Tesla has revived in-house manufacturing of solar panels at Gigafactory New York and unveiled redesigned residential panels featuring enhanced aesthetics, energy production, and installation efficiency. In a March 2026 blog post, the company detailed a 25-year warranty, over 500,000 global installations, and app integration, building on CEO Elon Musk's emphasis on solar during the Q4 2025 earnings call.
Tesla's renewed focus on solar panel production comes amid a strategic pivot, as announced during its Q4 2025 earnings call on January 29, 2026. Despite a 61% drop in net income, CEO Elon Musk positioned Tesla as a 'physical AI company' while committing to solar, stating, 'We are also going to be a significant manufacturer of solar cells' and aiming for 100 gigawatts annual production. The company is scaling its underutilized Giga New York (Buffalo) facility—acquired via the 2016 SolarCity deal—to an initial 300 MW/year capacity for modules, shifting from third-party reliance post-Panasonic's 2020 exit.
Last week prior to the February announcement (late January 2026), Tesla unveiled the new residential solar panels at its Los Angeles diner. On March 8, 2026, a company blog post provided further details on the redesigned panels, engineered in California and assembled at Gigafactory New York.
Key enhancements include refined aesthetics with all-black cells, concealed electrical connections, and a low-profile skirt hiding hardware. The panels deliver 420 watts (up from 410W), with dimensions of 71.1 x 44.7 x 1.57 inches, 20.5% efficiency, and 49 pounds weight. Laser-cut cells create 18 power zones—three times more than conventional panels—boosting resilience to shading or dirt. Panels and mounting systems carry a 25-year warranty, informed by over 500,000 installations worldwide.
Installation is accelerated by the rail-less Tesla Panel Mount, enabling 33% faster setup, 15% fewer roof penetrations, 24% less aluminum, and reduced weight/visual impact. Brackets rock into the panel frame for close roof fit, compatible with U.S. roof types like shingles, tiles, and metal.
Homeowners manage the ecosystem—including Powerwall, EVs, Wall Connector, and Powershare—via the Tesla app. Past deployments include 223 MW in 2023 and nearly 4 GW of solar roofs on 480,000 homes over a decade, though solar roofs remain low-volume.
This initiative capitalizes on rising electricity demand, positioning Tesla strongly in solar and storage amid EV and autonomy challenges.