Last updated: May 5th, 2026 at 10:08 am
1. MCS Certification isn't optional. It's Everything.
In the UK, if your solar system installer isn’t MCS-certified, Microgeneration Certification Scheme, you’re not just taking a risk on quality. You’re locking yourself out of the Smart Export Guarantee.
That’s the government-backed scheme that pays you for the surplus electricity your system exports back to the grid. No MCS certification, no SEG payments. Simple as that.
Beyond the financial hit, MCS certification means the installer has been independently assessed against industry standards.
Their workmanship, their products, and their processes—all of it has been verified by a third party that isn’t them. It’s not a gold star on a homework assignment. It’s proof that someone other than the company itself has said, “Yes, these people know what they’re doing.”

2. Experience With Your Specific Property Type Matters More Than You Think
There’s a significant difference between someone who’s spent five years installing solar on standard pitched roofs in new-build estates and someone who’s worked across flat commercial roofs, Victorian terraces, awkward split-level properties, and listed buildings.
The physics of solar is the same. The execution is not.





