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Solar GuidesApril 28, 2026

What Can Solar Actually Run in Your Home?

From phone chargers to 1.5HP inverter ACs — a plain-English breakdown of what a solar system can power, what sizing you need, and what Nigerian homes actually use day to day.

Joshville Team

Joshville Team

Engineering & Design

What Can Solar Actually Run in Your Home?

The number-one question we hear at Joshville is simple: 'What can solar actually run?' The honest answer is — almost anything, if the system is sized correctly. The practical answer for most Nigerian households is: fans, lighting, TVs, routers, phone chargers, and yes, even an air conditioner, as long as you use an inverter-type AC and pair it with enough panels and batteries.

Typical Appliance Wattages (Nigerian Home Reference)

  • LED bulb: 5–15W per bulb
  • Ceiling or standing fan: 50–75W
  • Solar-direct DC fan: 15–40W (much more efficient)
  • 43-inch LED TV: 60–90W
  • Decoder / DSTV: 15–25W
  • WiFi router: 8–15W
  • Laptop: 45–90W
  • Phone charger: 10–25W
  • Refrigerator (150L inverter): 80–150W average (compressor cycles)
  • 1HP inverter AC: 700–850W running load
  • 1.5HP inverter AC: 900–1,100W running load
  • 2HP inverter AC: 1,300–1,600W running load
  • Electric kettle (2kW): 2,000W — avoid on solar unless system is 5kWp+
  • Pressing iron: 1,000–2,500W — use sparingly

Small System (400W–1kWp): What It Covers

A 400W panel array with a 100Ah 12V lithium battery (or 200Ah lead-acid) can comfortably handle lighting across 4–5 rooms, 2–3 fans, a TV and decoder, phone and laptop charging, and a router — all night long. This is the typical 'NEPA supplement' setup many Lagos and Abuja families start with. You will not run an AC or fridge on this, but you will sleep comfortably and stay connected.

Medium System (2–3kWp): Add the Fridge and More

Step up to 2–3kWp of panels with a 200Ah 48V lithium battery bank (roughly 9.6kWh usable) and you can add an inverter refrigerator, a second TV, more lighting zones, and even run a small inverter AC (1HP) for 5–6 hours in the evening. Nigeria's sun hours vary — Lagos gets around 4.5–5 peak sun hours daily, while northern states get 6+. Factor in your location when sizing.

Large System (4–6kWp+): Full Home Including AC

To run a 1.5HP inverter AC for 8 hours a day alongside normal household loads, budget for at least 4–5kWp of panels and a 200Ah+ 48V LiFePO4 battery. A 6kW hybrid inverter like the Growatt SPF 6kW can manage this load comfortably, with Wi-Fi monitoring so you can track consumption in real time. Larger families or businesses with multiple ACs need to scale proportionally — each 1.5HP AC adds roughly 8–10kWh to your daily energy budget.

What Solar Cannot Run Cost-Effectively

  • Electric cooker or induction hob (2–3kW continuous) — LPG gas is a better companion
  • Electric water heater / immersion boiler (2–3kW) — solar water heaters (thermal) are a separate, cheaper solution
  • Heavy industrial motors without a dedicated industrial system
  • Standard non-inverter window units — these draw 2–3× more than inverter equivalents and are not recommended
The shift from 'will solar work for me?' to 'how do I size it?' is the most important mindset change. Every home can run on solar — the question is budget and load.

Frequently asked questions

Can solar power run all the appliances in a Nigerian home?+

Solar can power virtually every appliance in a Nigerian home, but the system must be sized to match your total daily energy consumption. Lights, fans, TVs, fridges, and inverter ACs are all well within reach. High-draw resistive appliances like electric cookers and immersion heaters are technically possible but expensive to cover with batteries — most families keep a gas cooker alongside their solar setup.

How many solar panels do I need to run my home in Nigeria?+

Start by adding up the wattage of every appliance you want to run and multiplying by the hours you use each one daily — that gives your daily kWh load. Divide that by 0.8 (system efficiency) then by your local peak sun hours (4.5–6 for most of Nigeria) to get the panel capacity in kW. A typical 3-bedroom Lagos home with moderate AC use usually lands between 3kWp and 6kWp.

Is solar worth it in Nigeria given grid instability?+

Yes — Nigeria's chronic grid instability (NEPA/PHCN outages) actually makes the financial case for solar stronger than in countries with reliable grids. Solar eliminates or drastically cuts generator fuel costs, which are the real pain point for most households and businesses. Payback periods for well-sized systems typically range from 3–5 years, after which electricity is essentially free.

Monitor Your System on the Go

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