When you build a standard pergola, you usually choose a size that fits your patio and call it a day. But the moment you decide to turn that pergola into a functional solar array, the engineering rules flip.
To get a clean, professional finish and maximise your power output, the solar panels must dictate the dimensions of the timber frame, not the other way around.
If you design the structure first and buy the panels later, you are guaranteed to end up with awkward overhangs, wasted space, or weak structural points. Here is how to plan a solar pergola from the roof down, and how to handle the inevitable footprint gaps when the math doesn’t perfectly align.
Solar panels are not universally standard. While they all look like uniform rectangles from the ground, a variance of just a few centimetres per panel can compound across a row, completely throwing off your rafter alignment.
Before cutting any timber, you need the exact spec sheet of your chosen modules. Standard residential panels typically measure around 1.65m – 1.75m in length and 1.00m –1.05m in width. They are lighter and easier to handle but yield lower wattage per square metre. Modern high-efficiency commercial panels regularly exceed 2.00m – 2.60m in length and 1.10m – 1.30m in width. They offer massive power gains but require far more robust structural support.
Your layout calculations must include the physical footprint of the panels plus the mid-clamps (the hardware that secures the panels to the mounting rails), which typically add 20mm to 40mm of spacing between each unit. The goal is a zero-overhang finish, where the outer edge of the solar array lines up flush with the outside edge of your perimeter timber beams. This keeps the installation looking like architectural integration rather than an afterthought.
A solar pergola has to balance two jobs: creating a comfortable space below and keeping the modules cool above.
Panels need a minimum slope of 5 degrees and snow load also has to be calculated. This isn’t just for water runoff; it ensures that seasonal rain can naturally wash away dust, pollen, and debris that block sunlight. Furthermore, modern high-wattage panels can weigh upwards of 25kg each. When you factor in wind uplift acting like a sail underneath the structure, your rafter spacing must align precisely with the manufacturer’s recommended mounting zones.
Sometimes, the available space on the ground doesn’t match the strict dimensions of a solar array. For example, if your available patio footprint allows for a 4.5m wide structure, but three of your chosen panels only equal 3.4m including clamps, you are left with a massive structural gap.
Since you can’t cut a solar panel to size, you have to get creative with the remaining roof space. Instead of leaving an awkward void, you can use intentional, functional infills to bridge the gap between technology and traditional craftsmanship.
If you want to soften the high-tech look of the glass and aluminium, use locally sourced chestnut (castaño) or eucalyptus sticks over the remaining rafters. These dense, high-tannin woods are incredibly durable and resist rot without requiring heavy chemical treatments. They cast a beautiful, dappled shade underneath, providing excellent ventilation and a traditional, organic aesthetic that grounds the structure.
If you want a section of the pergola to be 100% dry—perhaps to protect an outdoor kitchen, a dining table, or a dry workspace—sheet metal is the practical choice. Running matte black, anthracite grey, or weathered Corten-style corrugated steel sheets alongside the panels creates a sharp, industrial border. If colour-matched to the panel frames, the metal sheets blend right into the array from a distance while giving you a completely weatherproof zone underneath.
For a modern architectural finish, use the remaining footprint to install heavy timber louvers fixed at the same pitch as the solar panels. This turns a dimensional limitation into a deliberate design feature, allowing airflow while maintaining clean lines across the roofline.
Of course, theory is one thing, but real-world projects often demand a different kind of logic. I recently built a pergola specifically for our jacuzzi area where the blueprint rules went straight out the window. In this case, neither the structural footprint nor the orientation was dictated by the solar panels—the layout was entirely driven by the physical space of the hot tub zone itself.
Because we were constrained by the location, we couldn’t chase the perfect year-round solar angle. Instead, we intentionally set the pitch to capture the morning sun during the summer months, accepting the trade-off that it would offer limited generation during the winter. Since the math of the panel array didn’t match the required structural frame, we filled in the remaining gaps with eucalyptus battens. The result is a perfect compromise: a functional power-generating roof that protects the hot tub, provides natural ventilation, and blends seamlessly into the surrounding space.