Safety & Permits

Solar Safety Rules and Permits

Solar systems are safe when installed correctly. These rules are not optional — they protect you, your customer, and the building.

Non-Negotiable

The Six Critical Safety Rules

1

Solar panels are always live

Panels produce electricity any time light hits them. There is no off switch at the panel. Always cover panels with an opaque tarp before working on any wiring. Treat all DC wires as live at all times unless confirmed otherwise.

2

Fuse every battery connection

A short circuit in a battery bank can deliver thousands of amps instantly — enough to start a fire, weld metal, or cause serious injury. Every battery cable must have a correctly sized fuse or breaker within 12–18 inches of the battery terminal. No exceptions.

3

Size your wire correctly

Undersized wire overheats and can start a fire inside a wall, conduit, or enclosure. Use a wire sizing chart based on the amperage and length of the circuit. When in doubt, go one wire gauge larger than the calculation shows.

4

Ground the system

All metal enclosures, panel frames, and equipment cases must be bonded to earth ground. Proper grounding protects against lightning surges and stray voltage. Off-grid systems require grounding even though they never connect to the utility.

5

Store batteries safely

Keep batteries away from flammable materials, extreme heat, and open flames. LiFePO⁴ batteries are the safest type but still need clearance from walls and good airflow. Flooded lead-acid batteries produce hydrogen gas and must always be in a ventilated space.

6

Label everything clearly

Mark every breaker, disconnect, and wire run with permanent labels. Label DC lines and AC lines differently so they are never confused. Labels are required for permit inspections in most jurisdictions — and they protect whoever services the system later.

Battery Storage

Where and How to Store Your Batteries

✓ Stable temperature

Extreme heat reduces lifespan and increases risk. Extreme cold reduces capacity. Aim for a stable, moderate environment.

✓ Good airflow

LiFePO⁴ batteries can be stored indoors but still need clearance from walls. Lead-acid batteries must always be in a ventilated space — never in a sealed room.

✓ Off the cold floor

Never store batteries directly on concrete in cold climates. Use a wooden pallet or battery rack to insulate from ground cold.

✓ Proper enclosure

Use a proper battery enclosure or cabinet if required by local codes. Some jurisdictions require a smoke detector near indoor battery storage.

Codes & Permits

When Is a Permit Required?

Rules vary significantly by county. Always check locally before starting any permanent installation.

System TypePermit Required?
Solar generator / portable power stationNo
Plug-and-play kit (no permanent wiring)Usually No
Off-grid system wired to a structure’s panel or sub-panelYes
Permanent roof or ground mount on a structureYes
Stand-alone ground mount in a fieldVaries

Before any permanent installation, call your local building department and ask:

1. Do I need a permit for an off-grid solar installation?

2. What NEC edition does your jurisdiction use?

This call takes five minutes and prevents costly problems later.

NEC Article 690

Off-Grid vs Grid-Tied: Why the Rules Differ

FactorOff-GridGrid-Tied
Utility approvalNot neededRequired
Anti-islandingNot requiredRequired
Net meteringNot applicableRequired agreement
NEC Article 690 wiring/safetyYes — still appliesYes — applies

Rapid Shutdown — When Does It Apply?

Rapid shutdown is an NEC 2017+ requirement that allows firefighters to de-energize roof-mounted arrays quickly in an emergency.

Applies to:

Roof-mounted systems on occupied buildings where NEC 2017+ is enforced locally

Usually does NOT apply to:

Ground-mounted off-grid systems not attached to a building, portable kits and generators

Pre-Installation Checklist

Before Any Permanent Installation

  • Call the local building department to confirm permit requirements
  • Check which NEC edition the jurisdiction uses
  • Ensure all battery connections have properly sized fusing within 12–18 inches of terminal
  • Cover panels with opaque tarp before working on any wiring
  • Use correctly sized wire for every circuit — when in doubt, go one gauge up
  • Ground all metal parts, panel frames, and equipment enclosures
  • Label every breaker, disconnect, and wire run — DC and AC lines separately

Questions About Your Installation?

Get Expert Guidance Before You Start

Join Maina’s free 45-minute Zoom session. He covers real-world safety, correct system design, and what questions to ask your local inspector.

Join Free Session 1 →