Solar Comparison by Country
Europe 2026
Analyze European solar markets: installed capacity, costs, productivity, support mechanisms and investment potential by country. Complete guide for investors, developers and prosumers.
Why compare solar markets?
The capacity and profitability of solar installations vary significantly across European countries. Differences in production costs (LCOE), residential electricity prices, annual productivity and support mechanisms create distinct opportunities and risks for each market.
This interactive comparison allows investors, project developers and prosumers to quickly identify the most attractive markets based on their criteria: profitability, growth potential, regulatory stability and return on investment.
Interactive Comparison Table
Click on headers to sort by column
| Country โฒ | Installed Capacity (GW) โฒ | 2025 Additions (GW) โฒ | 2030 Target (GW) โฒ | LCOE utility (โฌ/MWh) โฒ | Residential Price (โฌ/kWh) โฒ | Productivity (kWh/kWp/yr) โฒ | Support Mechanism โฒ | Attractiveness โฒ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ๐ซ๐ท France | 31 | 5.9 | 54โ59 | 45โ55 | 0.2516 | 900โ1550 | Call for bids + Self-consumption grant | โ โ โ โ โ |
| ๐ฉ๐ช Germany | 96 | 16.0 | 215 | 50โ65 | 0.35 | 800โ1100 | EEG Feed-in | โ โ โ โ โ |
| ๐ช๐ธ Spain | 37 | 5.6 | 76 | 25โ35 | 0.18 | 1500โ1900 | Net billing | โ โ โ โ โ |
| ๐ฎ๐น Italy | 35 | 6.8 | 80 | 35โ45 | 0.25 | 1200โ1700 | Superbonus (reduced) | โ โ โ โ โ |
| ๐ณ๐ฑ Netherlands | 28 | 4.2 | 38 | 50โ60 | 0.28 | 850โ1050 | Net metering โ saldering | โ โ โ โโ |
| ๐ต๐ฑ Poland | 20 | 4.5 | 29 | 45โ55 | 0.18 | 900โ1100 | Net billing | โ โ โ โโ |
| ๐ง๐ช Belgium | 10 | 1.2 | 18 | 55โ65 | 0.30 | 850โ1050 | Prosumer tariff | โ โ โ โโ |
| ๐ต๐น Portugal | 5 | 1.8 | 20 | 25โ35 | 0.16 | 1400โ1800 | Collective self-consumption | โ โ โ โ โ |
| ๐จ๐ญ Switzerland | 7 | 1.9 | 35 | 55โ70 | 0.27 CHF | 900โ1300 | PRU (single premium) | โ โ โ โโ |
| ๐ฆ๐น Austria | 6 | 1.5 | 21 | 50โ60 | 0.25 | 900โ1200 | Subsidies + OeMAG | โ โ โ โโ |
LCOE Comparison (Levelized Cost)
Lower = more competitive. Average values in โฌ/MWh
LCOE (Levelized Cost of Energy) represents the average cost of electricity production over the lifetime of an installation. Countries with the lowest LCOE (Spain, Portugal) offer the best economic competitiveness for utility-scale projects.
Detailed Country Profiles
๐ซ๐ท France
โผMarket Context
France has the 3rd largest installed capacity in Europe (31 GW in 2025). The French market is in steady growth with 5.9 GW added in 2025. The national target for 2030 is ambitious (54โ59 GW), supported by the post-nuclear energy context and emission reduction expectations.
Key Regulations
- Calls for Tenders (CfT): Main mechanism for utility-scale, regularly launched by CRE
- Self-Consumption: Regulated by decrees since 2017, simplified grant
- Access Criteria: Preferences for building-mounted and existing rooftop projects
- Residential Feed-in Tariff: Revised quarterly, currently ~0.25 โฌ/kWh
Support Mechanism Details
Calls for Tenders: Competitive selection for large projects (> 500 kWp). Recent tariffs: 45โ55 โฌ/MWh (2025).
Self-Consumption Grant: Investment aid degressive (0.30โ0.60 โฌ/Wp by technology).
MaPrimeRรฉnov': Residential subsidy (eligibility by income).
Opportunities
- Favorable energy context (energy independence)
- Dynamic residential and self-consumption market
- Regulatory stability and predictability
๐ช๐ธ Spain
โผMarket Context
Spain leads Europe in LCOE competitiveness with exceptional solar irradiance. 37 GW installed (2025), target 76 GW by 2030. Strong grid expansion and industrial adoption of solar.
Key Regulations
- Net Billing: Prosumers receive compensation for excess generation at daily marginal price
- No registration required: Installations < 100 kWp exempt from registration
- Battery incentives: Growing support for storage projects
- Auction mechanism: Competitive tenders for larger installations
Why Spain Leads
- Superior irradiance: 1500โ1900 kWh/kWp/year
- Lowest LCOE in Europe: 25โ35 โฌ/MWh
- Favorable net billing rules for prosumers
- Active industrial solar market
๐ฉ๐ช Germany
โผMarket Context
Germany has Europe's largest installed capacity (96 GW in 2025). The EEG system remains stable with regular tariff adjustments. Ambitious 2030 target: 215 GW supporting the Energiewende (energy transition).
Key Regulations
- Renewable Energy Act (EEG): Feed-in tariffs based on technology and system size
- Tariffs 2025: 7.1โ12.7 cents/kWh for rooftop systems
- Auction system: Competitive bidding for > 750 kWp utility-scale
- Grid fees & charges: Significant cost component in total expenses
Market Dynamics
- Mature residential market with high installed base
- Growing industrial and community solar projects
- Regular policy reviews ensure long-term stability
- Strong technical expertise and supply chain
๐ฎ๐น Italy
โผMarket Context
Italy (35 GW installed, 2025) has excellent solar conditions and a recovering residential market. Target 80 GW by 2030. Evolving support mechanisms with some uncertainty around future incentives.
Key Regulations
- Superbonus: 110% tax deduction (2024 phase-out now 65%)
- Net metering: Credit system with seasonal balancing
- Minimal administrative burden: Simplified authorization for residential < 20 kWp
- Auction system: Competitive tenders for utility-scale
Investment Opportunities
- Excellent irradiance: 1200โ1700 kWh/kWp/year
- Strong residential demand, especially South Italy
- Industrial sector increasingly adopting solar
- Auction prices competitive: 35โ45 โฌ/MWh
Key Market Insights
๐ Capacity Leaders
- Germany: 96 GW (33% Europe)
- Italy: 35 GW (12%)
- Spain: 37 GW (13%)
- France: 31 GW (11%)
โก LCOE Champions
- Spain: 25โ35 โฌ/MWh (best)
- Portugal: 25โ35 โฌ/MWh
- Italy: 35โ45 โฌ/MWh
- France: 45โ55 โฌ/MWh
๐ Best Productivity
- Portugal: 1400โ1800 kWh/kWp/yr
- Spain: 1500โ1900 kWh/kWp/yr
- Italy: 1200โ1700 kWh/kWp/yr
- France: 900โ1550 kWh/kWp/yr
๐ Growth Markets
- Germany: +16 GW/yr
- Italy: +6.8 GW/yr
- Spain: +5.6 GW/yr
- France: +5.9 GW/yr
โ ๏ธ Disclaimer
This page provides reference information based on public data from IRENA, national grid operators, and official government sources. Market conditions, tariffs and regulations change frequently. For current market-specific advice, consult with local specialists, lenders or energy professionals. Data last updated March 2026.