01What this calculator tells you
A net-zero energy home generates as much energy on-site over a full year as it uses. This calculator puts the two sides of that balance next to each other: it estimates the annual generation from your solar array, compares it with your annual consumption, and returns a clear net-zero percentage, the surplus or deficit in kWh, and — if you are short — the extra kW of solar needed to close the gap. Any remaining grid import is converted into carbon so you can see the footprint that is left.
The approach follows the U.S. Department of Energy definition of a zero energy building, where the balance is measured across the year rather than hour by hour. Production is estimated with the standard method from the DOE Homeowner’s Guide to Going Solar. For related tools, see our energy efficiency upgrade calculator and embodied carbon calculator.
02How to read your result
The percentage at the top is your generation divided by your consumption. The balance scale shows the two energy flows to proportional widths, and the status chip summarises where you stand. Use the bands below as a quick guide.
03Efficiency first, then right-sized renewables
The cheapest kilowatt-hour is the one you never use, so the DOE Zero Energy Ready Home approach is efficiency-first: shrink the load before sizing the array. In practice that means:
- Seal and insulate. Air-sealing and insulation cut heating and cooling demand — see the ENERGY STAR seal-and-insulate guidance — which shrinks the array you need.
- Electrify efficiently. Heat pumps for space and water heating, plus efficient appliances and lighting, lower total kWh so a smaller PV system reaches net zero.
- Right-size the PV. Once the load is low, size the array to the remaining annual use using peak sun hours for your location and a realistic derate.
- Use the grid as a battery. Net metering credits daytime exports against night and winter imports; add storage or load-shifting if export credit is low.
- Verify with real data. Solar output depends on orientation, shading and weather; the EIA solar overview explains how photovoltaic generation varies.
- Enter your annual energy consumption in kWh (convert other fuels to kWh for a true net-zero-energy check).
- Enter your existing or planned solar PV size in kW — use 0 if you have none yet.
- Adjust peak sun hours for your location (default 4.0) and the system derate (default 0.8) if you have better figures.
- Set the grid emission factor (default 0.4 kgCO₂e/kWh) to size any residual carbon.
- Press Calculate to see your net-zero %, the balance scale, net kWh and the extra solar needed.
Planning wider home upgrades? Our conduit fill calculator helps size electrical containment for new circuits and solar wiring.
This is a planning estimate on an annual energy balance, not a bankable production forecast or a bill calculation. It does not account for:
- Hourly or seasonal timing — real net metering, time-of-use rates and export limits vary by utility
- Site specifics such as roof orientation, tilt, shading and local weather (a detailed model like NREL PVWatts refines this)
- Fuel conversions if you heat with gas — enter a kWh-equivalent for a whole-energy check
- Degradation of panels over time and future changes in household consumption
01The net-zero energy formula
A net-zero check rests on one comparison: how much energy the array generates in a year versus how much the home uses. Generation is estimated from the system size, the sun available and real-world losses; the balance and percentage follow directly.
Where:
- kW= the solar array size (nameplate DC capacity) in kilowatts.
- peak sun hours= equivalent hours of full-strength sun per day for your location (~3–6).
- derate= system loss factor for inverter, wiring, soiling and heat, typically 0.75–0.85.
- consumption= the home’s total annual energy use in kWh.
02Worked example
A home uses 10,000 kWh/yr and has a 6 kW array at 4.0 peak sun hours with a 0.8 derate. Here is the balance carried through to the extra solar needed:
The residual 2,992 kWh of grid import at a 0.4 kgCO₂e/kWh factor is about 1,197 kgCO₂e/yr — the carbon still on the table until the array is enlarged or the load is trimmed. If efficiency upgrades cut consumption to 8,000 kWh first, the same 6 kW system would reach roughly 88% with only ~0.8 kW more solar needed, which is why shrinking the load is usually the cheapest route to net zero. You can translate that residual figure into everyday equivalents with the EPA greenhouse-gas equivalencies calculator.