Solar panel inspection in Utah

Utah (UT)

Utah is in a hot arid climate zone with an average of 5.8 peak sun hours per day. Soiling risk is high, and solar adoption is moderate. Here's what UT solar owners should watch for.

Climate zone

hot arid

Avg sun hours

5.8 hrs/day

Soiling risk

high

Solar adoption

moderate

Common issues in Utah

Cell hotspots

Localised overheating in individual cells caused by micro-cracks, shading, or manufacturing defects. Best detected via thermal imaging.

Typical loss: 520%

Panel soiling

Dust, pollen, bird droppings, or debris accumulation reducing light absorption. More severe in arid or agricultural areas.

Typical loss: 215%

Natural panel degradation

All solar panels lose efficiency over time at roughly 0.5–0.8% per year. Accelerated in extreme heat or poorly manufactured panels.

Typical loss: 315%

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Solar inspection in Utah: frequently asked questions

How much does a solar panel inspection cost in Utah?+

A standard visual and electrical inspection in Utah costs $199–$349. A full thermal imaging audit using drone or handheld FLIR cameras runs $299–$549 for a typical residential 5–10 kW system. Commercial inspections are quoted per kW and usually start around $0.04–$0.08/W.

How many solar inspection providers operate in Utah?+

PanelAudit lists 4 thermal and drone inspection providers serving Utah, mixing national networks with UT-licensed local operators. We track coverage across 4 Utah cities — request 2–3 quotes to compare turnaround, drone vs handheld FLIR, and certifications.

What's the most common solar defect found in Utah?+

UT's hot arid climate accelerates panel degradation, with cell hotspots typically causing 5–20% output loss. Soiling risk in UT is high, and natural degradation averages 0.5%/year on quality panels — so a 10-year-old system should still be performing within 5% of nameplate after cleaning.

How often should Utah solar owners get an inspection?+

Every 3 years is recommended in UT — 5.8 peak sun hours means degradation shows up faster in real kWh terms. Always inspect after a hail event, major storm, or if monitoring shows a 8%+ year-on-year drop.

Are drone thermal inspections legal in Utah?+

Yes. Commercial drone solar inspections in Utah require an FAA Part 107 certified pilot, and most reputable UT providers fly DJI Matrice or Mavic 3T airframes with calibrated FLIR sensors. Flights stay below 400 ft AGL and require basic homeowner consent.

Will an inspection help with a Utah warranty claim?+

Yes — most panel and inverter warranties require third-party diagnostic evidence (thermal images, IV-curve traces, or performance reports) before honouring claims. A $300–$500 inspection in Utah often unlocks $2,000–$8,000 in covered repairs or panel replacements.

Based on conservative solar performance modelling and published degradation data

NRELIEA-PVPSSunSpecPVsyst+ published research

Updated June 2026 · Structured performance modelling

How we calculate →

Common problems in Utah

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