Could community solar panels save Brits from rising energy prices?
Solar power schemes nationwide could cut bills, increase energy independence and help communities share the benefits of clean energy, but barriers remain to widespread adoption
As energy prices continue to climb, community‑scale solar projects are emerging as a potential lifeline for British households and public facilities alike.
By pooling demand and installing solar panels collectively, neighbourhoods can unlock lower costs and shared savings that individual homeowners often struggle to achieve.
Recent UK initiatives and studies show measurable bill reductions and growing community interest, even as cost and policy challenges persist.
Community solar can cut energy costs and empower neighbourhoods
Evidence from UK pilot projects shows the financial benefits of shared solar initiatives. In Cheshire and Warrington, the Solar Together group‑buying scheme has attracted nearly 4,000 households and cut installation prices by around 38% – lowering barriers to adoption and likely reducing future energy spending for participating residents.
Elsewhere, community energy groups such as Croydon Community Energy report local solar systems saving community centres £1,500–£3,000 a year on power bills, with plans to expand to hundreds more homes through collective funding.
Government figures on rooftop solar deployment project that widespread adoption could deliver typical household savings of about £500 through reduced grid electricity use.
Shared power schemes can spread the financial and practical benefits
Beyond cost savings, community solar helps people who otherwise can’t install panels on their own roofs – for example, renters or households with unsuitable buildings.
Bring your dream home to life with expert advice, how to guides and design inspiration. Sign up for our newsletter and get two free tickets to a Homebuilding & Renovating Show near you.
Research from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) suggests community solar projects can drive up to 20–50% greater participation in renewable energy adoption in areas where individual installations are impractical.
Community‑owned solar schemes in London, Edinburgh and South Wales have generated over £100,000 in collective savings and local benefit funds while creating jobs and supporting fuel poverty programmes.
Trials like the CommUNITY project in Brixton illustrate how residents can benefit through flexible pricing and energy storage, with participating households saving about £8.20 a month on electricity bills (£98.40 a year).
Policy drivers and challenges for scaling up community solar
The UK government is prioritising solar to tackle high energy costs, investing in clean energy upgrades for public buildings that could produce £650 million in annual bill savings over the next decade.
However, rooftop solar systems are still relatively expensive compared with international standards – even as solar installation costs fall, typical UK systems can cost several thousand pounds per home.
Community solar also faces regulatory and financial hurdles: recent evidence submitted to Parliament highlights that community PV costs remain roughly twice those of large utility‑scale solar, and advocates are calling for targeted incentives akin to past feed‑in tariffs to make local projects more viable.
This shows that community solar panels are more than a rooftop trend – they’re a pathway to shared savings, local energy resilience, and lower bills at a time when UK families and councils are squeezed by rising prices and grid volatility.

News Editor Joseph has previously written for Today’s Media and Chambers & Partners, focusing on news for conveyancers and industry professionals. Joseph has just started his own self build project, building his own home on his family’s farm with planning permission for a timber frame, three-bedroom house in a one-acre field. The foundation work has already begun and he hopes to have the home built in the next year. Prior to this he renovated his family's home as well as doing several DIY projects, including installing a shower, building sheds, and livestock fences and shelters for the farm’s animals. Outside of homebuilding, Joseph loves rugby and has written for Rugby World, the world’s largest rugby magazine.
