Building-type guide
Warehouse Rooftop Solar: Finding the Best Sites
Warehouses are among the best commercial solar prospects: they offer large, unshaded, flat or low-pitch roofs ideal for high-density arrays. SolarScout detects them automatically from satellite and map data and estimates usable roof area for each one.
Across SolarScout's markets, a 100 kWp warehouse array typically pays back in 3–6 years depending on local sunshine and electricity prices.
Turn these rooftops into a lead list in minutes.
Scan this area free →Why warehouses are prime solar candidates
Warehouses combine large, unshaded, flat or low-pitch roofs ideal for high-density arrays with structural roofs that suit standard mounting systems. That makes them faster to quote and quicker to convert than small commercial premises.
SolarScout ranks them by roof area and, where Google Solar data exists, by modelled annual generation — so you can prioritise the highest-value warehouses first.
How to prospect warehouses with SolarScout
Draw an area or pick a location, and SolarScout returns every detected warehouse with an estimated roof footprint, business identity and contact details where available.
Each lead carries a pre-computed business case, so outreach opens with a concrete savings figure. Export to CSV/Excel and load straight into your CRM.
Frequently asked questions
Are warehouses good candidates for rooftop solar?
Yes — warehouses offer large, unshaded, flat or low-pitch roofs ideal for high-density arrays, which is why they typically deliver some of the best commercial solar economics, with payback around 4.5 years on a 100 kWp system.
How does SolarScout find warehouses?
SolarScout combines OpenStreetMap building data with satellite imagery and Google Solar API panel modelling to detect warehouses, estimate roof area, and attach contact data — then exports them as qualified leads.