Monocrystalline vs polycrystalline — which is better?

by WheresMeWires87 · 2 years ago 508 views 23 replies
WheresMeWires87
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Monocrystalline all day if you've got the space budget, polycrystalline if you've got the space but not the cash budget.

Honestly though, the efficiency difference is smaller than it was five years ago — we're talking 1-2% real-world in most conditions. Where mono wins is that it degrades slightly slower and handles heat better, which matters if you're stuck in the blazing sun rather than our usual drizzle. Polycrystalline gets cheaper by the month and does the job perfectly fine for off-grid setups.

The real question is: how much roof/ground space are you working with? Got a tidy plot and decent budget? Mono panels. Running a narrowboat or tight caravan setup? Every watt per square metre matters, so mono's your mate. Scrappy garden space and you're watching the pennies? Polycrystalline won't let you down, and you can always add more panels later when funds recover.

I've got Renogy mono on my setup purely because I'm paranoid about future degradation (touch wood), but I know plenty of people doing brilliant with poly panels feeding into their Victron controllers without a whisper of complaint. The UK cloud cover means neither is going to set the world on fire anyway.

What's your actual constraint — space, budget, or both? That'll really determine whether you're splitting hairs or not.

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Clive Baker
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@WheresMeWires87's spot on with the budget angle. Worth adding though — if you're roof-limited like I was with my garden office setup, mono wins hands down. I squeezed 4kWp into a tight footprint and the efficiency gap meant I could avoid adding a second run of panels.

The durability factor gets overlooked too. My older Renogy monos have held up better in the British damp than I expected. Polycrystalline degrades slightly faster in cloudy conditions, though honestly it's marginal over 25 years.

One thing I'd push back on: don't fixate on the nameplate wattage alone. Check the temperature coefficient instead. Some cheaper monos perform poorly in heat (less relevant here, granted), whilst decent polycrystalline panels hold their own.

For off-grid, consistency matters more than peak output. I'd rather have steady performance than chasing marginal efficiency gains.

Norfolk Solar, Jo
Quiet Trekker
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Mono's genuinely the way to go if space is tight — that extra 3-5% efficiency adds up over a decade. Plus they degrade slightly slower.

That said, poly's gotten decent lately. I've got a mix on my garden office (mono facing south, poly on the east side as a retrofit) and honestly? The performance gap's marginal in real-world UK conditions. Cloud cover matters more than panel type here.

Real factor nobody mentions: temperature coefficient. Mono handles our summer heat a bit better. But if you're budget-constrained and have decent roof space, poly won't let you down. Just spec a decent MPPT controller — Victron or Fogstar — and you'll squeeze out what's there.

New panels are cheaper than they were, so if you can stretch to mono, probably worth it. But don't lose sleep over poly.

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OldSailor
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Real talk — mono's the sensible choice these days, gap's closed enough that you're not paying a premium for marketing anymore. Got 400W of mono on my array and they're still knocking out decent output even on grey November days.

The durability angle @QuietTrekker mentions is worth the extra quid though. My old poly panels started looking dodgy after eight years; the mono's handling the weather better. South-facing roof space on a UK property isn't exactly abundant either, so that efficiency bump matters when you're cramped.

If you're genuinely tight on budget and have the real estate, poly won't leave you stranded. But if you're planning to keep them 15+ years — which you should be — mono's the better investment. Less faff with replacements down the line.

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Ducato Project
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The efficiency gap's definitely narrowed, but I'd factor in something nobody's mentioned yet — heat degradation. Got a mix of mono and poly panels on my static caravan setup, and the mono ones hold their performance better in summer. Matters more than you'd think if you're off-grid and relying on consistent output.

That said, if you're space-constrained (tiny house or van conversion), mono wins outright. For a static caravan like mine where I've got roof real estate, poly's perfectly adequate and the cost difference lets you invest in a decent Victron MPPT instead, which honestly moves your needle more than panel type.

Degradation rates are marginal these days across both — don't let that be your deciding factor.

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Somerset VanLifer
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Heat degradation's a solid point @DucatoProject — worth considering if you're in a hot climate or dealing with poor ventilation behind panels.

I've got a mix of both on my shepherd's hut setup, and honestly, the real difference I've noticed comes down to the mounting. Monocrystals do perform better in low light, which matters more here in the Southwest than raw efficiency stats suggest. On overcast days there's a noticeable difference.

That said, if you're space-constrained, mono wins. If you've got room and budget's tight, poly's perfectly adequate — just size the array slightly larger. Current gen poly panels are reliable enough that you're not taking a gamble anymore.

The degradation rates have both converged anyway. I'd spend the money you save on poly going towards a decent MPPT controller instead — that'll give you better returns than chasing another 2-3% efficiency.

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OldSailor
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Fair points on heat, but don't sleep on the real-world factor — installation footprint. I've got mono panels on my Array setup, and what matters more than specs is whether you can actually fit enough of them without re-mortgaging the roof.

Polycrystalline's still perfectly decent if you've already got the space sorted and fancy keeping a quid or two. The efficiency loss is negligible over a 25-year lifespan, honestly. Where I'd push back is assuming you need cutting-edge tech — a Victron MPPT doesn't care if your panels are mono or poly, it'll squeeze the same percentage out either way.

Temperature coefficient is worth checking though — some budget monos aren't as temperature-resilient as pricier stuff. Check the datasheets rather than just chasing megawattage claims. That's where you'll find the real difference between a bargain and a bodge.

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Anglia OffGrid
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@OldSailor spot on about footprint — that's been my deciding factor too. On the narrowboat, I've got limited roof space and every cm² counts, so monocrystalline's the only sensible choice even though they cost more upfront.

That said, @DucatoProject and @SomersetVanLifer are right about heat being underestimated. I've noticed my panels' output drops noticeably on boiling summer days, and that's despite decent airflow under the rails. Polycrystalline would degrade faster in those conditions.

The real consideration nobody's mentioned: what's your actual usage pattern? If you're running an EV charger or high-demand setup like I am, the efficiency headroom of monocrystalline means you hit your daily charging targets earlier in the day. Less reliant on afternoon sun. With polycrystalline you might be trickling charge well into evening.

Budget matters obviously, but I'd rather skimp elsewhere and invest in mono panels. You're looking at 20+ year lifespan — the extra quid upfront pays itself back.

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Dodgy Captain
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#465

On the narrowboat, space is absolutely the deciding factor for me too. I've got a Victron setup with 400W of mono panels crammed onto a pretty modest roof, and honestly the efficiency gain justified the extra cost because I simply couldn't fit enough polys in the available footprint.

One thing that's worth considering though — have you lot thought about panel orientation and shading? On a narrowboat especially, you're dealing with angles that might not be ideal, and monos tend to handle partial shading slightly better (though not brilliantly). That's been helpful when I'm moored under trees or near locks with overhanging vegetation.

The heat degradation point @SomersetVanLifer mentioned is real, but on the water you're usually getting decent air flow underneath the panels which helps. Probably matters less for narrowboats than it does for van roofs.

What's your actual roof space looking like? That'll probably settle it.

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John Dixon
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#494

The heat performance argument gets overlooked too. I've got mono panels on my van conversion and they genuinely hold their efficiency better in summer than the polycrystalline setup I had on my old boat. That matters more than people think when you're relying on the system year-round.

That said, @WheresMeWires87's got a point about the gap narrowing. Five years back, mono was noticeably better. Now? The real deciding factor for most of us off-gridders is what fits your specific constraints. Boat, van, caravan — you're all dealing with confined spaces where mono just makes sense because you're getting decent wattage without needing a second roof.

If I'd had unlimited roof real estate (which I definitely don't), polycrystalline would've been fine. But when you're squeezing every watt out of a conversion or a narrowboat, that extra efficiency per square metre becomes genuinely useful. Combined with a decent Victron controller managing the charge, you're getting a more flexible system overall.

The cost difference has dropped too, which shifts the calculus entirely.

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Burn Walker
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#514

Space constraints here too — got a narrowboat with a curved roof that's an absolute nightmare to work with. Ended up going mono because I can squeeze more watts into the limited area I've got available.

What I'm curious about though: how much does degradation differ between the two over time? I've read mono panels degrade slightly faster initially but then stabilise, whereas polycrystalline is more consistent from year one. Anyone got long-term data on this? My panels have been running about six years now and I'm wondering if I should be tracking output more carefully to spot any issues early.

Also worth mentioning — if you're looking at replacement panels down the line to expand a system, mono seems easier to source in smaller quantities, which matters when you're working with limited space and can't just throw another massive array at the problem.

👍 FormerMariner24, Cumbrian Wanderer
Liam Palmer
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#519

I'm genuinely curious about the heat performance side that @JohnDixon mentioned — how much does temperature actually impact your charging in practice? I've read the specs but wondering if it's noticeable on a motorhome where panels are basically cooking in summer.

I'm stuck between mono and poly for my setup. Space-wise I could fit either, but I'm wondering if the efficiency gains from mono actually translate when you're not in ideal conditions. UK weather's hardly peak sun exposure, and on cloudy days surely the difference narrows further?

Also keen to know — has anyone paired either type with a Fogstar or Renogy controller and noticed a real-world difference? I've got a garden office build starting next month and want to get this decision right before ordering the kit.

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JA_Solar
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#597

The heat coefficient thing is real but gets overstated, @LiamPalmer. Most panels drop about 0.4-0.5% efficiency per °C above 25°C — mono and poly are fairly similar here. What matters more is your actual install setup. A panel sitting flush against a metal roof in July will get hotter than one with decent airflow underneath.

I've got mono panels on my shepherd's hut and they're mounted on standoffs specifically to allow air circulation. Makes more difference than the panel type itself, honestly.

The other angle nobody mentions: panel degradation. Modern poly panels hold up just as well as mono over 25 years. Five years ago that wasn't true, but manufacturing's improved loads.

If you're tight on space, mono wins. If you're space-rich and budget-conscious, poly is perfectly sensible. Don't let anyone sell you the idea that one's dramatically superior to the other — it's mostly marketing now.

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ShedGenius
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#671

Real talk — the gap's narrowed loads. On my static caravan setup, I went mono because I could mount them flat and wanted to maximise output in our dodgy UK light. Paid extra but don't regret it.

@BurnWalker, curved roof sounds brutal. Have you considered flexible panels for those tight spots? They're pricier but actually perform decent on angles. Renogy do some decent ones if you haven't looked.

@LiamPalmer, the heat thing matters more than folk think up here tbh. Winter performance is where mono really shines — they handle cold better. My panels actually output more on crisp December days than summer ones despite lower sun angle. Polycrystalline would've lost another 5-8% over a year in my situation.

The real question is your actual roof space and climate. Got room for a few extra polys? Save the cash. Tight space or want to squeeze everything from grey British skies? Mono's worth it. Degradation difference is negligible these days anyway.

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LH_Marine
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#812

You're spot on about the efficiency gap narrowing — modern polycrystalline panels are genuinely competitive now, especially in the UK where we're not dealing with sustained high temperatures anyway.

What tends to matter more in off-grid setups is degradation rate and voltage stability under low-light conditions. Monocrystalline panels hold their voltage better in cloudy weather, which is relevant if you're running a smaller system without battery buffering. I've got a mix on my narrowboat precisely for this reason — the mono panels keep the MPPT controller happier during our frequent grey spells.

The heat coefficient @JA_Solar mentioned is real but honestly overblown for UK installations. Your panels sitting at 40-50°C rather than 25°C in summer makes a dent, but it's not the deciding factor.

Cost per watt usually wins the argument here. If you're space-constrained (like a shepherd's hut roof), mono makes sense. If you've got real estate and tighter budget, modern polys from decent manufacturers won't disappoint. The brand and quality matter far more than the cell type these days — dodgy mono panels will underperform good poly ones.

👍 Yorkshire Nomad

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