Solar Panel Cost in Bulls, MWT

Bulls (4818) is a metro area in Manawatu-Whanganui with a temperate climate with good solar potential. A 5kW solar system here typically costs $11,000-$13,000 installed, GST inclusive (indicative June 2026). New Zealand has no solar rebate, so the price you are quoted is the price you pay - and with grid power around 35c/kWh against buyback rates of 7-12c/kWh, using your solar at home beats exporting it. Good conditions for most of the year with a noticeable winter dip. Orientation matters: north-facing, unshaded roof space makes the biggest difference to annual output.

Bulls is in a metro area with multiple solar installers competing for work, which helps keep quotes sharp. Get two or three quotes and compare them line by line.

Installed solar in New Zealand typically runs $1.70-$2.00 per watt: roughly $11,000-$13,000 for a 5kW system and $15,000-$18,000 for 8-10kW, GST inclusive (indicative June 2026). There is no rebate to subtract: the quoted price is the real price.

There is no mandated feed-in tariff in NZ. Retailer buyback plans pay about 7-12c/kWh for exports, while grid power costs around 35c/kWh. Every kWh you use at home is worth roughly three times one you export, so shift dishwashers, hot water and EV charging into daylight hours.

$11,000-$13,000
5kW installed
$15,000-$18,000
8-10kW installed
$1.70-$2.00
Per watt installed
7-12c/kWh
Retailer buyback rates

Indicative June 2026 pricing, GST inclusive. No NZ rebate applies. Always compare 2-3 written quotes.

Recommended Solar Brands for Bulls

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does solar cost in Bulls?
A 5kW solar system in Bulls typically costs $11,000-$13,000 installed, and an 8-10kW system $15,000-$18,000 (GST inclusive, indicative June 2026). That works out to about $1.70-$2.00 per watt. There is no government rebate in New Zealand, so the quote you receive is the full story.
What rebates are available for solar in Bulls?
None. New Zealand has no government solar rebate and no mandated feed-in tariff, in Manawatu-Whanganui or anywhere else. What does exist: bank green home loan top-ups (ANZ, ASB and BNZ at about 1% p.a. fixed for 3 years, up to $80,000; Westpac at 0% up to $50,000 over 5 years) and retailer buyback plans that pay you for exported power. Be wary of anyone advertising a "government solar discount".
What do power companies pay for exported solar in Bulls?
Buyback rates are set by each retailer, not regulated. As at June 2026, typical plans pay 7-12c/kWh: Meridian 8-12c, Contact 8-10c and Electric Kiwi 8-10c. Plans change, so compare current rates before you commit. With grid power around 35c/kWh, a kWh used at home is worth roughly three times a kWh exported.
What is the payback period for solar in Bulls?
It depends mostly on how much of your generation you use at home. Self-consumed solar offsets grid power at roughly 33-38c/kWh, while exports earn only 7-12c/kWh. Households that run hot water heating, appliances and EV charging during the day see the strongest returns. Ask installers to model payback from your actual usage rather than accepting a one-size-fits-all claim.
What size solar system do I need in Bulls?
A 5kW system suits most households and is the most common residential size in New Zealand. If you have an EV, a hot water heat pump, or high daytime usage, an 8-10kW system usually makes better use of your roof. In your sunnier climate a standard-sized system performs well year-round.
What direction should solar panels face in Bulls?
North-facing is ideal for maximum annual output in Bulls. West-facing produces more in the afternoon (good if you use more power in the evening). East-facing produces more in the morning. Even a flat roof works well with tilt frames. Avoid south-facing where possible, as output can be 20-30% less than north-facing.

Related Guides

Also in Bulls

Nearby Suburbs

Free Quote
Step 1 of 4

Where are you?

See indicative costs and local installers for your area

100% freeNo obligationTakes 30 sec