The inverter is the brain of any solar system. It converts DC power from your panels or batteries into the 220 V AC your appliances run on, manages charging, and — if it is a hybrid — decides when to draw from the grid, the sun, or stored energy. Getting the size and type wrong is the single most expensive mistake Nigerian solar buyers make.
Step 1 — Calculate Your True Load (Not Just Wattage)
- List every appliance and its rated wattage. Multiply by daily hours to get Wh/day.
- Add 20 % headroom for cable losses, heat derating, and aging batteries.
- Identify your single largest startup surge — a 1.5 HP pump can pull 3× its running watts on startup.
- Your inverter's continuous kVA rating must exceed the sum of running loads; its surge rating must cover the biggest startup spike.
- Example: four LED TVs (60 W each), a 200 W fridge, two ceiling fans (75 W each), and a 1.5 HP pump (1 120 W run / ~3 000 W surge) → ~1 700 W running, ~3 000 W surge → minimum 3 kVA inverter.
Step 2 — Choose Your Inverter Type
- Off-grid / standalone: works entirely from batteries. Affordable, simple. No grid fallback. Right for areas with zero or highly unreliable NEPA.
- Grid-tie: sells power back to the grid. Rarely viable in Nigeria — DISCO metering and disconnection risk make ROI unpredictable.
- Hybrid: charges batteries from solar and/or grid, powers loads from whichever source is cheapest, and exports when grid rules allow. Best for Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt users who get 2–6 hours of NEPA daily.
- Pure sine wave output is non-negotiable if you run a fridge, air conditioner, water pump, or any appliance with a motor or sensitive electronics.
Step 3 — Match Battery Voltage (24 V vs 48 V)
- 24 V systems suit loads up to ~2 kW and battery banks up to ~400 Ah. Lower cost, easier sourcing of 12 V batteries in pairs.
- 48 V systems are standard for 3 kW and above. Half the current for the same power means thinner cables, less heat, better efficiency.
- The Gennex 3 kW 24 V MKS Plus is the sweet spot for a mid-size 24 V system; step up to the Growatt SPF 5000 5 kW 48 V or Itel 6 kW 48 V for larger homes.
- Never mix 24 V and 48 V components — you will damage batteries and void warranties.
Heat, Dust, and Unstable Grid — Nigerian Realities
Most inverter datasheets are rated at 25 °C. Nigerian dry-season temperatures regularly hit 38–42 °C indoors. Install your inverter in a ventilated, shaded enclosure and derate output by at least 10 %. Dust clogs cooling fins — clean with compressed air every three months. NEPA voltage swings (sometimes as low as 170 V or as high as 260 V) make wide-input-range inverters (90–280 V AC) essential; all the hybrids we stock meet this range.
Our Recommended Starting Points
- Small flat / essential loads only (≤2 kW): Gennex 3 kW 24 V MKS Plus — built-in 1 500 W MPPT, compact, honest price.
- 3-bedroom home (2–4 kW): Itel Hybrid 3 kW 24 V or Dyness Hybrid 5 kW 1-Phase — local support, proven in the field.
- Large home / SME (4–6 kW): Growatt SPF 5000 5 kW 48 V, Growatt SPF 6 kW 48 V with 8 000 W MPPT, or Itel Hybrid 6 kW 48 V.
- All units are built for you on order and shipped nationwide within the quoted lead time.
Shop inverters & read deeper guides
- Browse all solar inverters
- Growatt SPF 5000 Smart Hybrid 5 kW 48 V
- Growatt SPF 6 kW 48 V with 8 000 W MPPT
- Itel Hybrid 6 kW 48 V 1-Phase
- Itel Hybrid 3 kW 24 V 1-Phase
- Gennex 5 kW 48 V MKS Zero
- Gennex 3 kW 24 V MKS Plus
- What Size Inverter (kVA) Do I Need?
- Pure Sine vs Modified Sine — Why It Matters
- Hybrid Inverter Features That Actually Matter
- Why We Recommend Growatt Inverters