Does Soap Actually Matter When
Cleaning Your Solar Panels?
We didn’t just assume soap was better — we tested it. Side by side. Same sun, same day, same ground mount. Here’s exactly what the numbers showed.
If you’ve ever wondered whether it’s worth dragging out a bucket of soapy water and a soft brush to clean your panels — or whether a quick rinse with the hose is good enough — you’re not alone. It’s one of the most common questions I get on the channel. So we decided to stop guessing and start measuring.
On our Chico ground mount, we split the array into two rows and cleaned them differently. The top row (A1–A6) got the full treatment: biodegradable soap and a soft-bristle brush. The bottom row (B1–B6) got a straightforward rinse with clean water. Everything else stayed the same — same sun angle, same temperature, same inverter, same day.
The Test Setup
Test Conditions
- Location: Chico Ground Mount — 40 miles north of Houston, TX
- Array: 12 panels split into two rows of 6
- Row A (top): Cleaned with biodegradable soap + soft brush
- Row B (bottom): Rinsed with water only
- Measurement: Individual panel watt-hour output, same day
- Conditions: Identical sun exposure, temperature, and time of day
The panels had been operating for the same amount of time since their last cleaning, so they started with roughly equal levels of dust, pollen, and grime — which here in Southeast Texas is no small amount. Ground mounts sit low and catch everything: dirt, grass clippings, pollen, and whatever the wind drags across the property.
The Raw Numbers
Here are the individual panel outputs recorded after cleaning:
The soap-cleaned row outperformed the water-only row on every single panel. Not one exception. The closest gap was just 10 Wh (A2 vs B2), and the widest was 47 Wh (A6 vs B6).
What the Numbers Mean
A 3% gain per panel might not sound dramatic on paper, but let’s put it in context. If you have a 24-panel system and you’re leaving 3% production on the table every day, that adds up over weeks and months — especially in summer when your panels are doing the most work and you need every watt you can get.
Why Does It Make Such a Difference?
Water alone removes loose dust and debris. But solar panels accumulate a thin film of oily grime — pollen residue, air pollution, bird droppings, mineral deposits from hard water — that doesn’t rinse off with water. It bonds to the glass surface and acts like a permanent partial shade across your entire panel.
Soap breaks down that oily film at the molecular level. The surfactants lift it off the glass so it rinses away cleanly. A soft brush helps agitate the surface to make sure nothing’s left behind. The result is a panel that’s genuinely clean — not just wet.
Here in Southeast Texas, we deal with especially heavy pollen seasons, red clay dust, and high humidity that helps that film stick. If you’re in a similar environment, the gap between soap and water-only cleaning is likely to be even wider than what we saw here.
What We Recommend
Based on this test and our ongoing experience maintaining ground mounts in a high-dust, high-pollen environment, here’s what we’ve settled on:
Our Cleaning Protocol
- Use a biodegradable, pH-neutral solar panel soap — don’t use dish soap or anything with citrus
- Soft-bristle brush or a dedicated solar panel cleaning kit
- Clean in the early morning or evening — never on hot panels in direct sun
- Rinse thoroughly after scrubbing to avoid leaving soap residue
- Clean monthly during heavy pollen season, every 6–8 weeks otherwise
- Always check your output before and after so you can measure the difference yourself
The investment in a proper cleaning system is minimal — a good brush and some solar-safe soap runs maybe $30–$40. Compared to the production you’re recovering over a year, it’s one of the highest-return maintenance tasks you can do on your off-grid system.
The Bottom Line
Soap and a brush outperformed water alone on every single panel in this test. The soap-cleaned row averaged 918 Wh per panel versus 891 Wh for the water-only row — a +3% improvement and +162 Wh total across just six panels.
That’s not a marginal difference you need a microscope to see. It showed up clearly in the data, consistently, across all six comparison pairs. If you’ve been rinsing your panels and wondering why your output feels flat — this might be your answer.
Clean panels = more power. It really is that simple.
