Peak Sun Hours by State

“Peak Sun Hours by State: The Complete US Reference GuideAlright, here’s something that surprises most people when they first look at solar numbers across the country: the same 10-panel solar system produces wildly different amounts of

Shariful Raj
Written by Shariful Raj

Published: May 5, 2026 at 1:41 PM EDT

Peak Sun Hours by State: The Complete US Reference Guide

Alright, here’s something that surprises most people when they first look at solar numbers across the country: the same 10-panel solar system produces wildly different amounts of electricity depending on which state it’s installed in.

A 5kW system in Phoenix, Arizona generates approximately 33 kWh per day. That same 5kW system on a roof in Seattle, Washington generates just 14 kWh per day. Same panels. Same inverter. Same size system. But Arizona homeowner gets more than double the electricity — purely because of where they live.

The number that explains this entire difference is peak sun hours (PSH) — the single most location-specific variable in any solar sizing calculation. This guide gives you the complete state-by-state reference for all 50 US states, a clear ranking of solar potential, and a practical guide to using your state’s PSH number in a real system sizing calculation.

If you’ve been following this solar series, you already know how peak sun hours work. If you’re coming to this fresh — no worries, we cover the essentials right here.


What Are Peak Sun Hours?

One peak sun hour = one hour of sunlight at exactly 1,000 W/m² — the intensity threshold at which solar panels produce their rated output.

They are not daylight hours. A location might have 10 hours of daylight but only 4.5 peak sun hours — because early morning and late afternoon sunlight is weaker than the intense midday sun. Only the hours that are equivalent in energy to 1,000 W/m² count toward peak sun hours.

The practical use: a 400W panel at 5.0 PSH produces 400 × 5.0 = 2,000 Wh (2 kWh) per day. That’s your per-panel daily output — multiply by your panel count to get total daily system generation.

The values in this guide represent annual daily averages — the number that best represents year-round system performance for sizing purposes.


How to Read This Data

A few important notes before diving into the tables:

Annual average is what you use for sizing. Your system needs to perform year-round, not just in summer. The annual average captures the full seasonal reality — hot sunny summers and shorter, cloudier winters — in a single representative number.

There’s a range, not one exact figure. Every state has geographic variation — coastal vs. inland, north vs. south, elevation differences. The ranges provided reflect this internal variation. Use the lower end if you’re in a cooler, cloudier, or coastal part of your state. Use the higher end if you’re in a dry, inland, or high-elevation area.

For precise location data, use PVWatts (pvwatts.nrel.gov) or Global Solar Atlas (globalsolaratlas.info) with your exact address for the most accurate figure.


All 50 States — Complete PSH Reference Table

The Southwest — America’s Solar Powerhouse

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayBest CityNotes
Arizona6.5 – 7.5Phoenix 7.0–7.5#1 solar state; desert climate, clear skies
New Mexico6.5 – 7.0Albuquerque 6.5–7.0High elevation boosts irradiance
Nevada6.0 – 7.0Las Vegas 6.5–7.0Dry desert air, exceptional irradiance
Utah5.5 – 6.5Salt Lake City 5.5–6.0High plateau; excellent solar resource
Colorado5.0 – 6.0Denver 5.5–6.0High altitude compensates for cold winters

The Southeast — Surprisingly Strong Solar

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayBest CityNotes
Florida5.0 – 5.7Miami 5.3–5.7Consistent year-round; humidity causes some diffuse loss
Texas4.5 – 6.5West Texas 6.0–6.5; Houston 4.5–5.0Massive variation; western TX is exceptional
Oklahoma5.0 – 5.5Oklahoma City 5.0–5.5Strong Southern Plains solar resource
Kansas5.2 – 6.0Wichita 5.5–6.0Underrated solar state; wide-open skies
Georgia4.5 – 5.2Atlanta 4.5–5.0Good solar resource; growing market
South Carolina4.5 – 5.0Charleston 4.5–5.0Coastal humidity slightly reduces PSH
North Carolina4.5 – 5.0Raleigh 4.5–5.0Solid solar resource; strong state market
Tennessee4.2 – 4.7Nashville 4.3–4.6Moderate; good enough for strong ROI
Alabama4.2 – 4.7Birmingham 4.2–4.5Underutilized solar potential
Mississippi4.2 – 4.7Jackson 4.3–4.6Similar to Alabama
Louisiana4.5 – 5.0New Orleans 4.7–5.0Good despite humidity
Arkansas4.5 – 5.0Little Rock 4.5–4.8Decent Southern solar resource
Virginia3.8 – 4.5Richmond 4.0–4.5Moderate; varies north to south significantly
West Virginia3.5 – 4.0Charleston 3.5–4.0Terrain and cloud cover limit PSH

The West Coast — High Variation by Location

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayNotes
California4.8 – 7.5Coastal 4.8–5.5; Inland 5.8–6.5; Desert 6.5–7.5
Hawaii5.5 – 7.0Varies dramatically by island and elevation
Oregon3.5 – 5.0Eastern Oregon 4.5–5.0; Coastal/Portland 3.5–4.0
Washington3.0 – 4.5Eastern WA 4.0–4.5; Seattle/Western WA 3.0–3.5

The Great Plains & Mountain States

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayNotes
Wyoming5.5 – 6.5High elevation, dry air — exceptional and underrated
Montana4.5 – 5.2Eastern plains better than west; high elevation helps
Idaho4.5 – 5.5Southern Idaho desert areas excellent
South Dakota4.7 – 5.5Strong plains solar resource
North Dakota4.5 – 5.0Better than most expect for northern state
Nebraska4.5 – 5.2Good Central Plains irradiance
Iowa4.2 – 4.8Moderate; worthwhile with federal ITC
Minnesota4.2 – 4.8Better than reputation; cold keeps panels efficient
Missouri4.3 – 5.0Reasonable Midwest solar resource

The Midwest & Great Lakes

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayNotes
Illinois4.0 – 4.5Chicago 4.0–4.2; southern IL slightly higher
Indiana3.8 – 4.3Moderate cloud cover; viable with strong incentives
Ohio3.5 – 4.2Frequent overcast; workable with good system design
Michigan3.5 – 4.0Great Lakes cloud effect; lower PSH
Wisconsin3.8 – 4.3Similar to Michigan; cold keeps panel efficiency up
Kentucky4.0 – 4.5Moderate; viable market

The Northeast

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayNotes
New York4.0 – 4.5NYC 4.1–4.3; Upstate 3.8–4.2
Pennsylvania3.8 – 4.2Philadelphia better than Pittsburgh
New Jersey3.8 – 4.2Dense market; high electricity rates compensate
Connecticut3.8 – 4.2Similar to NJ; strong incentives
Massachusetts3.5 – 4.0Boston 3.7–4.0; one of the best state incentive programs
Rhode Island3.8 – 4.2Small but strong solar market
Vermont3.5 – 4.0Cold keeps panels efficient; good net metering
New Hampshire4.2 – 4.8Better than most New England states
Maine4.0 – 4.5Better than reputation; cold and clear days common
Maryland4.0 – 4.5Good Mid-Atlantic resource
Delaware4.0 – 4.5Strong incentives compensate for moderate PSH
District of Columbia4.0 – 4.4Viable urban solar market

Special Cases

StateAnnual Avg PSH/DayNotes
Alaska2.0 – 3.5Extreme seasonal variation; summer 3.5–5.0, winter 1.0–1.5
Hawaii5.5 – 7.0Among the best in the nation; very high electricity rates

States Ranked by Solar Potential

Here’s the complete state ranking from highest to lowest annual average peak sun hours — giving you the clearest picture of where solar energy is most productive across the country.

RankStateAnnual Avg PSH/Day
🥇 1New Mexico6.5 – 7.0
🥈 2Arizona6.5 – 7.5
🥉 3Nevada6.0 – 7.0
4Wyoming5.5 – 6.5
5Hawaii5.5 – 7.0
6Kansas5.2 – 6.0
7Florida5.0 – 5.7
8Oklahoma5.0 – 5.5
9California4.8 – 7.5 (widest range)
10Utah5.5 – 6.5
11South Dakota4.7 – 5.5
12Colorado5.0 – 6.0
13Texas4.5 – 6.5
14Idaho4.5 – 5.5
15Montana4.5 – 5.2
16Nebraska4.5 – 5.2
17North Dakota4.5 – 5.0
18Georgia4.5 – 5.2
19Louisiana4.5 – 5.0
20South Carolina4.5 – 5.0
21North Carolina4.5 – 5.0
22Arkansas4.5 – 5.0
23New Hampshire4.2 – 4.8
24Iowa4.2 – 4.8
25Minnesota4.2 – 4.8
26Tennessee4.2 – 4.7
27Alabama4.2 – 4.7
28Mississippi4.2 – 4.7
29Missouri4.3 – 5.0
30Maine4.0 – 4.5
31Maryland4.0 – 4.5
32Kentucky4.0 – 4.5
33Illinois4.0 – 4.5
34New York4.0 – 4.5
35Wisconsin3.8 – 4.3
36Virginia3.8 – 4.5
37Pennsylvania3.8 – 4.2
38New Jersey3.8 – 4.2
39Connecticut3.8 – 4.2
40Indiana3.8 – 4.3
41Delaware4.0 – 4.5
42Rhode Island3.8 – 4.2
43Vermont3.5 – 4.0
44Massachusetts3.5 – 4.0
45Ohio3.5 – 4.2
46Michigan3.5 – 4.0
47Oregon3.5 – 5.0
48Washington3.0 – 4.5
49West Virginia3.5 – 4.0
50Alaska2.0 – 3.5

The Four Solar Zones of the USA

Rather than thinking state by state, it helps to visualize the US in four broad solar zones — each with its own characteristics, sizing implications, and financial dynamics.

Zone 1 — The Sun Belt (PSH 5.5 – 7.5+)

States: Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Southern California, Utah, West Texas, Southern Colorado, Hawaii, Florida (parts)

This is America’s solar gold mine. Dry air, clear skies, high elevation in many areas, and intense sunshine create the most productive solar environment on the planet outside of the Sahara and Middle East. A well-designed system here pays back in 5–7 years and generates maximum lifetime savings.

The catch: Extreme summer heat in Arizona, Nevada, and the Inland West reduces panel efficiency during the hours of peak irradiance. High temperatures push panels to 60–75°C, causing temperature coefficient losses of 10–15% during summer afternoons. A 25% buffer (×1.25) in the sizing formula is recommended for the hottest inland locations to account for this.

Zone 2 — The South & Southern Plains (PSH 4.5 – 5.5)

States: Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, most of Texas, Florida, Virginia

Strong solar resource with good year-round consistency. Humidity in the Gulf States causes some diffuse light losses but still produces excellent economics given the high electricity consumption for air conditioning in summer months. Systems here typically pay back in 7–10 years.

Zone 3 — The Midwest & Northeast (PSH 3.8 – 4.5)

States: Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and most other Northeast states

Moderate solar resource — good enough for financially viable solar in most cases, particularly given high electricity rates in the Northeast that increase per-kWh savings. The cold climate actually helps panel efficiency — panels perform closer to their rated output in cold clear air than in hot summer heat. Many Midwest and Northeast states also offer strong incentive programs that improve economics despite lower irradiance. Systems here typically pay back in 9–13 years.

Zone 4 — The Pacific Northwest & Alaska (PSH 2.0 – 4.0)

States: Washington, Oregon (west), Alaska

The most challenging zone for solar economics. High rainfall, persistent cloud cover, and in Alaska’s case — extreme seasonal variation in daylight — reduce both PSH and system output significantly. Western Washington and Oregon average just 3.0–4.0 PSH annually. That said, electricity rates in Washington are very low (hydro power), which reduces the financial incentive anyway. Eastern Oregon and Washington are dramatically better — clearing 4.0–5.0 PSH in the drier inland regions.


Summer vs. Winter PSH — Why the Gap Matters

Every state experiences seasonal variation — and for some states, this variation is dramatic enough to significantly affect system design.

StateAnnual AvgSummer PSHWinter PSHSeasonal Gap
Arizona6.577.426.01Small — excellent winter performance
Florida5.676.165.26Small — consistent year-round
Kansas5.796.145.28Small — surprisingly consistent
California5.386.193.42Large — coastal fog reduces winter
Colorado4.875.724.44Moderate — cold but clear winters
Kentucky4.945.973.60Large — cloudy winter months
Louisiana4.925.713.63Large — winter cloud cover
Montana4.935.703.66Large — shorter winter days
Nebraska4.795.404.38Moderate
Alaska2.993.871.78Extreme — 2:1 summer-to-winter ratio

What this means for sizing:

  • Grid-connected systems: Use annual average — the grid covers seasonal shortfalls automatically
  • Battery backup systems: Check that battery is large enough for the worst winter month
  • Off-grid systems: Size based on the lowest winter PSH — not annual average — to ensure self-sufficiency year-round

States like Florida, Arizona, and Kansas with small seasonal gaps are ideal for off-grid solar because winter performance is nearly as strong as summer. States with large seasonal gaps like Kentucky, Louisiana, and coastal California require much more conservative sizing for off-grid applications.


How to Use Your State’s PSH to Size a Solar System

Now that you have your state’s PSH figure, here’s the complete sizing formula — the same one we’ve used throughout this series:

Required System Size (kW) = (Daily Energy Usage ÷ Peak Sun Hours) × 1.2

Quick sizing examples by state:

A home consuming 900 kWh/month (30 kWh/day) — here’s what system size it needs in different states:

StatePSHFormulaSystem Size400W Panels Needed
Arizona7.0(30 ÷ 7.0) × 1.25.1 kW13 panels
Nevada6.5(30 ÷ 6.5) × 1.25.5 kW14 panels
Florida5.5(30 ÷ 5.5) × 1.26.5 kW17 panels
California (inland)6.0(30 ÷ 6.0) × 1.26.0 kW15 panels
California (coastal)5.0(30 ÷ 5.0) × 1.27.2 kW18 panels
Texas (west)6.0(30 ÷ 6.0) × 1.26.0 kW15 panels
Texas (east)4.7(30 ÷ 4.7) × 1.27.7 kW20 panels
Georgia4.8(30 ÷ 4.8) × 1.27.5 kW19 panels
New York4.2(30 ÷ 4.2) × 1.28.6 kW22 panels
Massachusetts3.8(30 ÷ 3.8) × 1.29.5 kW24 panels
Washington (Seattle)3.2(30 ÷ 3.2) × 1.211.3 kW29 panels

The same 900 kWh/month home needs 13 panels in Arizona but 29 panels in Seattle — that’s a 2.2× difference in system size purely from peak sun hours.


Best and Worst States for Solar ROI

Here’s the thing — high PSH doesn’t automatically mean best ROI. Financial return depends on the combination of solar production (PSH) and electricity savings (local utility rates). A state with moderate PSH but very high electricity rates can deliver better ROI than a sunnier state with cheap electricity.

Best ROI States

Arizona — Highest PSH in the country (6.5–7.5) combined with APS/SRP rates that have risen significantly. Payback periods of 5–7 years are common. One of the best solar investments nationally.

California — Sky-high electricity rates ($0.28–$0.35/kWh average) combined with strong PSH (especially inland) create exceptional ROI despite NEM 3.0 changes. A solar + battery system here is one of the strongest financial investments a homeowner can make.

Hawaii — The highest electricity rates in the nation ($0.35–$0.45/kWh) combined with excellent PSH (5.5–7.0) create the fastest payback periods in the country — often 4–6 years. Hawaii homeowners save more per kWh than anywhere else in the US.

Massachusetts — Lower PSH (3.5–4.0) but compensated by high electricity rates ($0.25–$0.30/kWh), the nation’s strongest state solar incentive program (SMART program), and generous net metering. Excellent ROI despite being a northeastern state.

New Jersey — High electricity rates, strong state incentives (SREC market), and PSH of 3.8–4.2 combine for solid economics. One of the top solar markets in the northeast.

Nevada — Exceptional PSH (6.0–7.0) combined with NV Energy rates that have risen steadily. Strong market with good installer competition keeping installation costs reasonable.

States Where ROI Is Challenging

Washington (Western) — Low PSH (3.0–3.5) combined with very cheap electricity from hydropower (rates as low as $0.08–$0.10/kWh) creates a very long payback period. The solar savings per kWh are minimal when grid electricity is already cheap.

Louisiana — Moderate PSH (4.5–5.0) but historically low electricity rates and less aggressive state incentive programs make economics tighter than many comparable states.

West Virginia — Low PSH (3.5–4.0) and some of the lowest electricity rates in the country create challenging economics without significant federal incentives.

Alaska — Extreme seasonal variation, very low winter PSH (1.0–1.5), and the high installation costs associated with remote locations make solar economically marginal except in specific off-grid situations where it competes with diesel generation.


Frequently Asked Questions

Which US state has the most peak sun hours?

Arizona and New Mexico consistently top the rankings, with Arizona reaching 6.5–7.5 PSH annually in cities like Phoenix and Tucson, and New Mexico averaging 6.5–7.0 PSH. The desert Southwest’s combination of low humidity, minimal cloud cover, and high elevation makes it the most solar-productive region in the continental United States.

Which US state has the least peak sun hours?

Alaska has the lowest annual average PSH at 2.0–3.5 hours per day, with dramatic seasonal variation — summer can reach 4–5 hours while winter drops to 1.0–1.5 hours in many regions. Among the contiguous 48 states, Washington (western) and Oregon (coastal) have the lowest PSH at 3.0–3.5 hours due to persistent cloud cover and rain from the Pacific.

Does high peak sun hours always mean better solar investment?

Not necessarily. ROI depends on the combination of PSH and local electricity rates. Hawaii has excellent PSH (5.5–7.0) and the nation’s highest electricity rates — delivering the best solar ROI nationally. Massachusetts has moderate PSH (3.5–4.0) but high rates and strong incentives — delivering better ROI than many sunnier but low-rate states. Always consider both factors together.

How does altitude affect peak sun hours?

Higher altitude locations generally receive more PSH because the atmosphere is thinner — absorbing and scattering less sunlight. This is why Colorado (5.0–6.0 PSH), Wyoming (5.5–6.5 PSH), and New Mexico (6.5–7.0 PSH) have surprisingly strong solar resources despite their northern latitudes. Denver’s altitude of 5,280 feet boosts its solar resource meaningfully compared to a lower-elevation city at the same latitude.

Is solar worth it in low-PSH states like Michigan or Ohio?

Yes — with the right expectations and incentives. Ohio’s PSH of 3.5–4.2 is workable, particularly when factoring in the federal 30% Investment Tax Credit, rising utility rates, and net metering policies that credit solar generation. The payback period is longer (10–14 years) than in Arizona, but with a 25-year panel lifespan, the net lifetime savings are still substantial. Cold climates also keep panels running at higher efficiency than hot desert states — partially compensating for fewer sun hours.

Why does California show such a wide PSH range?

California is geographically enormous with dramatically different climates within the same state. Coastal San Francisco experiences marine layer fog that reduces effective PSH to 4.8–5.2 annually. Inland Sacramento and Fresno reach 5.8–6.5 PSH. Palm Springs and the Imperial Valley hit 6.5–7.5+ PSH in the desert. No single number represents “California” — always use your specific city’s figure from PVWatts or the Global Solar Atlas.

Should I use summer or winter PSH for system sizing?

For grid-connected systems, use the annual average — the grid covers seasonal shortfalls. For off-grid systems, use the lowest month’s PSH (typically December or January for most US states) to ensure self-sufficiency during the hardest period. For battery-backed systems, use annual average for panel sizing but check that battery capacity is adequate for the worst winter week’s consumption

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Shariful Raj admin of solarpanel.news

I’m Shariful Raj, a clean energy enthusiast with a deep interest in solar technology and sustainable living. I write in SolarPanel.news about practical solar solutions, product reviews, and eco-friendly tips to help you make smarter energy choices. Whether you're curious about installing solar panels or just want to live a little greener, my goal is to simplify the journey for you.

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