For years, anyone researching solar panels grants in Ireland has run into the same nagging question: will the grant still be there by the time I get around to installing? On 18 June 2026, that question finally got a real answer.
Speaking at the Solar Ireland Conference, Minister for Climate, Energy and the Environment Darragh O'Brien confirmed that the SEAI rooftop solar grant will remain in place for the lifetime of the current government. Since the Dáil's current term began in 2024 and a general election must be called no later than January 2030, that commitment effectively locks in support for grants for solar panels Ireland through to at least 2029.
It's a bigger deal than it might first sound, and it's worth unpacking why.
Why the grant was expected to shrink
When the Solar Electricity Grant scheme launched, the plan was always for it to wind down gradually. The original structure cut the maximum grant by roughly €300 each year, on the logic that as panel and installation costs fell, less state support would be needed to keep solar affordable. By that schedule, the scheme was due to taper off entirely around 2028 or 2029.
That changed in late 2025, when a planned €300 reduction for 2026 was reversed, keeping the maximum grant at €1,800. June's announcement goes a step further: rather than a year-by-year reprieve, homeowners now have a multi-year guarantee.
What the grant actually covers right now
As things stand in 2026, the residential solar panels grant works out to €700 per kWp for the first 2kWp installed, then €200 per kWp up to 4kWp, capping at €1,800 for systems of 4kWp or larger. The grant is paid pro rata, so a 2.5kWp system would receive €1,500 rather than the full amount.
On top of that, the 0% VAT rate on the supply and installation of residential solar panels — introduced in May 2023 — is still in effect, which typically saves a further €1,000 to €1,350 on a standard installation. Combined, these two supports continue to make solar one of the better-funded home energy upgrades available in Ireland.
To qualify, the property generally needs to have been built and occupied before 31 December 2020, must not have already claimed a solar PV grant on the same MPRN, and the installation has to be carried out by an SEAI-registered installer, with grant approval secured before any work begins.
Why removing the uncertainty matters
This is really the heart of the announcement. A lot of homeowners weren't holding off on solar because the numbers didn't add up — they were holding off because they were worried the numbers might change. Some delayed in case the grant got cut in the next budget. Others put off a decision waiting to see if panel prices would drop further before the support disappeared.
Both of those concerns lose most of their force now. With the funding secured for the medium term, the decision becomes less about "do I need to move now before the grant disappears" and more about the straightforward question every homeowner should be asking anyway: does solar make financial sense for my home, my roof, and my electricity usage?
That's a healthier place for the conversation to be. It also reflects the wider trajectory of the sector — Ireland's rooftop and utility-scale solar capacity has grown roughly threefold since 2023, and is on track to pass 3 gigawatts by the end of 2026, making it the second-largest source of renewable electricity in the country after wind. The grant commitment isn't an isolated gesture; it's consistent with a government that's clearly treating solar as a long-term pillar of its energy policy, not a short-term subsidy.
What this means if you're considering solar
If you've been sitting on the fence, the practical takeaway is simple: the financial case for installing now is essentially the same as it would have been under the old, more cautious assumption that grants were running out — except you no longer need to rush a decision out of fear the support will vanish.
That said, the core mechanics of applying haven't changed. You still need to get your Letter of Offer from SEAI before any installation work starts, you still need an SEAI-registered installer, and you still need a post-installation BER assessment to release the payment. For a full breakdown of current grant amounts, eligibility criteria, and the step-by-step application process, LVP Renewables' guide to grants for solar panels Ireland covers each of these stages in detail.
The bottom line
The confirmation that solar panels grants will continue through to 2029 doesn't change the underlying value of going solar — but it does remove one of the biggest psychological barriers that's been keeping cautious homeowners on the sidelines. For a country trying to hit ambitious rooftop solar targets by 2030, that kind of certainty might end up mattering just as much as the grant amount itself.
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