Learn about solar PV output, roof shading, planning checks, grants, battery storage and commercial solar options across South Derbyshire.
South Derbyshire is a varied district for solar panels. It includes Swadlincote, growing residential areas around Hilton and Woodville, older villages such as Repton, Melbourne, Ticknall and Shardlow, Trent-side settlements, schools, village halls, farms, barns, major employment sites and larger countryside solar proposals.
That mix makes South Derbyshire different from Derby City, Chesterfield, Erewash or the Derbyshire Dales. A roof in Swadlincote, a rear-facing home in Willington, a heritage-sensitive property in Repton or Bretby, a barn near Melbourne, a school in Etwall, a village hall near Stanton, or a larger solar proposal between rural villages will all need to be assessed differently.
For homeowners, landlords, farms, schools, community buildings and businesses in South Derbyshire, the question is not simply “does solar work here?” Solar panels can generate electricity from daylight, not just direct sunshine. The more useful questions are whether the roof has enough clear space, whether the property is shaded by trees or neighbouring buildings, whether planning checks are needed, whether the setting is visually sensitive, and whether battery storage would help you use more of your own solar electricity.
Positive Energy Solutions is a family-run solar company based in Derbyshire. We help homeowners and businesses understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, battery storage or commercial solar could be right for their property, with clear advice and no hard sell.
If you are comparing options across the wider county, you can also visit our main page for solar panels in Derbyshire.
Start with our free remote solar survey. You can pinpoint your exact roof online, and our Derbyshire-based team will take a look before giving you honest, no-pressure advice.
Start Your Free Remote Solar Survey
Yes, solar panels can work well in South Derbyshire, provided the property is suitable. According to the Energy Saving Trust, solar panels generate electricity from sunlight and can still work on cloudy days. They usually perform best on an unshaded, south-facing roof, although east and west-facing roofs can also be worth considering.
This matters locally because South Derbyshire includes several different types of solar setting. Swadlincote, Woodville, Castle Gresley, Church Gresley and Linton include many domestic roofs where orientation, chimney shading, extensions and roof condition need checking. Hilton, Findern, Etwall and Willington include suburban and village homes where garage roofs, rear roofs and newer estate layouts may affect panel design.
In places such as Repton, Melbourne, Bretby, Ticknall, Shardlow and Newton Solney, the planning context can be more sensitive. Some local solar applications include heritage statements, rear roof positioning, anti-reflection information or design documents, which shows why visibility and setting need to be considered carefully.
For farms, barns, schools, village halls, employment sites and larger ground-mounted schemes, the assessment becomes wider again. Roof structure, access, glare, landscape impact, land quality, biodiversity, construction traffic and long-term land use may all need to be reviewed before deciding whether solar is appropriate.
A representative PVGIS estimate for a suitable South Derbyshire roof suggests that a 1kWp solar PV system could generate around 1,012 kWh per year. Based on that estimate, a typical 4kWp domestic solar PV system could produce around 4,048 kWh per year.
This estimate is based on a suitable south-facing roof with a 35° pitch, crystalline silicon panels, 14% system losses and calculated horizon shading. It should be treated as a useful guide, not a guarantee. Actual output will depend on the property, roof orientation, pitch, shading, roof condition, panel layout, inverter choice, system design and how electricity is used in the home, school, farm or business.
In South Derbyshire, the final design can vary significantly by property. Chimneys, dormers, rooflights, mature trees, neighbouring buildings, extension roofs, barn roof materials, commercial roof structures and the visibility of the roof from roads or public spaces can all affect the best solar layout.
You can learn more about how PVGIS estimates solar radiation and PV system performance through the European Commission PVGIS tool.
South Derbyshire needs a property-specific view because the district has a wide mix of suburban, rural, village, heritage-sensitive and commercial properties. Around Swadlincote, Woodville, Castle Gresley and Church Gresley, the main considerations may be roof direction, roof space, chimneys, dormers, extensions and household electricity use.
In Hilton, Findern, Etwall, Hatton and Willington, suitable roofs may vary from newer houses and garage roofs to older village properties and rear roof slopes. In Repton, Melbourne, Bretby, Ticknall, Shardlow and Newton Solney, roof visibility and heritage setting may need more care, especially where a property is older, prominent or supported by a design and heritage statement.
For Trent-side villages such as Aston-on-Trent, Barrow upon Trent, Walton-on-Trent and Weston-on-Trent, and for rural locations such as Netherseal, Overseal, Rosliston and Coton in the Elms, land, landscape and access can be more relevant if a ground-mounted or agricultural system is being considered.
In some cases, a South Derbyshire roof may be very suitable for solar. In others, shading, roof condition, planning constraints, heritage sensitivity, landscape impact or commercial roof complexity may mean a different design is needed, or that solar is not the right option.
Many domestic roof-mounted solar panel installations in England may fall under permitted development rights, but this depends on the property and the exact installation. The Planning Portal explains the main national rules for solar equipment on houses and blocks of flats, including requirements around appearance, siting and permitted development limitations.
For commercial and non-domestic buildings, the rules are different. The Planning Portal guidance for non-domestic solar panels explains that roof-mounted commercial systems may need to meet specific conditions, and some proposals may need prior approval.
South Derbyshire needs careful planning checks in some cases. Local examples show solar being considered on homes, rear roof slopes, barns, schools, village halls and major employment sites. Larger countryside solar proposals can raise much broader issues, including landscape impact, agricultural land, public views and construction traffic.
This does not mean solar panels are unsuitable in South Derbyshire. It means the planning route needs to be checked properly. A rear roof in Willington, a Repton home, a barn near Melbourne, a school roof in Etwall, a village hall in Stanton, a property in Bretby Park or a large solar farm between rural villages will all need different planning considerations.
Yes. Recent local planning activity shows Solar PV being considered across domestic homes, rear roof slopes, barns, schools, village halls, heritage-sensitive settings, major employment sites and larger countryside solar schemes.
Proposal for a two-storey rear extension, rear pergola and installation of solar panels. The public register lists officer and decision documents dated 07/07/2026. This is a useful Repton example because it shows solar being considered alongside wider householder alterations.
Installation of solar panels under a 56-day application using Class J, Part 14, Schedule 2 of the General Permitted Development Order. The public register lists officer and decision documents dated 27/05/2026. This shows school roofs forming part of the South Derbyshire solar picture.
Approval of details required by planning conditions linked to permission DMPA/2025/1001 for a ground-mounted solar photovoltaic farm with ancillary infrastructure. Documents relate to archaeological monitoring and precautionary working methods, showing how larger schemes can involve detailed technical conditions.
Application for installation of solar panels. The document list includes battery information, a ground-mounted installation kit document and a planning application heritage statement. The public register lists officer and decision documents dated 06/06/2026.
Erection of solar panels on the single-storey south-facing roof. The document list includes proposed solar panel details and a design, access and heritage statement, with officer and decision documents dated 17/06/2026.
Installation of solar panels under a 56-day Class J, Part 14 application. The public register lists officer and decision documents dated 01/05/2026. This is a useful example of community-building solar being considered locally.
Proposal including demolition of an existing porch, conversion of a double garage, installation of solar panels and alterations to openings. The document list includes a design and heritage statement, with officer and decision documents dated 22/05/2026.
Installation of solar panels onto the rear dwelling-house roof. The document list includes an anti-reflection declaration, panel specification, mounting rail information, a design, access and heritage statement, and decision documents dated 11/03/2026.
A 21MW solar farm proposal on land between Bretby and Newton Solney was refused by South Derbyshire District Council and the later appeal was dismissed. The case is a useful local reminder that wider renewable-energy benefits can still be outweighed where a proposal is considered to cause unacceptable countryside or landscape harm.
These examples do not mean every South Derbyshire property will be suitable for solar, and they do not prove that every proposed system has been installed. However, they show the main local pattern clearly: Solar PV is being considered across homes, schools, village halls, barns, heritage-sensitive properties, major employment sites and larger countryside schemes.
They also show why the planning route can vary. A rear domestic roof in Willington is very different from school roof solar in Etwall, village hall solar in Stanton, a barn roof near Melbourne, condition details for a ground-mounted scheme at a major employment site, or a large countryside solar farm near Newton Solney and Bretby.
South Derbyshire District Council’s domestic energy efficiency information estimates that a significant share of local carbon emissions comes from residential properties. This makes home energy efficiency, EPC awareness and suitable renewables part of the wider local conversation.
The council signposts local energy advice, including Warmer Derby & Derbyshire, and points residents towards energy-efficiency support and financial assistance routes. This is useful for households that want to understand energy improvements before committing to solar.
Solar panels should usually be considered alongside roof condition, insulation, EPC recommendations, electricity usage and possible battery storage, rather than as a stand-alone decision based only on postcode.
For homeowners, landlords, schools, village halls, farms and businesses, the useful lesson is the same: solar should be considered as part of the property as a whole. Roof suitability, energy usage, planning status, shading, heritage sensitivity, electricity tariffs and battery storage all need to be reviewed together.
Some South Derbyshire residents may be able to access support for energy-efficiency improvements, depending on eligibility and funding availability. South Derbyshire District Council’s domestic energy efficiency information signposts residents to energy advice, EPC information and grants or financial support routes that may help with home energy improvements.
The council also signposts local advice through Warmer Derby & Derbyshire, as well as wider support routes such as ECO4 Flex and other schemes. These routes can change over time, and not every scheme will fund solar panels or suit every home.
Important: It is important not to assume that solar panels will be funded or that every home will qualify. Grant support depends on eligibility, EPC rating, household circumstances, funding availability, property suitability, scheme rules and technical surveys. Residents should check the latest South Derbyshire District Council guidance before making decisions.
Anyone interested in grant support should check the latest information directly through South Derbyshire District Council, Warmer Derby & Derbyshire or the relevant official scheme provider before assuming funding is available.
Solar panel batteries in South Derbyshire may be worth considering for homes that generate solar electricity during the day but use more power in the evening. A battery can store surplus electricity from your solar panels so you can use more of it later, instead of exporting it straight back to the grid.
The Energy Saving Trust explains that solar batteries store electricity generated during the day so it can be used later, including at night or during cloudy periods. This can be especially relevant for households with EV chargers, heat pumps, electric cooking, home offices or higher evening electricity usage.
Battery storage can also be relevant for schools, village halls, farms, workshops, retail sites and larger businesses where electricity demand does not always match daytime generation. The Newton Solney application documents also show battery-related information appearing in local planning material, which reflects how solar and storage are increasingly being considered together.
However, a battery is not automatically right for every property. It depends on your electricity usage, solar generation, tariff, budget and whether the system is designed to match your needs.
Commercial solar panels may be a strong option for some South Derbyshire businesses and organisations with suitable roof space and daytime electricity use. The district includes schools, village halls, farms, barns, workshops, retail buildings, hospitality sites, depots and major employment sites where solar can be worth assessing.
The John Port Spencer Academy example in Etwall shows school roof solar being considered locally. The Stanton village hall example shows community-building solar. The Gorse View Barn example near Melbourne shows how barn roofs can be part of the local solar picture. The Toyota-related ground-mounted solar condition application shows that larger employment sites and land-based systems are also part of the South Derbyshire renewable-energy context.
Commercial solar can be useful where a business, farm, school or organisation uses a lot of electricity during the day, because more of the electricity generated by the panels can be used on site. Larger roofs may also make it possible to install more Solar PV capacity than a typical domestic system.
However, commercial solar needs a detailed assessment. Roof size, roof structure, roof condition, access, grid connection, electricity demand, energy tariffs, inverter siting, glare, planning constraints, landscape impact, heritage setting, biodiversity, construction access and expected payback all need to be reviewed before making a recommendation.
Positive Energy Solutions helps homeowners and businesses across South Derbyshire understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, battery storage or commercial solar could be right for their property.
Areas we cover include: Swadlincote, Melbourne, Hilton, Repton, Willington, Woodville, Aston-on-Trent, Barrow upon Trent, Castle Gresley, Church Gresley, Coton in the Elms, Etwall, Findern, Hatton, Linton, Netherseal, Overseal, Rosliston, Shardlow, Ticknall, Walton-on-Trent and Weston-on-Trent.
Because South Derbyshire includes suburban homes, rural villages, schools, village halls, farms, barns, heritage-sensitive settings, Trent-side settlements, employment sites and larger land-based solar proposals, we always recommend checking the individual property rather than making assumptions based on location alone.
We are also creating local solar guides for towns and villages across South Derbyshire, with information on roof suitability, shading, planning considerations, battery storage and expected solar output.
As each local guide is published, we will link to it from this page so you can find information specific to your town or village.
For many homes, schools, farms, village halls and businesses in South Derbyshire, solar panels may be well worth considering. A representative PVGIS estimate suggests that a suitable 4kWp system could generate around 4,048 kWh per year, and local planning activity shows Solar PV being considered across homes, schools, village halls, barns, rear roof slopes, heritage-sensitive properties and larger employment or countryside sites.
However, solar suitability always depends on the individual property. Roof direction, shading, roof condition, planning constraints, heritage sensitivity, landscape impact, electricity usage, commercial demand and battery storage all need to be considered before deciding whether solar is right.
That is why Positive Energy Solutions starts with clear, practical advice. We will help you understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, solar panel batteries or commercial solar are suitable for your South Derbyshire property.
Yes, solar panels can work in South Derbyshire. They generate electricity from daylight, not just direct sunshine. The main factors are roof direction, shading, roof space, roof condition and how much electricity the property uses.
No. Cloudy weather reduces output compared with bright sunshine, but it does not rule solar out. A property-specific assessment is the best way to estimate likely performance for your roof, school, farm, village hall or business premises.
A representative PVGIS estimate suggests that a suitable 1kWp system in South Derbyshire could generate around 1,012 kWh per year. A typical 4kWp system could therefore produce around 4,048 kWh per year, depending on roof direction, pitch, shading and system design.
Many domestic roof-mounted solar installations may fall under permitted development rights, but not all. Heritage-sensitive buildings, conservation settings, listed buildings, commercial roofs, school roofs, village halls, barns, ground-mounted systems and large solar farms may need extra checks.
Often, yes, but each property needs checking. Roof direction, chimney shading, neighbouring buildings, roof condition, extensions, rooflights and electricity use all affect whether solar is suitable.
Sometimes, yes, but older and heritage-sensitive properties need more care. Roof materials, visibility, setting, conservation constraints, listed-building considerations and the need for heritage information may all affect the design and planning route.
Some school and village hall roofs may be suitable for solar panels. Local planning records include solar applications for John Port Spencer Academy in Etwall and a village hall in Stanton, but every building still needs checks for roof structure, glare, access, planning route and electricity usage.
Some farms and barns may be suitable for roof-mounted Solar PV, especially where there is usable roof space and daytime electricity demand. Barn roof structure, roof condition, access, planning constraints and landscape visibility should all be checked.
Solar panel batteries can be useful if your property generates electricity during the day but uses more power in the evening. They may also be worth considering for homes with EV chargers, heat pumps, electric cooking, home offices, schools, farms or businesses with varied electricity demand. They are not essential for every property.
Yes, some South Derbyshire businesses may be suitable for commercial solar panels, especially where they have usable roof space and daytime electricity demand. Schools, village halls, farms, workshops, retail sites, depots and major employment sites may all be worth assessing.
South Derbyshire District Council signposts residents to domestic energy efficiency advice, EPC information and grant or financial support routes. Solar funding depends on current scheme rules, EPC rating, household circumstances, technical surveys, property suitability and funding availability, so residents should check the latest official guidance before assuming support is available.
Solar panels can be a good option for many homes, schools, village halls, farms and businesses across South Derbyshire, but every property is different. Roof direction, shading, roof condition, planning considerations, heritage setting, electricity usage and battery storage all affect whether solar is likely to be worthwhile.
If you live in Swadlincote, Melbourne, Hilton, Repton, Willington, Woodville, Aston-on-Trent, Barrow upon Trent, Castle Gresley, Church Gresley, Coton in the Elms, Etwall, Findern, Hatton, Linton, Netherseal, Overseal, Rosliston, Shardlow, Ticknall, Walton-on-Trent, Weston-on-Trent or another part of South Derbyshire, you can start by using our remote solar survey. Simply pinpoint your roof online and our team will review your property before discussing the next steps with you.
Start with a free remote solar survey and get practical, no-pressure advice based on your actual property.
Start Your Free Remote Solar SurveyYou can also return to our main Solar Panels Derbyshire page to learn more about solar installation across the wider county.
Positive Energy Solutions is a family-run company helping homeowners and businesses with practical solar and battery storage solutions tailored to their property, energy usage and long-term goals.
Positive Energy Solutions
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Email: help@positiveenergysolutions.co.uk
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