If you’ve looked into solar power recently, you’ve probably seen quotes ranging from $12,000 all the way up to $50,000 or more for what looks like roughly the same job. The truth is simple: most of that extra cost is not for better equipment or better work — it’s for sales commissions, fancy office overheads, branding, and features you simply do not need. You can have a fully compliant, safe, high-performance system that meets every New Zealand standard, without paying for all the unnecessary extras. Here’s exactly how to do it right.

✅ First: Understand What You Actually Need !
A solar installation only has one real job: safely turn sunlight into usable electricity, while following the rules so it’s legal, insured, and reliable. Everything beyond that is optional — and often overpriced add‑ons.
What IS essential (must have, must meet standards):
- Panels: Look for IEC 61215 / 61730 certification, or equivalent AS/NZS standards. These prove they have been tested for weather, safety, and performance. You don’t need the absolute most expensive brand — reputable Tier 1 manufacturers make panels that last 25 years and perform perfectly, at a fair price.
- Inverter: The heart of the system. Must be certified to AS/NZS 5033 and grid‑connection standards. Pure sine‑wave models work for all appliances, and efficiency above 97% is standard today. Avoid paying extra for “premium” branding; the performance difference is tiny, while the price gap is huge.
- Cables, switches, fuses, and mounting: Must be rated for outdoor use, correct voltage, and wind/load ratings for your location. This is where compliance matters — but standard, certified hardware works exactly the same as “luxury” versions.
- Installation by registered electricians: This is non‑negotiable. Only qualified sparkies can sign off the work, issue compliance certificates, and ensure it is safe and legal. That is your guarantee, not a fancy logo.
What is almost always overpriced or unnecessary:
- “Premium” branding markup: You can pay 30–50% extra just for a famous name, with no real benefit in output or lifespan.
- Over‑sized systems: Most homes only need 4–6 kW; many salespeople push 10 kW+ just to increase the price tag. Size it to your actual power bill, not their sales target.
- Over‑complicated monitoring: Basic systems show everything you need to know. Fancy apps, remote control, or extra analytics cost hundreds extra but rarely change how you use the system.
- Unneeded warranties: Standard 10‑year inverter and 25‑year panel warranties are normal. Extended or “lifetime” offers are almost always paid for upfront in a higher price.
✅ Rules to Buy Smart & Stay Compliant
- Buy components that meet standards, not hypeAlways check certification marks. If a product doesn’t list IEC, AS/NZS, or equivalent safety marks, walk away — it’s not worth the risk, and it won’t pass inspection. But once it meets those standards, cheaper or mid‑priced options perform just as well as the most expensive ones.
- Size for your usage, not the maximum possibleLook at your last 12 months of power bills. Calculate your average daily use. A system matched to that will save you the most money. Oversizing means you pay thousands extra for power you send back to the grid at low feed‑in rates. Keep it simple, right‑sized, and effective.
- Pay for skill and compliance, not sales teamsThe biggest cost difference comes from how the business is run. When you deal directly with qualified electricians who do the work themselves, you cut out the salesperson, the office, and the huge markup. You still get the compliance certificate, insurance, and warranty — just without all the extra cost.
- Keep the design simpleSolar works best when it’s straightforward. Roof‑mounted panels, standard rail systems, good quality cabling, and a reliable inverter. Fancy tracking systems, special coatings, or complex battery setups are only useful in very specific cases — and usually not worth the extra money for a standard home.
✅ Our Speciality: Mobile Systems & Small Off‑Grid Power
While we do full home installations at fair prices, we also specialise in mobile solar setups and small off‑grid or UPS systems designed to power just a few rooms or key appliances.
These are perfect for:
- Bachs, sleep‑outs, sheds, or remote buildings where grid power is expensive or unavailable
- Temporary power for work sites, events, or farms
- Backup power for essential rooms during outages
- Running lights, fridges, freezers, or office equipment independently
We build these to the same strict standards, using quality, certified components — but sized exactly for what you need. No over‑engineering, no over‑charging, just reliable power for exactly the space you want to run.
At the end of the day, solar power should be simple, affordable, and honest. You get exactly what you need, fully compliant, built to last — and you don’t pay for things that don’t matter. That is how we do it.
