Installers, your rooftop solar systems are only as good as the wiring behind them. Learn how to wire solar systems right for long-term performance in 2025.
Be honest now, when most people hear the term rooftop solar, they picture the panels in mind. Of course, nobody will believe that those shiny panels will help much without having solid, safe and smart wiring behind it that any experienced installer understands. Considering you are an installer and doing installations in India or any part of South Asia, wiring is not a technical detail but rather it forms the nervous system of the complete system. Mess it up and you can expect to be faced with energy losses, the threat of safety, and loads of headaches in the future.
So no matter how many systems you have installed or you have just come off the bus, here is what really matters in the rooftop solar wiring: what to use, what to avoid and how to make your installs better and safer in 2025.
The lifeline of a rooftop solar set up is wiring. It is the one that links the solar panels to the inverter, the inverter to the distribution board and all to the grounding system. One weak connection, whether a cable that does not fit or a crimped MC4 connector that did not connect safely, an overheated conduit or even worse, something can become a fire hazard.
Suppose that you installed a 10 kW system to a customer at Ahmedabad. The panels are top-notch, the inverter’s from a trusted brand. But if you used undersized DC cables and skipped weather protection? That system’s output will dip in peak summers, connectors will degrade faster, and the client’s faith in solar might go with it. Not ideal.
If you’re working on rooftops, these are the essentials you’ll be dealing with:
Even in 2025, we’re still seeing basic wiring mistakes in rooftop installations. Here are some of the most common ones I’ve seen on-site:
Cable sizing isn’t just about safety—it affects performance too. A small voltage drop might not sound like much, but on a hot summer day in Chennai, that drop could mean several units of lost energy. Multiply that over months and years, and you’re looking at a real dent in ROI.
Use this basic formula:
Voltage Drop (%) = (2 × Length × Current × Resistance) / 1000
Try to keep the voltage drop under 1.5% for DC and under 2.5% for AC runs.
Many experienced installers now use online tools or mobile apps to size cables on-site. Worth getting one, especially when dealing with custom rooftop layouts.
There are so many products in the market to the extent that corners can be easily cut. In the case of cables though, make sure you follow known standards.
A cable that just says “solar cable” isn’t enough. Look for UV resistance, double insulation, temperature range (-40°C to +90°C), and flame retardancy.
Solar wiring is evolving. Some of the trends already making waves this year:
And to be on top of the game, it is the high time you get to know about these. No matter whether your client requests it or not, proposing it means that you are thinking in the long-term.
There’s nothing worse than getting a call a month after installation because “the inverter’s tripping” or “there’s no generation.” Nine times out of ten, it’s a wiring issue—loose MC4, waterlogged conduit, or just a cable that was too thin.
Good wiring is invisible. When done right, it just works—for years. You won’t see it, but your client will thank you for the peace of mind. And you’ll walk away knowing your system is solid.
As solar continues to boom across India and South Asia, the bar for quality installations is rising. Let’s raise our game too—because rooftop wiring isn’t a minor detail. It’s the backbone of the system.