Calculator
Solar Tilt Angle Calculator
Find the optimal tilt angle for solar panels at your latitude
The tilt angle of your solar panels is one of the most important factors affecting energy production. Panels tilted at the optimal angle capture more sunlight throughout the year, directly increasing your system's output and payback. This calculator uses well-established formulas based on your latitude to determine the best tilt for annual, winter, or summer production. It also estimates the production gain compared to flat (0°) panels and shows seasonal tilt ranges. Whether you're installing ground-mount panels, adjusting a roof-mounted system, or just curious about solar geometry, this tool gives you the precise angle for your location.
Enter Your Details
Fill in the form and click Calculate to see results.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter your latitude in degrees. For US locations, this ranges from about 25° (Key West, FL) to 49° (northern Montana). You can find your latitude on Google Maps or at latlong.net.
Choose the season optimization:
Annual — best for year-round production (most common choice)
Winter — maximizes production during low-sun months (good for off-grid systems)
Summer — maximizes production during peak sun months
The calculator shows your optimal tilt angle, the production gain percentage compared to flat panels, and the winter and summer reference tilts. For most residential installations, the annual tilt is the best default — it maximizes total yearly production.
Formula & Methodology
Optimal Tilt Formulas (Northern Hemisphere): Annual: tilt = latitude × 0.76 + 3.1 Winter: tilt = latitude × 0.87 + 3.56 (maximize low-sun season) Summer: tilt = latitude × 0.93 − 21 (maximize high-sun season) Production Gain vs Horizontal (approximate): Gain (%) = −0.001 × tilt² + 0.18 × tilt This quadratic approximation is derived from solar irradiance modeling across US latitudes. It captures the diminishing returns at steep angles — going from 0° to 30° gives a large boost, but from 30° to 60° the incremental gain shrinks. Why latitude matters: The sun's path across the sky changes with both latitude and season. At higher latitudes, the sun sits lower in the sky year-round, requiring steeper panel angles. In winter, the sun is lowest, so winter-optimized tilts are steeper than annual averages. In summer, the sun is nearly overhead, so flatter panels capture more energy. These formulas work for the Northern Hemisphere with positive latitude values. For the Southern Hemisphere, use the absolute latitude value — the physics is symmetric.