
Updated June 2026
When most people think about solar, they picture panels installed on a home's roof. While rooftop solar is a great solution for many properties, it's not the only option.
For many Maine homeowners and businesses, a purpose-built solar shed offers advantages that a rooftop system simply can't. The right choice depends on your property, your goals, and how you want your solar system to perform over the next 25+ years.
If you're still deciding whether solar is a worthwhile investment, read our guide on whether solar is still worth it in Maine without the federal tax credit before comparing system types.
Rooftop solar remains the most common type of residential installation because it uses existing roof space and doesn't require additional structures.
For homes with:
...rooftop solar can be an excellent investment.
However, not every property is an ideal candidate.
Maine homes often present unique challenges that can affect rooftop solar performance.
These may include:
None of these automatically rule out rooftop solar—but they can reduce flexibility or increase project complexity.
Regardless of which type of system you choose, it's also worth understanding what solar incentives and programs are still available in Maine before making a decision.
A solar shed is a purpose-built structure designed specifically to optimize solar production while providing usable storage or workspace.
Instead of designing around an existing roof, the structure is designed around the solar array.
That means panel orientation, roof pitch, and placement can all be optimized for energy production.
Because the structure is purpose-built, solar sheds offer several practical advantages.
Panels can be positioned for the best available sun exposure instead of being limited by your home's roof.
The solar system is installed on the shed rather than your home, avoiding penetrations through your existing roof.
Unlike a traditional ground-mounted array, a solar shed provides usable storage or workspace while generating electricity.
Solar shed roof angles can be designed to encourage snow shedding and simplify seasonal maintenance.
If your home eventually needs a new roof, your solar system remains untouched.
Not necessarily either one. Production depends on factors like:
A well-designed rooftop system can outperform a poorly placed ground-mounted system—and vice versa. The goal isn't choosing the "better" technology. It's choosing the system that's better for your property.
Every property is different. Some homes are perfect for rooftop solar. Others can generate more energy with a purpose-built solar shed.
That's why the first step isn't choosing a product—it's evaluating your property.
Rooftop solar and solar sheds are both excellent ways to generate renewable energy. The difference is that a solar shed gives you the flexibility to optimize the solar system without being constrained by your home's roof.
For many Maine properties, that means:
The best solution is the one that fits your property—not a one-size-fits-all approach.
Not always. It depends on your property's layout, roof condition, shading, and goals. A solar shed offers more flexibility in panel placement and adds usable storage space.
Production depends on system size, orientation, shading, and installation quality—not simply whether the panels are on a roof or a shed.
Yes. Solar sheds are designed with Maine conditions in mind and can be built with roof angles that encourage snow shedding while taking advantage of cold-weather panel efficiency.
Yes. In many cases, a solar shed provides an excellent alternative when a home's roof has limited sun exposure, shading, or structural limitations.
Written by Maine Solar Sheds
Maine Solar Sheds was founded by Matt and his team, who bring over 30 years of experience in Maine's solar industry. Over the decades, they've built roof-mounted systems, concrete ground-mounted arrays, and steel ground-mounted installations across the state.
Since developing the Maine Solar Shed, Matt and his team have come to see how often a purpose-built solar structure is the best long-term solution—offering optimized solar production, snow management, durability, and additional functional space for Maine property owners.