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City profile

Balcony Solar in Innsbruck

PVGIS irradiance for Innsbruck, Austria — vertical south-facing balcony mount, monthly profile and city-specific payback against the current Austria tariff.

Annual yield (vertical)
1,006
kWh/kWp/yr
74% of optimal-tilt
Optimal-tilt yield
1,369
kWh/kWp/yr
Best tilt ≈ 42°
Payback (cheapest kit)
2.1
years
≈ €117 saved/yr
Latitude
47.27
°N
11.40° E/W
Monthly profile — kWh per kWp installed
Vertical south-facing balcony mount, PVGIS v5.3 with 14% system loss.
Best: Mar (113 kWh)
Worst: Jun (64 kWh)
056113JFMAMJJASOND
City-specific payback for the cheapest kit
priWall
€248
Pays back in 2.1 years
€117 saved per year
Computed against the current Austria residential tariff (32.7¢/kWh) at 70% self-consumption. The kit's panel wattage is scaled by 1006 kWh/kWp/yr, the PVGIS-derived vertical yield for Innsbruck.

Why these numbers — climate and orientation in Innsbruck

Innsbruck sits at 47.27°N. PVGIS v5.3 estimates an annual yield of 1,006 kWh per kWp installed for a south-facing balcony mounted vertically (90° tilt) with a 14% system loss assumption. That is +9% relative to the Austria country-average vertical yield of ~920 kWh/kWp/yr we use in the per-country payback widget.

For the same hardware mounted at PVGIS-optimal tilt (42° from horizontal, south-facing), the same kit would produce 1,369 kWh/kWp/yr — roughly 36% more. The vertical-mount penalty in Innsbruck is average; it's the price you pay for being able to use the kit on a balcony railing without a frame and without rooftop access.

The monthly profile above shows the seasonal shape clearly: Mar is the strongest month (113 kWh per kWp installed), Jun the weakest (64 kWh per kWp). For a typical 800 W (= 0.8 kWp) plug-in kit you can multiply these numbers by 0.8 to read directly in absolute kWh per month.

How to read the payback number

The 2.1-year payback assumes a 70% self-consumption rate (a typical 2-3 person urban household running fridge, standby load, and a midday work-from-home dishwasher cycle). The remaining 30% of generation gets exported and credited at the country-default export tariff (10.0¢/kWh in Austria). Higher self-consumption shortens the payback; an empty flat during working hours can stretch it by 1-2 years.

For full per-country regulatory context — registration, tax treatment, tenant rights, condominium rules — see the Austria country guide.

Other cities in Austria

Where these numbers come from

PVGIS v5.3 (the EU JRC's photovoltaic geographic information system) is the standard EU reference for residential PV yield estimates. We refresh the per-city data every 6 months — both vertical (balcony) and optimal-tilt scenarios — and store the monthly breakdown so the seasonal shape stays accurate. Last fetched for Innsbruck: 03 May 2026.

Yield numbers are PVGIS estimates based on a long-run irradiance model; actual production varies year-to-year ±10% due to weather. Payback is a deliberately simplified calculation suitable for orientation, not a financial recommendation. For installer-grade modelling, use the full PVGIS tool directly with your specific tilt, azimuth and shading inputs.