
Czech Republic Solar Energy Market Analysis by Mordor Intelligence
The Czech Republic Solar Energy Market size in terms of installed base is expected to grow from 4.81 gigawatt in 2025 to 10 gigawatt by 2030, at a CAGR of 15.75% during the forecast period (2025-2030).
Near-term momentum builds on the solid 4,159MW base recorded in 2024 and the 967MW of new capacity added during that year, of which close to 500MW came from commercial and industrial (C&I) sites.[1]PV Magazine, “Czech Republic adds 967 MW in 2024,” pv-magazine.com Cost-competitive auction prices, expanded interest-free loan programs, and rapid residential uptake combine to push the Czech Republic solar energy market toward the National Energy and Climate Plan objective of 10.1GW by 2030. Parallel financing from the EU Recovery and Resilience Facility and a EUR 400 million European Investment Bank (EIB) grid-modernization loan are easing integration hurdles, while a 94% solar-plus-battery attachment rate in homes underscores growing system sophistication.[2]European Investment Bank, “EIB backs ČEZ with EUR 400 m for grid upgrades,” eib.org Although Parliament cut subsidies for legacy 2009-2010 plants in late 2024, fresh demand is now propelled by market-based feed-in-premium auctions and corporate power-purchase agreements, keeping the Czech Republic solar energy market firmly on a high-growth path.
Key Report Takeaways
- By deployment type, ground-mounted systems held 60% of the Czech Republic solar energy market share in 2024; residential rooftops are poised to expand at a 20% CAGR to 2030.
- By application, utility-scale plants accounted for 55% of the Czech Republic solar energy market size in 2024, while C&I projects are forecast to grow at a 17% CAGR through 2030.
- By company, ČEZ Group generated 67.7% of domestic electricity in 2024, giving it the single-largest position in the broader power sector tied to solar build-out.
Czech Republic Solar Energy Market Trends and Insights
Drivers Impact Analysis
Driver | (~) % Impact on CAGR Forecast | Geographic Relevance | Impact Timeline |
---|---|---|---|
Ambitious NECP 10 GW target | 3.20% | Nationwide, South Moravia, Central Bohemia | Long term (≥ 4 years) |
Falling auction strike prices | 2.80% | Nationwide, stronger in utility-scale zones | Medium term (2-4 years) |
Industrial power-price hedging | 2.10% | Industrial belts | Medium term (2-4 years) |
EU rooftop PV funding | 1.90% | Rural and suburban areas | Short term (≤ 2 years) |
Source: Mordor Intelligence
Ambitious NECP Target of 10 GW Solar by 2030
The binding National Energy and Climate Plan lifts capacity from 4,159 MW in 2024 to 10.1 GW by 2030, a 140% jump linked to streamlined permits for sub-50 kW arrays, multi-billion-CZK grid spending, and a coal exit in 2033. Progress became visible in 2024 with 967 MW of new installations, validating the credibility of the target. Clear alignment with EU climate goals keeps investment-risk premiums low, though utility-scale approvals above 1 MWp still take longer than the EU average.
Declining Auction Strike Prices for Feed-in Premiums
Competitive bidding is cutting support costs while adding more than 1,500 MW by 2025. The Promoted Energy Sources Act favors auctions instead of fixed tariffs, leveraging lower solar LCOE and bigger project scales. Developers welcome reduced fiscal risk, yet call for auction volumes and contract tenors that avert boom-bust cycles.
Industrial-Power-Price Hedging by C&I Off-takers
Energy-intensive manufacturers now frame on-site solar as a hedge against volatile power markets. A CZK 3 billion interest-free loan facility has already signed 128 C&I contracts. Logistics groups such as CTP secured EIB backing for 400 MWp rooftops that lock-in long-term electricity prices for tenants.
2024 Community-Energy Law for Collective Self-Consumption
New rules effective July 2024 let neighbors share power, lifting solar access for flats and rural co-ops.[3]Energy Regulatory Office, “Community Energy Law Guidelines,” eru.cz Municipalities gain subsidies, and research shows optimized shared rooftops could offset up to 77% of annual apartment-block demand.
Restraints Impact Analysis
Restraint | (~) % Impact on CAGR Forecast | Geographic Relevance | Impact Timeline |
---|---|---|---|
>1 MWp permit delays | -2.30% | Nationwide utility-scale sites | Medium term (2-4 years) |
South Moravia grid congestion | -1.80% | South Moravia | Short term (≤ 2 years) |
Source: Mordor Intelligence
Lengthy >1 MWp Permitting Timelines
Administrative layers keep approval periods among the longest in the EU. Council Regulation 2022/2577 seeks streamlining, yet uneven regional implementation inflates project costs and jeopardizes auction commitments.
Distribution-Grid Congestion in South Moravia
The sunniest region faces the starkest bottlenecks. Developers pay higher interconnection fees or relocate to less-irradiated zones, eroding national solar efficiency. Coordinated transmission-distribution upgrades and virtual power plants are emerging fixes.
Segment Analysis
By Deployment Type: Ground-Mounted Dominance Faces Residential Surge
Ground-mounted systems claimed 60% of the Czech Republic solar energy market in 2024, benefiting from wide agricultural land parcels and scale economies. The Czech Republic solar energy market size for ground-mounted projects is forecast to expand to 6.1 GW by 2030. Residential rooftops, spurred by the New Green Savings Light Programme, will deliver the fastest growth at a 20% CAGR, potentially lifting their share from 25% to 35% by 2030. Agrovoltaics, newly permitted in orchards and vineyards, adds a hybrid category that blends dual land use and modest extra capacity.
Rooftop momentum illustrates shifting consumer attitudes, lower equipment prices, and rising electricity bills. Battery storage accompanies 94% of home arrays, letting households optimize time-of-use tariffs while offering ancillary services.[4]SolarPower Europe, "European Market Outlook for Battery Storage," cdn.rinnovabili.it C&I rooftops sit between residential and utility-scale sites, and new auction rules plus zero-interest loans keep this slice of the Czech Republic solar energy market rising. Combined, rooftops may reach 4 GW by 2030, reshaping the grid from centralized generation toward distributed and prosumer-led supply.

Note: Segment share of all individual segment available on report purchase
By Application: Utility-Scale Leadership Challenged by C&I Momentum
Utility-scale plants retained 55% of the Czech Republic solar energy market share in 2024 on strong auction visibility and access to deep-pocketed lenders. Czech Republic solar energy market size for utility-scale projects is projected to grow at 13% CAGR to reach 5.5 GW by 2030. Yet C&I installations will outpace all other segments at a 17% CAGR, reflecting corporate hedging needs and expanding rooftop real estate. Residential applications, though smaller, post steady double-digit gains due to favorable subsidies and community-energy frameworks.
The C&I boom hinges on straightforward PPAs, extended roof leases, and the financial logic of locking-in daytime power. Government zero-interest loans reduce capital barriers, and EIB financing to landlords demonstrates bankability. Meanwhile, residential progress depends on budget continuity for rebates and streamlined permitting for under-50 kW systems. Together, these forces signal a broader diversification of demand drivers within the Czech Republic solar energy market.

Note: Segment share of all individual segment available on report purchase
Geography Analysis
South Moravia registers the highest irradiation but wrestles with grid congestion that delays large projects and inflates connection fees. Central Bohemia offers ready access to Prague demand centers and robust transmission capacity, pulling investors toward mid-sized utility projects and C&I rooftops. Former coal hubs in Northern Bohemia and Moravia-Silesia receive EUR 1.64 billion from the EU Just Transition Fund, which is re-allocated partly to renewables, positioning these areas for solar-plus-battery clusters that replace retiring coal units.
Distribution grid modernization will rebalance development. The EIB-backed ČEPS program upgrades lines feeding South Moravia, freeing an extra 5.5 GW of hosting capacity by 2026 and enabling the Czech Republic solar energy market to spread evenly across high-resource zones. Urban regions, especially Prague and Brno, are seeing rooftop growth supported by simplified permits and fast rebate processing. Rural municipalities use community-energy rules to add village-scale arrays, sharing electricity with low-income households.
Regional heterogeneity mandates distinct development models. Ground-mounted megaprojects favor sparsely populated districts with large plots, while rooftops dominate dense suburbs. Agrovoltaics unlock value in orchards and vineyards concentrated in South Moravia, easing land-use conflicts and adding resilient farm income. Northern coal transition areas prioritize workforce redeployment from mining to solar construction, aligning social and climate policy objectives.
Competitive Landscape
ČEZ Group remains the most influential player in the Czech Republic solar energy market through its generation fleet and grid ownership, yet policy shifts to auctions and PPAs have diluted its dominance. Specialized developers such as Photon Energy and Solar Global aggregate mid-scale projects that slip under utility radar, while international funds like KGAL enter via project acquisitions, injecting liquidity and sharpening competition. Vertical integration is emerging: leading actors manage development, EPC, asset management, and now battery storage under one roof to capture margin.
Domestic banks cautiously lengthen tenors, yet multilateral lenders stay pivotal for gigawatt-level grids and plant funding. Technology partnerships also shape rivalry. Hitachi Energy’s Brno switchgear expansion addresses grid hardware shortages, creating local supply chains that favor proximate developers. Community-energy aggregators represent a small but fast-growing challenger class, pooling residential demand to negotiate better equipment prices and grid access.
Over the next five years, expect consolidation as funding tightens and second-tier owners exit to institutional investors seeking stable returns. Auction pricing discipline will reward cost leaders and efficient capital structures, while new license requirements under Lex RES III raise the bar for market entry. The Czech Republic solar energy market therefore moves from early-stage fragmentation to structured competition among well-capitalized, vertically integrated groups.
Czech Republic Solar Energy Industry Leaders
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ČEZ Group
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Photon Energy NV
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Solar Global a.s.
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Solartec Holding a.s.
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Ekotechnik Czech s.r.o.
- *Disclaimer: Major Players sorted in no particular order

Recent Industry Developments
- April 2025: Government renewed the CZK 3 billion interest-free loan pool for C&I solar and attached battery storage, covering up to 30% of PV CAPEX and 50% of storage costs.
- April 2025: Lex RES III introduced stricter licensing, mandatory price transparency, and security index rules, with fines up to CZK 50 million for breaches.
- December 2024: EIB approved a EUR 400 million loan to ČEZ for grid upgrades that will integrate an additional 5.5 GW of renewables by 2026.
- December 2024: Hitachi Energy earmarked CZK 1.1 billion to expand Brno high-voltage equipment output, adding 200 jobs.
Czech Republic Solar Energy Market Report Scope
Solar energy is the radiation the Sun emits that can create heat, trigger chemical reactions, or create electricity. The total solar energy incident on Earth is far greater than the global energy needs at the moment and in the future.
The report offers the market size and forecasts for Czech Republic solar energy in installed capacity (MW).
By Deployment Type | Ground-Mounted | ||
Rooftop | Residential Rooftop | ||
Commercial and Industrial Rooftop | |||
By Application | Utility-Scale Power Plants | ||
Commercial and Industrial | |||
Residential |
Ground-Mounted | |
Rooftop | Residential Rooftop |
Commercial and Industrial Rooftop |
Utility-Scale Power Plants |
Commercial and Industrial |
Residential |
Key Questions Answered in the Report
What is the current size of the Czech Republic solar energy market?
The market reached 4,812.77 MW in 2025 and is forecast to hit 10,000 MW by 2030.
Which deployment type leads the Czech Republic solar energy market?
Ground-mounted projects held 60% market share in 2024, though residential rooftops are growing fastest at a 20% CAGR.
How much funding supports grid upgrades for solar integration?
The European Investment Bank approved a EUR 400 million loan in December 2024 to add 5.5 GW of renewable hosting capacity by 2026.
What incentives exist for residential solar installations?
The New Green Savings Light Programme reimburses up to 50% of capital costs for hybrid solar-plus-battery systems and has driven a twenty-fold surge in monthly applications.
Why are C&I solar installations expanding rapidly?
Corporations use on-site solar and power purchase agreements to hedge volatile electricity prices and tap zero-interest government loans.
What is the main regulatory change affecting collective self-consumption?
The July 2024 community-energy law allows surplus power to be shared among participants within defined geographic zones, enabling apartment blocks and villages to pool rooftop generation.