Many DIYers automatically reach for Dreft or other detergents when they want to clean their solar panels. Makes sense - you wash glasses and plates with them every day, so why not rooftop glass too? In this guide, we explain why Cleaning solar panels with Dreft can damage the performance of your plant, how exactly chemistry affects the fragile coating and why professional cleaning with deionized water by Solarco is both smarter and more economical.
1. Why people reach for dish soap
- Availability - A bottle of Dreft is already in the kitchen cupboard.
- Price perception - A few drops cost almost nothing.
- Foam = clean - Lots of foam gives the impression of powerful cleansing.
- Unknown - Few manufacturers actively warn against household products.
Yet these arguments are misleading. Let's unravel the chemistry behind foam bubbles.
2. The chemical pitfalls of cleaning solar panels with Dreft
2.1 Surfactants
Detergent contains surfactants which emulsify fats. Perfect for food scraps, but on a solar panel they settle as microfilm once the water dries up. That film has three negative effects:
- Light reflection - Average +2 % reflection loss measured at film of 0.05 µm.
- Dirt magnet - The greasy layer attracts dust and pollen faster.
- Coating stress - Surfactants reduce surface tension; nano-coatings can come off.
2.2 Salts and dyes
Detergents contain sodium chloride as a thickener and dyes for brand recognition. When drying, salts crystallise into mini-scratch. Yellow-green pigment residues are hygroscopic and retain moisture: breeding ground for algae.
"We took micrographs of panels that had been cleaned twice with Dreft - the salt crystals looked like sandpaper," says Hendrik, CEO of Solarco.
2.3 pH level
Dreft sits around pH 8-9, so slightly alkaline. Anti-reflection coatings are designed for neutral water. Prolonged exposure to base accelerates silica etching processes, making gloss permanently dull.
Table 1 summarises the main Dreft components and what they do on PV glass.
Component | Purpose in kitchens | Impact on solar panels |
---|---|---|
Anionic surfactant | Fat breaker | Forms light-absorbing film |
Sodium chloride | Consistency | Crystal scratches glass |
SLES | Foam enhancer | Attack silicone seal |
Colouring agent CI 42051 | Branding | Pigmentation spots, algae growth |
Perfume | Smell | Film attracts flies & dust |
3. Case study: 10 % yield loss due to Dreft
In 2023, Solarco documented a residential system in Aalst (24 panels, 7.9 kWp) where the owner was cleaning solar panels with dreft and sponge every spring. After three years:
- Hotspot detection: IR camera showed 12 °C temperature difference.
- PR drop: from 0.83 to 0.75 (≈ 10 % less yield).
- Coating scans: loss of 15 % anti-reflection efficiency.
- Cost: €840 in missed revenue, excluding repairs.
Solarco removed residue with a mild acid bath and osmosis water, after which the PR recovered to 0.80. Full recovery was impossible as some micro-scratches were permanent.
4. Osmosis water: the safe counterpart
4.1 What makes osmosis water unique?
- TDS < 30 ppm - No salts ➜ no crystal formation.
- pH 6.8-7.2 - Almost neutral ➜ coating-friendly.
- High surface tension - Binding to dirt without chemistry.
- Spot-free - Dries without streaks or film.
"Osmosis water behaves like a magnet: negatively charged water molecules envelop positively charged dust particles," explained chief operator Sander out. "That's why you don't need soap."
4.2 Comparison of osmosis water vs Dreft mix vs rainwater
Feature | Osmosis water | Dreft + tap water | Rainwater |
Minerals | < 30 ppm | 250 ppm | 50-80 ppm |
pH | 6,8-7,2 | 8,5-9,0 | 5,5-6,0 |
Residue formation | No | Soap film + salt | Dust/acid film |
Reflection loss | 0 % | 2-5 % | 1-3 % |
Warranty risk | No | High | Moderate |
5. Professional cleaning: more than a suds
5.1 Robotic and telescopic technology
Solarco uses telescopic brushes with split bristles and low pressure or fully autonomous cleaning robots for large roofs. Water consumption and pressure are precisely tuned to avoid scratching.
5.2 Safe working methods
- VCA-certified mechanics.
- Fall protection on sloping roofs.
- Non-life insurance included.
5.3 Inspection & reporting
Every turn includes a visual inspection and IR scan. Small defects are found early, preventing expensive burns.
6. Cost tag: DIY with Dreft vs Solarco service
Scenario | Material costs | Risk of damage | Missed revenue | Time investment |
Dreft method (1×/year) | € 2 soap + € 10 water | High | 5-10 % per year | 4 hours working by yourself |
Solarco osmosis cleaning | from € 125 (25 panels) | No | 0 % | 0 hours |
On average, a 5 kWp system earns €90 per 1 % return per year. At 5 % losses, Dreft therefore costs €450 per year. A professional turn therefore pays for itself after only three months.
7. Frequently asked questions
Question | Answer (summarised) |
---|---|
1. Can Dreft invalidate the warranty of my solar panels? | Yes. Manufacturers require pH-neutral cleaning (< 7.5) and can reject claims once soap residue (pH 8-9) has been shown to cause damage. |
2. How do I recognise soap film or salt residue on the glass? | Look at the panel in floodlight: do you see a rainbow haze or white rings? That is soap film or crystallised salt; a greasy fingerprint that does not disappear confirms residue. |
3. I don't have an osmosis plant. What is a safe alternative? | Use demineralised water or spot-free-rinse-water (car wash). Rinse generously and dry with a clean microfibre cloth; avoid pure tap water. |
4. Does rain remove enough dirt so that I don't need to clean again? | No. Rain contains minerals and city pollution; it washes away loose dust but leaves behind a thin film that absorbs light and attracts dirt. |
5. How much efficiency do I lose from one Dreft cleaning? | Laboratory tests show 2-3 % direct yield drop; repeated turns can cause up to 10 % permanent loss via micro-scratches and film build-up. |
6. What does professional cleaning cost if I have more than 40 panels? | Solarco charges €125 for the first 25 panels and ± €5 per panel above that. At >100 panels, the price drops to €1.50-€2.00 per panel, depending on accessibility. |
9. Conclusion & call-to-action
Cleaning solar panels with Dreft seems cheap, but is an expensive mistake in the long run. Soap film, crystal formation and alkaline damage can cost up to 10 % efficiency and permanently degrade the coating. Choose the safe route: have your panels treated with pure osmosis water by Solarco's certified experts.
Schedule your free inspection today via our solar panel cleaning-page and receive a no-obligation quotation. Share this article with neighbours and friends so that they too protect their investment!