No installer. No roof work. No permits for most California systems under 2kW. One outlet and a few hundred dollars gets you generating your own power today.
The system has four parts. Understanding what each one does makes every buying decision obvious.
The system doesn’t store power or charge batteries (unless you add a battery unit separately). It’s live solar — when the sun is out, your panels are producing and your grid draw is lower. When the sun goes down, you’re back on the grid. Simple.
What each part does, what to look for, and what to buy for the US market.
A solar panel is a flat array of photovoltaic cells sealed under tempered glass. When photons from sunlight hit the cells, they knock electrons loose and create a flow of DC (direct current) electricity. The panel itself has no moving parts and requires essentially no maintenance — modern panels degrade less than 0.5% per year and are typically warranted for 25 years.
For plug-in solar, you’re generally choosing between 200W and 400W panels. A 200W panel is lighter, easier to handle, and better for tight balconies with limited space. A 400W panel produces twice the power but weighs more (~20kg) and needs more room. Most people do two panels of 400W each for a total 800W system — that hits the sweet spot between production and practicality.
The number that matters most for comparing panels is efficiency — expressed as a percentage, it tells you how much of the sunlight hitting the panel turns into electricity. Premium panels today hit 22–23%. Budget panels are closer to 20–21%. In a fixed space like a balcony, higher efficiency means more watts per square foot.
Honest note on panels: For plug-in solar, panel brand matters less than for rooftop systems because the production scale is smaller and the installation is reversible. A Renogy 400W panel from Amazon will work just fine. If you care about long-term efficiency and you’re buying through a distributor anyway, step up to Canadian Solar or Qcells. The difference is real but not dramatic at 2-panel scale.
The microinverter is the piece that makes plug-in solar possible. It sits between the solar panel and your wall outlet, performing continuous DC-to-AC conversion at high efficiency (97%+). Unlike a string inverter on a rooftop system, a microinverter is dedicated to one or two panels, which means shading on one panel doesn’t tank the output of the whole system.
For US installations, certification is non-negotiable. The inverter must be UL 1741 or ETL listed for the US market. A non-certified inverter connected to your home circuit is a fire and electrocution hazard — and your homeowner’s or renter’s insurance won’t cover you if something goes wrong. The European versions of some popular brands (Hoymiles HM-600, HM-800) carry VDE 4105 certification for Europe but are not listed for the US. Always verify the US certification before purchasing.
The plug-in inverter category is newer than standard rooftop microinverters. APsystems launched direct US sales of their EZ1-M in early 2026 — it’s currently the best dedicated plug-in inverter for the US market. This is the part that makes it safe and easy to just plug into your house on any outlet.
Standard Hoymiles HM-600, HM-800, and HMS (non-NA) models are certified for Europe (VDE 4105), not the US (UL 1741). They are widely sold on Amazon by third-party sellers and look identical to the NA versions. Check the model number: it must end in “-NA” for North America. When in doubt, buy APsystems or Enphase instead.
The mount is the weakest product category in plug-in solar right now. Most kits ship with a cheap A-frame stand that takes up half a small balcony, or a railing hook that only fits one railing size and gives you no angle adjustment. This is genuinely the hardest part of the setup for most renters — not because it’s technically complex, but because no one has designed a great universal solution yet.
The angle matters more than most people realize. In California (latitudes 32–42°N), the ideal tilt for year-round production is roughly equal to your latitude — around 35–38° for most of the state. Flat on a table produces significantly less than angled toward the sun. The best mounts allow adjustment; the worst lock you into one position.
For renters, the additional constraint is reversibility — the mount can’t penetrate the wall, the railing, or the floor. That rules out most permanent mounting options and makes a good adjustable railing clamp the right answer for most balcony situations.
Honest note on mounts: No one makes a great universal balcony railing mount for the US market yet. The European market (where balcony solar is more established) has better options. If your balcony has a standard square or round metal railing, the hook mount gets you running. If you have a flat-topped wood railing or an unusual railing, you’ll likely be improvising with clamps and angle brackets. This is a solvable DIY problem, just not a solved commercial one.
The connection cable runs from the AC output of the microinverter to a standard wall outlet. In the US, this is a NEMA 5-15 plug — the same three-prong plug every appliance uses. Most plug-in inverters either include this cable or have the plug integrated directly into the unit.
The cable typically needs to run from your balcony or patio through a door or window into an interior outlet. Most microinverters come with 3–5 meters (10–16 feet), which is enough for most setups. If you need more length, use a heavy-duty extension cord rated for outdoor use (12-gauge or 14-gauge, 15A rated).
One thing worth knowing: the NEC (National Electrical Code) technically requires a dedicated outlet for grid-tied inverter connections in a standard rooftop installation — but plug-in solar under SB 1120 at under 2kW doesn’t trigger the same requirements. You can use an existing outdoor outlet. If your landlord or an inspector asks, the system is operating as a consumer appliance plugged into a receptacle, not as a hardwired grid-tied system.
Mix and match the parts above, or start with one of these three proven combinations.
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The easiest path to plug-in solar. Everything ships together, the app is well-designed, and you can add an EcoFlow battery later for after-dark storage. The tradeoff: you’re locked into EcoFlow’s ecosystem and the all-in-one price is slightly above buying modular. For most people starting out, that trade is worth it.
The best option if you want maximum production and the freedom to choose your own panels. The EZ1-M is the top dedicated plug-in inverter for the US market right now — 97.3% efficiency, designed specifically for DIY balcony installs. Pair it with Canadian Solar or JinkoSolar 400W panels from a distributor for best value. The total output (up to 800W) is meaningfully higher than the all-in-one kits.
The Enphase IQ8MC is the most trusted microinverter in US residential solar, with a 25-year warranty and UL 1741 SA certification. One unit per panel means you can start with a single 400W panel and add a second later. The Enlighten monitoring app is excellent. The tradeoff: higher per-unit cost and a system designed for professional installation, which adds some DIY complexity.
Sun exposure is everything. Orientation and shading determine whether this makes economic sense for your specific situation.
For a more precise estimate, use NREL’s free PVWatts calculator. Enter your address, set the system size to 0.6–0.8kW, and select the direction your balcony faces. The annual output number it gives you, multiplied by your utility rate, is your annual savings.
California law changed in 2024. Landlords can no longer simply say no.
SB 1120[1], effective 2024, establishes that California landlords cannot unreasonably deny a tenant’s written request to install a small solar energy system on their balcony, patio, or other exclusive-use space. The system must be portable or reversibly installed — no roof penetrations, no structural changes, no connection to the building’s main electrical panel.
“Reasonable” is still somewhat defined by context. A landlord can set conditions: reasonable placement that doesn’t create a hazard, proof that the system is UL-listed, an agreement to restore the space on move-out. What they can’t do is issue a blanket refusal.
Send a written request by email (creates a timestamp). Reference SB 1120 by name. A written record matters if there’s a dispute.
1–2 panels on the balcony. No roof access. Plug-in connection to existing outlet. UL-listed components. You’ll restore to original condition on move-out.
Include the product spec sheet for the inverter showing UL certification. This removes the landlord’s main legitimate objection (safety concern).
Don’t ask for permission as if it might be denied. State your intention, reference the law, and invite them to reply with any specific conditions. Most reasonable landlords will say yes.
Most plug-in solar setups take 1–3 hours. No licensed contractor required.
Use PVWatts (pvwatts.nrel.gov) or Google’s Project Sunroof. Enter your address and the direction your balcony faces. If the estimated production is underwhelming, don’t buy the system — exposure is the one thing you can’t fix.
Attach your mount to the railing or set up the ground stand. Tilt toward the sun at roughly your latitude in degrees. Secure everything against wind — a 400W panel acts like a sail in a strong gust.
MC4 connectors click together — positive to positive, negative to negative. They can only go in one way and lock when properly seated. No tools needed.
Run the AC cable from the microinverter through a door or window gap to an outdoor-rated outlet. Route it safely so it won’t get pinched in the door frame over time.
Connect the inverter to Wi-Fi using the manufacturer’s app (APsystems EMA, Enphase Enlighten, or EcoFlow). Wait for a sunny period and verify actual production matches your expected numbers from PVWatts. If it’s significantly lower, check for shading or a loose MC4 connection.