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Solar Panels in Milton Keynes: Costs, Output, and Local Guide

Does solar work in Milton Keynes?
Milton Keynes is one of the better locations in England for solar, and its housing stock is unusually well-suited to it. The city sits in the NGED (National Grid Electricity Distribution) area and typically yields around 950–1,000 kWh per kWp per year — above the UK average, benefiting from its south-midlands location.
A 4kWp system in Milton Keynes generates approximately 3,800–4,000 kWh per year, comfortably covering a typical household's annual electricity use.
950–1,000
kWh/kWp/year — A 4kWp Milton Keynes system generates 3,800–4,000 kWh per year — above the UK average
Learn moreHow much does solar cost in Milton Keynes?
Installed costs in Buckinghamshire are close to the England average. Expect to pay roughly £1,500–£1,650 per kWp, making a 4kWp system around £6,000–£6,600 installed.
Payback periods in Milton Keynes are typically 7–9 years for households with good self-consumption — one of the better payback profiles in the Midlands, thanks to the combination of above-average yield and relatively simple roofs. Adding a battery (typically £3,000–£4,500 for a 5kWh unit) can reduce payback further.
Your electricity network: NGED (National Grid Electricity Distribution)
NGED — formerly Western Power Distribution — manages the distribution network across the Midlands, South West, and Wales, including Buckinghamshire.
For solar installations:
- Systems up to 3.68kW (single-phase): G98 notification — installer informs NGED within 28 days of commissioning, no prior approval needed
- Systems above 3.68kW (single-phase): G99 pre-approval required before installation — allow 45–65 working days
- NGED's online portal handles G98 and G99 submissions
Typical Milton Keynes system
Milton Keynes is unique among UK cities: built from scratch as a new town from the late 1960s onwards, most of its housing was planned with generous plots and consistent road orientations. This creates housing estates with a high proportion of south-facing or near-south roof sections — more reliably than in organically developed cities.
Key features of MK housing for solar:
- Estate homes: Many grid-layout estates in Campbell Park, Walnut Tree, and Emerson Valley have roofs that face close to south or south-west — ideal for maximum generation
- Detached and semi-detached: The majority of Milton Keynes housing is detached or semi-detached — providing more roof area than terraced properties
- Energy Park and other planned developments: Some MK estates were specifically designed with solar orientation in mind
- A 4–5kWp system suits most MK homes; larger detached properties may benefit from 5–6kWp
Local grants and schemes
Milton Keynes homeowners may be eligible for:
- ECO4: Available to households on qualifying benefits or with a low EPC rating — active until December 2026
- Warm Homes Local Grant: Delivered through Milton Keynes City Council — check current eligibility
- Warm Homes Plan: Government successor to ECO4 (published 21 January 2026); rollout ongoing — eligibility criteria still being finalised
- Smart Export Guarantee (SEG): All grid-connected solar owners can apply for export payments — Milton Keynes's above-average yield makes export income more meaningful
Milton Keynes estate orientation
Before assuming your roof is well-oriented, check using a free tool like Google Sunroof or a compass app. Milton Keynes estates vary in their grid alignment — some roads run perfectly north–south (giving east–west facing roofs), while others run diagonally. Your specific street matters more than the city's general reputation for solar-friendly planning.
Solar installers in Milton Keynes
Several MCS-certified installers cover Milton Keynes and Buckinghamshire. Joju Solar operates across the East of England and the south east, with experience across new-town and modern estate housing. National providers including Octopus Energy Solar and Sunsave also cover the Milton Keynes area — both are worth contacting for a comparison quote alongside any local firms.
When selecting an installer, verify their MCS certification, request a site survey before any quote is finalised, and aim for at least three quotes.
For a full comparison of national and regional installers, see our installer directory. You can also search the MCS installer finder for certified companies near you.
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