Microinverters vs String Inverters: Which Solar Inverter Type Is Right for You?
When designing a solar system, choosing the right inverter is as important as choosing the panels themselves. The two main options—microinverters and string inverters—each have distinct advantages and disadvantages. Understanding the differences helps you make an informed decision about which technology best suits your home, budget, and situation.
What Inverters Do
Solar panels produce direct current (DC) electricity. Your home uses alternating current (AC) electricity. Inverters convert DC to AC—it\’s essential equipment in any solar system. But inverters do more than just convert; they optimize performance, monitor output, and protect your system.
String Inverters Explained
A string inverter is a single, centralized device (typically mounted in a garage or on the exterior wall) that converts DC power from all your solar panels into AC power for your home.
How it works: Solar panels are wired in \”strings\” (series connections) that feed into the central inverter. All panels in a string send power to the same inverter.
Advantages of string inverters:
Lower cost: $2,000-$4,000 for a typical residential system vs. $3,000-$6,000+ for microinverters
Simple installation: One device to install and monitor instead of multiple units
Proven technology: String inverters have been used for decades; reliability is well-established
Easier maintenance: If something fails, you replace one central unit
High efficiency: Modern string inverters achieve 97-98% efficiency
Disadvantages of string inverters:
Shading impact: If even one panel is partially shaded, the entire string\’s output is reduced (the \”weakest link\” problem)
Limited monitoring: You see total system output, but not individual panel performance
Less flexible design: All panels in a string must have the same orientation (direction and tilt)
Single point of failure: If the inverter fails, your entire system stops producing (until repairs)
Microinverters Explained
Microinverters are small devices installed on (or behind) each solar panel, converting DC to AC at the panel level.
How it works: Each panel has its own microinverter. Individual panels send AC power to a combiner/optimizer, then to your home.
Advantages of microinverters:
Shading resilience: If one panel is shaded, only that panel\’s output is reduced. Other panels operate at full capacity
Granular monitoring: Track performance of each individual panel, identifying underperforming units
Design flexibility: Panels can face different directions or have different tilt angles
Scalability: Add panels incrementally without redesigning the inverter setup
High efficiency: Modern microinverters achieve 96-97% efficiency (slightly lower than string, but offset by better per-panel optimization)
Reduced fire risk: Microinverters reduce DC voltage across the roof, lowering arc-flash risk
Disadvantages of microinverters:
Higher cost: $500-$800 per microinverter adds up quickly for a 10-panel system
Roof penetrations: Each microinverter requires mounting and electrical connections (more installation complexity)
Lifespan concerns: While improving, microinverters have shorter warranted lifespans than string inverters (25 years vs. 10-15 years typically)
Replacement complexity: If one microinverter fails, you must replace just that unit (good), but at higher per-unit cost
Weather exposure: Microinverters mounted on the roof experience more temperature extremes
String Inverter with Optimizers: A Middle Ground
Some systems use string inverters paired with power optimizers (DC-to-DC converters) on individual panels. This hybrid approach offers benefits of both:
Each panel has a small optimizer (cheaper than a microinverter) that sends optimized power to a central string inverter
You get per-panel monitoring and shading resilience without paying full microinverter prices
Cost is between pure string and pure microinverter systems
Example: SolarEdge systems use this architecture
Comparison Table
String Inverter
Cost: $2,000-$4,000 | Efficiency: 97-98% | Shading Impact: High | Monitoring: System-level | Lifespan: 10-15 years
Microinverter
Cost: $3,000-$6,000+ | Efficiency: 96-97% | Shading Impact: Low | Monitoring: Per-panel | Lifespan: 25 years
String + Optimizer
Cost: $2,500-$4,500 | Efficiency: 97% | Shading Impact: Medium-Low | Monitoring: Per-panel | Lifespan: 15-25 years
Which System Is Right for You?
Choose a string inverter if:
Your roof gets full sun exposure with minimal shading
All panels face the same direction and have the same tilt
Budget is your primary concern
You want simplicity in installation and monitoring
Your home is new, and you plan the entire system at once
Choose microinverters if:
Your roof has partial shading (trees, buildings, roof peaks)
Panels face multiple directions (east/west sides)
You want granular, per-panel performance monitoring
You plan to expand the system incrementally
You prioritize reliability and longer equipment lifespan
You have a complex roof design with multiple orientations
Choose string + optimizer if:
You want a middle-ground cost with good shading resilience
You want per-panel monitoring without paying full microinverter prices
Your roof has some (but not extensive) shading
Real-World Example
Consider a 10-panel system (3 kW):
String inverter option: $2,500 inverter + installation = ~$3,500 total
Microinverter option: 10 × $600 microinverters + installation = ~$8,000 total
SolarEdge option (string + optimizer): $3,000 inverter + 10 × $150 optimizers + installation = ~$5,500 total
If your roof has moderate shading, the SolarEdge option costs $1,500 more than string but prevents losing output when trees shade panels.
Key Takeaways
String inverters are cheaper and simpler, but suffer when panels are shaded
Microinverters cost more but optimize each panel individually and provide granular monitoring
String inverter with optimizers (like SolarEdge) offers a cost-effective middle ground
Shading, roof orientation, and budget should guide your choice
Modern string inverters are 97-98% efficient; microinverters are 96-97% (the difference is negligible)
Microinverters last longer (25 years) than string inverters (10-15 years), affecting long-term value
Ask your solar installer which system they recommend for your specific roof and situation
The best inverter system is the one that maximizes output for your home\’s unique circumstances.