1500 Vdc has been the standard DC bus voltage for utility solar since 2017. But for many C&I projects, 1000 Vdc remains the right choice. The decision depends on string length, cable cost, inverter pricing, and grid-code requirements. This article explains when 1500 Vdc pays off and when sticking with 1000 Vdc makes sense.
Why higher DC voltage matters
Cable I²R losses scale with current squared. Doubling the voltage (1000 → 1500 V) reduces current by 33% and losses by 56%. For long string runs and large arrays, this means smaller cable gauges and significant copper savings.
Beyond cable savings, 1500 Vdc enables longer strings — typically 26–32 modules per string vs. 18–22 at 1000 Vdc. Fewer combiner boxes, fewer DC connections, lower BoS costs.
Where 1500 Vdc wins
| Project profile | 1500 Vdc advantage |
|---|---|
| Utility solar > 5 MW | 3–5% lower BoS cost |
| Long string runs (200+ m) | Significant cable savings |
| Ground-mount with row spacing | Fewer combiner boxes |
| Bifacial modules at scale | Higher current capacity per string |
Where 1000 Vdc is still the right choice
| Project profile | Why 1000 Vdc |
|---|---|
| Rooftop C&I < 1 MW | Short string runs minimize cable advantage |
| Residential / villa (< 50 kW) | 1000 Vdc required by most safety standards |
| Markets with 1000 Vdc grid code | Some countries still mandate 1000 Vdc max |
| Modules rated only for 1000 Vdc | Older modules can't safely operate at 1500 V |
Sungrow's 1500 Vdc offering
The SG320HX-20 is Sungrow's flagship 1500 Vdc utility inverter:
- 320 kVA AC output at 40°C ambient
- 6 MPPTs × 5 strings = 30 strings input
- 500–1500 V MPP range (very wide — accommodates voltage variation under hot conditions)
- 99.02% peak efficiency, 98.8% European
- Motorized DC switch with automatic fault cutoff
- 24/7 real-time DC and AC insulation monitoring
- PLC (Power Line Communication) for SCADA integration
Migration strategy for plant operators
Existing 1000 Vdc plants don't need to be replaced. The decision to migrate to 1500 Vdc applies primarily to new builds. For brownfield expansion, 1000 Vdc inverters and 1500 Vdc inverters can coexist on the same plant — connected to separate MV transformers or even the same one (with appropriate isolation).