Is Solar Panel Cleaning Worth It in Ventura County?
2026-03-05 · WaveWash Ventura
Dust can quietly cut your solar output by a quarter. Here's the math on whether cleaning your panels pays for itself in our dry climate.
Dust is the enemy of solar output
Solar panels work by absorbing sunlight — so anything that blocks that light cuts your production. In Ventura County's dry, dusty climate, a film of grit builds up on panels faster than almost anywhere, and because panels sit at an angle facing the sky, they catch maximum dust with minimal natural rinsing. We rarely get the rain that would wash them clean.
Studies consistently show that soiled panels can lose 15–25% of their output, and in heavy-dust agricultural areas the losses run even higher. If your system isn't producing what it used to, dust is often the quiet culprit.
Doing the math
Say your solar system saves you $200 a month on electricity. A 20% output loss from dust means you're effectively throwing away $40 a month — nearly $500 a year. Against that, a periodic professional cleaning pays for itself easily, especially in the high-production summer months when output matters most.
Why not just hose them off?
Two reasons. First, your hard tap water leaves mineral spots that block light just like dust — you trade one problem for another. Second, walking on a roof and scrubbing panels risks both your safety and the panel surface; the wrong tools can scratch the coating and void your warranty. We use purified water and soft, non-abrasive tools designed specifically for panels, with proper roof-access safety.
How often?
For most Ventura County homes, twice a year keeps output strong — typically before summer and after the worst of the dry-season dust. Homes near farmland or unpaved roads may benefit from more frequent cleaning.