Solar energy in Dresden, Germany

Average irradiation 2.9 kWh/m²/day · ~847 kWh per kWp per year

2.9
Avg GHI (kWh/m²/day)
847
kWh / kWp / year
4,000
kWh/yr from 5 kW system
51.05, 13.74
Coordinates

Monthly solar irradiation & temperature in Dresden (NASA POWER)

MonthIrradiation (kWh/m²/day)Avg temp (°C)Est. production per kWp (kWh)
Jan0.74-1.818
Feb1.44-0.735
Mar2.513.161
Apr4.118.4100
May4.9213.1120
Jun5.2917.3129
Jul5.0719.5123
Aug4.3219.1105
Sep3.1514.377
Oct1.828.944
Nov0.883.821
Dec0.58-0.214

Solar potential of Dresden explained

Dresden receives an average of 2.9 kilowatt-hours of solar energy per square metre per day, measured over four decades of satellite observation. In practical terms, every kilowatt-peak of installed PV capacity yields about 847 kWh of electricity per year here, assuming a well-oriented system with a typical 80% performance ratio. While winters are dark, modern panel prices mean solar can still be economical — self-consumption value matters more than raw sunshine here.

Frequently asked questions

Is solar worth it in Dresden?

With 2.9 kWh/m²/day of average irradiation, a 1 kWp system in Dresden produces roughly 847 kWh per year. That is a moderate solar resource; economics depend more on local electricity prices and incentives, which our AI planner can research for you.

How much electricity would a 5 kW system produce in Dresden?

Approximately 4,000 kWh per year — enough to cover a large share of a typical household's consumption.

What data is this based on?

Long-term satellite observations from NASA POWER (1981–present) and the PVGIS SARAH3 database, assuming a performance ratio of 80%.