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Solar GuidesApril 30, 2026

Running an AC on Solar — What It Really Takes

Yes, you can run an AC on solar in Nigeria — but only if you use an inverter-type unit and size your panels and batteries correctly. Here's the real maths, no sugar-coating.

Joshville Team

Joshville Team

Engineering & Design

Running an AC on Solar — What It Really Takes

Running an air conditioner on solar is the most common 'is it really possible?' question we get — especially as Nigerian summers push midday temperatures past 38°C in many states. The short answer is yes, absolutely possible. The longer answer: you need an inverter-type AC, a properly sized battery bank, and enough panels to replenish what you use each day. Cut corners on any of those three and you'll be disappointed.

Why Inverter AC Is Non-Negotiable for Solar

A standard (non-inverter) AC compressor runs at full speed until the room hits the set temperature, then cuts off completely and restarts — often dozens of times per hour. Each restart draws 3–5× the running wattage in surge current. On solar, those surges drain your battery and stress your inverter. An inverter-type AC modulates compressor speed continuously, maintaining temperature with much lower average draw (900–1,100W for a 1.5HP unit vs. 1,800–2,200W for a comparable non-inverter). The LG Gencool Inverter series is what we consistently recommend for solar pairing in Nigeria.

Sizing Your System for AC

  • 1HP inverter AC (bedroom): ~750W running load × 8 hrs = 6kWh/day. Minimum: 2.5kWp panels + 10kWh battery.
  • 1.5HP inverter AC (living room): ~1,000W × 8 hrs = 8kWh/day. Minimum: 3.5kWp panels + 12kWh battery.
  • 2HP inverter AC (large room): ~1,400W × 8 hrs = 11.2kWh/day. Minimum: 4.5kWp panels + 14kWh battery.
  • Add your other household loads on top — a typical 3-bedroom home uses another 3–5kWh/day for lights, fans, TV, fridge.
  • Total for 1.5HP AC + household: ~12–14kWh/day. A 5kWp system with 16kWh LiFePO4 battery handles this comfortably.

Inverter Choice Matters Too

Your solar inverter (the device that converts DC battery power to AC) must be rated above your AC's startup surge — not just its running wattage. A 1.5HP unit can surge to 2,200W at startup. We recommend a 5kW minimum inverter for a single 1.5HP AC plus household loads, and a 6kW unit if you want headroom. The Growatt SPF 6kW 48V is our go-to recommendation: it handles 8,000W MPPT input, has built-in Wi-Fi monitoring, and tolerates the kind of variable loads a Nigerian household throws at it.

Real-World Tips for Nigeria's Climate

  • Set your AC to 24–26°C instead of 18°C — each degree lower adds roughly 6–8% to energy draw.
  • Use ceiling or solar fans alongside the AC to distribute cool air; this lets you raise the AC setpoint without losing comfort.
  • Insulate or shade your roof — a well-insulated room in Lagos can cut AC runtime by up to 40%.
  • Schedule heavy AC use for daytime when panels are generating, not midnight when you're drawing purely from batteries.
  • Clean AC filters monthly — dirty filters increase draw by 10–15%.
The biggest mistake we see is pairing a good inverter AC with an undersized battery — the panels are fine during the day, but the system collapses at 2am. Size the battery for your night-time AC hours, not just your daytime use.

Recommended Products for Solar AC Setup

Frequently asked questions

Can I run an air conditioner on solar in Nigeria?+

Yes — but you must use an inverter-type AC, not a standard unit. Inverter ACs modulate their compressor speed and draw 40–60% less power on average than non-inverter equivalents, making them practical for solar. You also need an adequately sized battery bank (at least 10–12kWh for a 1.5HP unit running 8 hours) and 3.5–5kWp of panels to replenish the battery during the day.

How many solar panels do I need to run a 1.5HP AC in Nigeria?+

A 1.5HP inverter AC draws roughly 1,000W running and consumes about 8–10kWh over an 8-hour night. To replenish that plus cover household loads during the day, you need approximately 3.5–5kWp of solar panels, assuming 4.5–5 peak sun hours (typical for Lagos and southern Nigeria). Northern states with 5.5–6 peak sun hours can manage with slightly fewer panels.

What happens to my solar AC system during cloudy days in Nigeria?+

During extended cloudy periods, panel generation drops to 10–30% of rated output. A properly sized LiFePO4 battery bank (e.g., 16kWh) provides 1–2 days of buffer for essential loads at reduced AC use. For critical comfort, a hybrid inverter like the Growatt SPF 6kW can automatically top up from the grid or generator when battery reserves drop below a set threshold — so you are never caught without power.

Monitor Your System on the Go

Download the Joshville mobile app to track your solar generation, monitor battery health, and control your home's power from anywhere.