Professional Solar Installation: From Permit to First Power — What to Expect

Week 1–2: Site Assessment and System Design
A professional installer begins with a thorough site assessment:
Roof Assessment
- Roof age and remaining life (most installers won't mount on a roof with <10 years remaining)
- Structural check: rafter size, spacing, sheathing condition
- Pitch and orientation (south-facing at your latitude is optimal)
- Shading analysis using Aurora Solar or PVSyst across all months
- Main panel amperage and available capacity
- Grounding system condition
- Location for inverter and AC disconnect
- String layout with shading losses modeled per string
- Inverter selection (string inverter vs. microinverters vs. DC optimizers)
- Wire routing and single-line electrical diagram
Week 2–4: Permitting
For a grid-tied installation you need:
- <strong>Building permit</strong>: Structural drawings, roof plan, equipment specs
- <strong>Electrical permit</strong>: Single-line diagram, NEC 690 compliance documentation
- <strong>Utility interconnection application</strong>: Required before net metering activation (2–8 weeks review)
Installation Day
Morning — Mounting:
- Roof penetrations planned at rafter locations (never between rafters)
- Stanchions/lag bolts installed through roof deck into rafters
- Flashing installed under adjacent shingles and sealed
- Rails attached and leveled
- Panels lifted to roof, slid onto rails, clamped
- String wiring terminated into combiner box
- Conduit run from roof to inverter
- PV wire (USE-2 or PV wire, UV-rated) run through conduit
- Inverter mounted, AC disconnect installed
- PV system breaker installed in main panel
- System commissioned and test production run verified
Inspection
The building inspector verifies:
- Structural attachment meets permit drawings
- NEC 690 compliance
- Labels, placards, and disconnects properly located
- Rapid shutdown device installed (required by NEC 2017+ in most jurisdictions)
- Grounding and bonding correct
Permission to Operate (PTO)
After permit sign-off, your installer submits to the utility. The utility issues PTO — typically within 1–5 business days for standard residential installations.
Do not run grid-tied in grid-connected mode before receiving PTO — back-feeding an energized grid line is a lineworker safety hazard.
Net Metering: How You Get Credit
Once PTO is issued, your utility installs/activates a bidirectional meter and activates your net metering tariff. Excess solar production credits your bill. Net metering policies vary significantly:
- <strong>Retail rate NEM</strong>: Credits exports at full retail rate — most favorable
- <strong>NEM 3.0 (California)</strong>: Export rates tied to time-of-use avoided cost — batteries strongly recommended
- <strong>Avoided cost NEM</strong>: Credits at wholesale rate ($0.03–$0.06/kWh) — southeastern US
Monitoring
Set up email alerts for zero production on sunny days — the most common sign of a fault before you notice a bill increase. Most inverter apps show real-time power, daily/monthly/lifetime kWh, CO₂ offset, and system fault alerts.


