For the first three months after my system went live, I checked the Enphase Enlighten app roughly four times a day. Claire found this mildly alarming. I told her I was doing quality control. She told me I needed a hobby.
She wasn’t entirely wrong — but the monitoring habit did catch something real. In month seven, one of my 22 panels started showing output about 30% below its neighbors on clear days. The Enphase system flags per-panel anomalies, and I had a baseline by then to recognize what normal looked like. A warranty claim followed. The microinverter was replaced under the 25-year warranty at no cost.
Without monitoring, that underperforming panel would have silently dragged my system’s total output down by about 1.4% for however long it took to notice — probably years.
Here’s what the monitoring app actually tells you and how to read it.
What the Main Dashboard Numbers Mean
Today’s production (kWh): How much electricity your system has generated today. The shape of the daily production curve matters as much as the number — a smooth bell curve peaking midday is normal. A jagged curve with drops suggests intermittent shading, cloud cover, or a struggling panel or inverter.
Current output (watts or kW): Real-time production right now. At solar noon on a clear day, your system should be producing close to its nameplate capacity. My 9.6kW system peaks around 8.2–8.8kW on clear summer days — the gap from nameplate is expected due to temperature loss and system efficiency.
Lifetime production (kWh or MWh): Cumulative production since install. This is your long-term health indicator. Compare against what your installer projected at installation. If you’re consistently 10–15% below the projection after accounting for weather, something warrants investigation.
CO₂ offset and “equivalent trees planted”: Ignore these for analytical purposes. They’re marketing metrics. Focus on kWh.
Per-Panel Monitoring: The Real Value (Enphase, SolarEdge)
If your system uses microinverters (Enphase) or power optimizers (SolarEdge), you have per-panel production data. This is the feature most owners underuse.
What to look for:
- One panel consistently producing 20%+ below its neighbors on clear days: Likely a microinverter failure or panel defect. Flag for warranty claim.
- One panel producing well in the morning but dropping off by noon: Shading from a tree or structure that grows or shifts seasonally. Worth monitoring across seasons.
- All panels showing reduced output equally: System-wide issue — inverter efficiency, temperature effects, or widespread cloud cover. Normal on overcast days; abnormal on clear days.
- Random single panels dropping to zero: Microinverter failure. Document the panel ID and contact your installer.
The monitoring system paid for itself in my case not by preventing a problem but by catching one early. A microinverter that might have failed silently for two years got replaced in month seven.
String Inverter Monitoring (No Per-Panel Data)
If your system uses a central string inverter, your monitoring shows system-level data only — no per-panel breakdown. You’ll see total production, inverter output, and sometimes string-level voltage.
The limitation: a single underperforming panel in a series string reduces the output of every panel in that string. You won’t know which panel it is without a site inspection. This is one of the functional advantages of microinverter systems — not just for production but for visibility.
With string inverter monitoring, focus on:
- Year-over-year production comparison for the same month
- Comparing actual vs. projected production from your installer’s estimate
- Any sudden drops that don’t correlate with weather
When to Actually Contact Someone
- Any panel showing zero production for more than 2 consecutive clear days
- System total output drops 15%+ from seasonal baseline without an obvious weather explanation
- Lifetime production running more than 10% below installer projection after a full year
- Monitoring app shows communication errors for specific panels lasting more than a week
Most systems are reliable and won’t trigger any of these. But knowing what to look for turns your monitoring app from a feel-good dashboard into an actual diagnostic tool.
— Allen