Ground-Mount Solar Systems: When and How They Are Installed

Ground-mount solar systems place photovoltaic arrays on freestanding structures at ground level rather than on rooftops, making them viable across residential, commercial, and agricultural properties where roof characteristics limit installation. This page covers how ground-mount systems are engineered and installed, the regulatory and permitting frameworks that govern them, the scenarios in which they outperform roof-mounted alternatives, and the key variables that drive site selection and system design. Understanding these factors is essential before engaging with solar installation contractors or comparing quotes through a solar energy systems directory.


Definition and Scope

A ground-mount solar system is a photovoltaic array supported by a racking structure anchored directly into the ground — typically via driven posts, helical piles, or concrete footings — rather than fastened to a building surface. The array may be fixed at a static tilt angle or equipped with a tracking mechanism that adjusts panel orientation relative to the sun.

Ground-mount installations fall into two primary structural categories:

A third variant — the solar tracker system — is a ground-mount configuration where single-axis trackers follow the sun's east-to-west arc throughout the day, increasing energy production by 15–25% compared to fixed-tilt ground mounts (National Renewable Energy Laboratory, NREL).

Ground-mount systems are distinct from solar carport installations, which serve a dual purpose as vehicle canopies, and from roof-mounted configurations addressed in solar roof mounting systems.


How It Works

A ground-mount system operates on the same photovoltaic principles as any solar installation: semiconductor cells within panels convert incident solar radiation into direct current (DC) electricity. The DC output is routed through conductors to an inverter — either a central string inverter or a microinverter array — which converts power to alternating current (AC) for use in a building or for export to the grid. For a detailed breakdown of inverter options, see solar inverter types.

The installation process follows a discrete sequence:

  1. Site assessment and geotechnical survey — Soil bearing capacity, slope, flood zone designation, and shade analysis are evaluated. The National Electrical Code (NEC, NFPA 70 2023 edition) mandates minimum conductor burial depths and equipment ratings relevant to ground-mounted equipment.
  2. Structural engineering — Racking systems must meet wind and snow load requirements defined by ASCE 7 (Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures), which sets the baseline mechanical standards used by Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) reviewers nationwide.
  3. Permitting and AHJ approval — Most jurisdictions require a building permit, electrical permit, and in some cases a grading or land-use permit. The solar installation permits and approvals process varies by county but universally requires stamped engineering drawings for arrays exceeding a defined wattage threshold.
  4. Trenching and conduit installation — Underground conduit routes DC and AC conductors between the array, combiner boxes, and the inverter pad. NEC Article 690 (as updated in the 2023 edition of NFPA 70) governs photovoltaic system wiring, including ground-fault protection and rapid shutdown requirements.
  5. Racking and module installation — Ground screws or poured footings are set to engineered depth specifications. Racking rails are fastened, modules are attached and torqued to manufacturer specs, and DC wiring is completed.
  6. Inverter and electrical connection — The inverter is commissioned, AC wiring is connected to the main service panel or utility interconnection point, and monitoring equipment is configured. Solar system monitoring integration is typically completed at this stage.
  7. Inspection and interconnection — A local inspector verifies compliance before the utility authorizes grid connection. The solar interconnection process requires a separate utility application in most jurisdictions.

Common Scenarios

Ground-mount systems are the preferred configuration in four identifiable situations:

Roofs that cannot support arrays — Structural limitations, age, material type (clay tile, wood shake), or insufficient area eliminate roof mounting as a practical option. Homes with heavily shaded rooftops or unfavorable orientations face the same constraint.

Agricultural land useAgricultural solar installations, sometimes called agrivoltaic systems, co-locate crop or grazing activity under or between ground-mounted arrays. Farmers with underutilized acreage can generate significant kilowatt-hour output while maintaining partial land productivity.

Utility and commercial scale systemsCommercial solar energy systems and industrial solar energy systems often deploy ground mounts across acres of land when building roof area is insufficient for target system capacity. Large ground arrays can reach capacities above 1 megawatt DC on a single contiguous parcel.

Off-grid and remote powerOff-grid solar systems in remote locations — cabins, agricultural outbuildings, telecommunications infrastructure — frequently use ground mounts because no suitable building rooftop exists at the site.


Decision Boundaries

Choosing between a ground-mount and a roof-mount system involves five primary variables:

Variable Ground-Mount Advantage Roof-Mount Advantage
Site control Full tilt/azimuth optimization No land area consumed
Installation cost Higher (trenching, structural footings) Lower per watt on suitable roofs
Maintenance access Walk-up access, easier cleaning Requires rooftop safety protocols
Permitting complexity Potential land-use review required Typically simpler AHJ review
System sizing flexibility Expandable footprint Constrained by roof dimensions

Safety framing is a significant factor in ground-mount projects. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R and Subpart V govern electrical and trenching hazards during installation. Solar installation safety standards require fall protection planning, lockout/tagout procedures, and arc flash risk assessment regardless of whether the installation is roof- or ground-mounted.

Installer qualifications matter proportionally to system scale. The North American Board of Certified Energy Practitioners (NABCEP) PV Installation Professional certification is the nationally recognized credential benchmark, and AHJs in many states require NABCEP-certified personnel or licensed electricians to sign off on permitted ground-mount systems. See solar installer certifications for a breakdown of credential types.

Net metering policies and state-level solar incentives apply to ground-mounted systems with the same general eligibility criteria as roof mounts, though some utility tariffs impose capacity caps or differentiate interconnection fees by installation type.

References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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