homes |
| Low-slope (6:12 to 4:12) | 18–27° | -5 to -8% | Ranch homes, modern designs |
| Standard (5:12 to 7:12) | 22–30° | Optimal for most U.S. latitudes | Most common residential roofs |
| Steep (8:12 to 10:12) | 34–40° | Near-optimal for mid-latitudes | Colonial, Victorian, traditional |
| Very steep (12:12+) | 45°+ | -5 to -10% | A-frame, chalet styles |
Flat roofs offer an advantage: installers can mount panels at any tilt angle using adjustable racking systems, effectively choosing the optimal angle regardless of roof pitch.
Factor 3 — Roof Age and Condition
Solar panels installed on a roof nearing end-of-life create a costly problem: panels must be removed and reinstalled when the roof is eventually replaced, adding $1,500–$6,000 in labor to a future reroofing project.
- Asphalt shingles under 10 years old: Fine to install solar — adequate remaining life
- Asphalt shingles 10–15 years old: Get a professional roof inspection. May be fine; monitor for upcoming replacement needs
- Asphalt shingles 15–20+ years old: Strongly consider replacing the roof before solar installation
- Metal roofing: 40–70 year lifespan — almost never needs replacement before solar
- Tile (clay/concrete): 50+ year lifespan — compatible but requires experienced tile-roof solar installers
- Wood shake: Not recommended due to fire risk and poor compatibility with flashing
Factor 4 — Structural Load Capacity
Solar panels and racking hardware add approximately 2.5–4 lbs per square foot of additional dead load to your roof structure. Most U.S. residential roofs built to modern building codes easily accommodate this—but older homes, homes with known structural issues, or homes in high-snow-load areas may require engineering evaluation.
Indicators that a structural assessment may be needed:
- Home built before 1970 without structural updates
- Visible roof sagging or uneven ridge line
- Location in high-snow-load zone (ASCE 7 ground snow load >30 psf)
- Previous DIY roofing work or non-permitted additions
- Unusually long rafter spans without intermediate support
A structural engineer assessment costs $300–$600 and provides written documentation that simplifies the permit process. Reputable installers obtain this automatically for homes that trigger any concern flags.
Factor 5 — Available Unobstructed Area
Usable roof area excludes: vents, skylights, chimneys, HVAC equipment, dormers, and fire code setbacks. Fire codes typically require a 3-foot clear path from all roof edges and a 3-foot clear path on each side of the roof ridge—these provisions allow firefighters roof access in emergencies.
| System Size | Panels (400W) | Roof Space Needed |
|---|---|---|
| 4 kW | 10 panels | ~180 sq ft |
| 6 kW | 15 panels | ~270 sq ft |
| 8 kW | 20 panels | ~360 sq ft |
| 10 kW | 25 panels | ~450 sq ft |
| 12 kW | 30 panels | ~540 sq ft |
Factor 6 — Shading Analysis
Shading is the most underestimated performance factor in residential solar. Even a shadow covering just 1 panel in a string inverter system can reduce the output of all panels in that string by 50% or more. A professional shade analysis uses tools like Solmetric SunEye, Solar Pathfinder, or drone-mounted LiDAR to map shading across all hours of the year and calculate its production impact.
Key shading sources to identify:
- Mature trees — identify which ones cast shadows and at what times of year
- Neighboring buildings or structures to the south, east, or west
- Chimneys and dormers on your own roof
- Utility poles or equipment
- Future shading from currently small trees
If significant shading exists, microinverter or power optimizer technology can recover 10–25% of lost production by allowing each panel to operate independently. Targeted tree trimming (with homeowner permission) is also often cost-effective if a single tree is responsible for most shading.
Roof Material Compatibility Summary
| Roof Material | Solar Compatibility | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Asphalt Shingles | Excellent | Most common, lowest installation cost |
| Metal Standing Seam | Excellent | Clamp-on mounts, no roof penetrations needed |
| Metal Corrugated | Very Good | Requires specific clamp hardware |
| Concrete Tile | Good | Requires tile-hook system, experienced installer |
| Clay/Terracotta Tile | Good | Fragile; specialized installation required |
| Flat (TPO/EPDM/Modified Bitumen) | Good | Ballasted or bonded mount systems |
| Slate | Fair | Very fragile; premium installation cost, few experienced installers |
| Wood Shake | Poor | Fire risk; many jurisdictions require replacement first |
What If Your Roof Isn't Suitable?
A challenging roof doesn't mean you can't go solar—it means you need an alternative mounting strategy:
- Ground-mounted solar: Ideal for homes with inadequate roof area or poor orientation. Panels mounted on structures in the yard at optimal angle and orientation. Higher upfront cost ($0.50–$1.00/W more) but often better production than a compromised roof installation.
- Solar carport/pergola: Dual-purpose structure that provides shade for vehicles or outdoor living while generating electricity. Growing in popularity for homes with tree-covered or north-facing roofs.
- Community solar: Subscribe to a shared solar array in your utility territory and receive bill credits for your share of production—no roof modifications at all.