Solar panels for churches in Hull
Serving Hull and the wider East Yorkshire area, including Beverley, Cottingham, Hessle. Faculty applications, Buildings for Mission and diocesan grant support included from first conversation to commissioning.
Solar panels for churches in Hull — the local picture
Hull (Yorkshire and the Humber, population 267,100) is served by the Diocese of York (covering East Yorkshire, the North York Moors and most of North Yorkshire) on the Anglican side, the Diocese of Middlesbrough on the Catholic side, and the Yorkshire North and East District for Methodists. Across the wider parish footprint sit ~470 CofE parishes across York diocese, plus several hundred Catholic, Methodist, United Reformed, Baptist and independent free-church congregations. Many are heritage buildings — listed, often Victorian, often poorly insulated, and almost always wrestling with the same questions: rising energy bills, ageing electrical systems, and the gap between diocesan net zero commitments and the parish’s available capital.
We work across all of those traditions in Hull. Faculty applications in the Diocese of York go through Chancellor Canon Peter Collier KC; Listed Building Consent for Catholic and free-church buildings goes through Hull City Council’s heritage planning team. We have prepared both routes many times and know which questions each tribunal asks first.
A representative recent Hull install: a 16 kW system on a Listed parish church with parish hall. The PCC applied for and received Buildings for Mission grant funding (covering around 65% of capex), with the remainder funded from parish reserves and an interest-free diocesan loan. Faculty was granted in 11 weeks. The system was commissioned without disruption to a normal Sunday-service pattern. The parish magazine ran a creation-care feature on it the following month and the church added an Eco Church credit shortly after.
Why Hull churches are turning to solar
Three things converge in Hull in 2026 to make solar PV the most-asked-about energy intervention for churches. First, energy bills: most Hull parishes are now spending £3,000 to £18,000 a year on electricity and gas combined, with smaller churches typically paying £4,500–£7,500 and larger town-centre churches with active community halls paying £10,000–£25,000. After the 2022–24 wholesale gas price spike, energy is now the second or third largest line item on the average PCC budget after clergy stipend and fabric.
Second, the Church of England’s national net zero by 2030 commitment, made in 2020 General Synod, flows down to every diocese with carbon reporting now embedded in the annual parish return. In Diocese of York, that is delivered through the Diocese of York Environment Strategy. ~470 CofE parishes across York diocese have a target trajectory that includes electrification of heat, on-site generation where feasible, and a credible plan for the remaining residual emissions. For most Hull parishes solar is the single largest single-action contributor to that trajectory.
Third, the diocesan and national grant landscape has matured significantly. The CofE’s national Buildings for Mission programme, diocesan Net Zero Capital Programmes (notably strong in Oxford, Bristol, Manchester, Salisbury and Lichfield), the Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme (which reimburses the 20% VAT on listed-building works), and the National Lottery Heritage Fund are all options open to Hull churches. Combined, grants can cover 50–100% of capex on a parish PV scheme, and York Diocesan Board of Finance Carbon Reduction Grants; Humber Freeport Enhanced Capital Allowances provides specific local capital support in addition.
Faculty jurisdiction in Diocese of York — what Hull PCCs need to know
For Anglican churches in Hull, any works to the consecrated building — solar PV included — require a faculty granted by Chancellor Canon Peter Collier KC on the advice of the Diocesan Advisory Committee (DAC). The legal basis is the Care of Churches and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Measure 2018. The process has three substantive stages.
Stage one — preparation. The PCC resolves to apply for faculty and prepares two key documents: a Statement of Significance (describing the heritage value of the building and the relevant fabric) and a Statement of Needs (describing why the works are necessary). For solar PV the Statement of Needs typically includes the parish’s energy expenditure, carbon trajectory, and the link to the diocesan net zero plan. We draft both documents from a template that the DAC office has reviewed.
Stage two — DAC consultation. The DAC meets quarterly in most dioceses. The DAC issues a Notification of Advice, which is usually one of: recommended, recommended with conditions, no objection, or objection. For a well-prepared solar application on a non-listed or Grade II building, the typical outcome is “no objection” or “recommended with conditions”. Grade II* and Grade I cases usually require Historic England consultation, which adds 6–10 weeks.
Stage three — petition and grant. Once the DAC has issued its Notification of Advice, the petition goes to the Chancellor. For non-contested applications the faculty is typically granted in 4–8 weeks. The grant document specifies any conditions (e.g. panel colour, fixings, removability) and authorises the work.
Total timescale from PCC resolution to faculty grant for Hull parish churches: typically 10–18 weeks for non-listed and Grade II buildings, extending to 18–26 weeks for Grade II* and Grade I, and occasionally longer where SPAB or the Victorian Society lodge formal observations.
For Catholic, Methodist, URC, Baptist and independent free-church buildings in Hull, there is no equivalent to faculty jurisdiction. Listed-building works follow the civil regime via Hull City Council’s heritage planning team. Non-listed free-church buildings need only standard planning consent (often Permitted Development for rooftop PV on non-domestic buildings under Class A Part 14 of the GPDO 2015).
Hull City Council, Hull Carbon Neutral 2030 Plan, and what it means for your project
Humber Freeport unlocks Enhanced Capital Allowances. Saltend chemical cluster represents major industrial decarbonisation context. The council’s planning service treats rooftop solar PV as Permitted Development for most non-listed commercial and community buildings. For listed places of worship in conservation areas — which covers most heritage parish churches in central Hull — Listed Building Consent or planning permission is required, and the council’s heritage team applies the relevant guidance from Historic England’s Energy Efficiency and Historic Buildings series and the Church of England’s Faculty Online heritage guidance.
Hull’s net zero target of 2030 means Hull City Council is actively supporting community-sector decarbonisation. Church buildings, as community assets used by uniformed organisations, food banks, baby groups, choirs, dementia cafés, drop-in centres, mental health support groups and many others, fit squarely within the council’s community resilience and net zero strategies. We have found Hull’s planning team consistently constructive on church solar applications.
Where a Hull parish hall is unlisted (as most are) and sits within the curtilage of a listed church, the curtilage classification matters: a hall within the curtilage of a Grade II* church can still attract faculty jurisdiction. We always confirm the legal curtilage with the diocesan registrar before assuming a hall is exempt.
Local cost data — what Hull churches actually pay
A typical Hull parish church (a Grade II Victorian building seating 150–250, used Sunday-only with occasional weddings and funerals) spends £4,000–£8,000 a year on electricity. Where the parish also has an active hall — children’s groups, hires, drop-in centres — combined electricity bills typically rise to £8,000–£15,000. Larger town-centre Hull churches with school, café and active community use can reach £20,000–£35,000 a year. The Catholic and Methodist equivalents are broadly similar; cathedrals in any tradition spend significantly more (£50,000–£300,000 a year is common).
For a Hull church solar PV installation in 2026, indicative cost per kW is:
- £1,100–£1,400 per kW for parish church installs of 8–25 kW (specialist heritage work, often with bespoke fixings)
- £950–£1,200 per kW for hall and curtilage installs of 15–40 kW (much simpler work)
- £850–£1,050 per kW for combined church-plus-hall schemes above 40 kW
- £800–£950 per kW for cathedrals and very large schemes (50+ kW)
A 16 kW system on a typical Hull parish church costs roughly £18,000–£28,000 turnkey. After Buildings for Mission funding (covering 50–70% of capex on a typical award), the parish’s net cost is often £6,000–£14,000 — recoverable through electricity savings in 6–10 years. The Listed Places of Worship Grant Scheme reimburses the VAT (20%) for listed buildings, effectively a further discount.
Postcodes and parishes covered in Hull
We cover all Hull postcode districts:
HU1, HU2, HU3, HU4, HU5, HU6, HU7, HU8, HU9, HU10, HU11, HU13, HU16, HU17
Within those postcodes we work with parishes across the city and surrounding deaneries. Recent and current parish enquiries include congregations from Beverley, Cottingham, Hessle, Withernsea, where the parish-church and free-church footprint is denser per square mile than the city-centre wards.
Notable Hull-area church buildings include Hull Minster (Holy Trinity, the largest medieval parish church in England by floor area), St Mary Lowgate, St Charles Borromeo (RC, Pugin). Cathedral-scale solar is a separate workstream — cathedrals have their own fabric committee oversight under the Care of Cathedrals Measure 2011 and engagement with the Cathedrals Fabric Commission for England (CFCE) for Grade I cathedrals — and we are happy to engage on cathedral feasibility, but the typical PCC enquiry comes from parish-scale buildings of 8 kW to 35 kW.
Eco Church and the wider parish energy strategy in Hull
A growing number of Hull parishes have registered with A Rocha’s Eco Church scheme — over 50 Eco Church registered parishes. Eco Church awards Bronze, Silver and Gold credits across five categories, with renewable-energy installations contributing meaningfully to the Buildings category. Pairing a solar PV installation with the Eco Church audit gives parishes a structured way to communicate the work to the congregation and the wider community.
Beyond solar, parish energy strategies in Hull now routinely consider: LED lighting upgrades (typically 50–70% reduction in lighting load, payback 2–4 years), pew-heater controls (replacing always-on resistive heaters with motion-controlled or hire-day-only operation), insulation of ancillary spaces (vestry, kitchen, hall ceiling), heat pump retrofit for the hall, and shared-meter arrangements where the church, hall and vicarage are on the same site. We can model the full pathway, not just the solar component.
Why Hull PCCs choose specialist installers
The most common reason Hull PCCs come back to us rather than the cheapest local commercial installer is the faculty pathway. A generalist commercial solar installer who has never written a Statement of Significance, never engaged a DAC, and never sat through a chancellor’s consistory court will typically produce an application that the DAC office sends back for redrafting. That adds 8–16 weeks to the project and frequently triggers a renegotiation of capex.
The second reason is the grant case. Buildings for Mission and diocesan capital grants require a project case that is grounded in carbon, congregational mission, and stewardship — not just the financial return on investment. We draft the grant application alongside the technical proposal.
The third reason is heritage sensitivity. Black-on-black panels, in-roof flush mounting, careful slope selection (chancel south slope is often more visually acceptable than nave roof for medieval buildings), and reversibility of fixings all matter to DACs and Historic England. We design for these from the outset.
A Hull church solar project — what to expect
For a typical Hull parish solar project, the timeline is:
- Months 1–2: PCC discussion, desk feasibility, parish meeting, indicative proposal
- Months 2–3: On-site survey, formal proposal, PCC vote, faculty Statement of Significance/Needs prepared
- Months 3–4: Faculty / Listed Building Consent application submitted, DAC consultation
- Months 4–6: Faculty granted, grant applications submitted (Buildings for Mission etc.)
- Months 6–9: Grant approval, contract signed, DNO G98 connection application
- Months 9–11: Install on site (1–3 weeks physical work), commissioning, monitoring active
- Months 11–12: Eco Church credit logged, parish magazine feature, official switch-on if desired
Throughout that timeline the PCC’s only obligations are: chair a project lead (often the churchwarden or treasurer), make decisions at three or four PCC meetings, and host the on-site survey and install. The rest — paperwork, technical design, grant writing, faculty application, DNO liaison, install management — sits with us.
Get in touch — free feasibility for Hull parishes
If you are a PCC member, churchwarden, treasurer or parish administrator in Hull (or the wider East Yorkshire area: Beverley, Cottingham, Hessle), we offer a free, no-obligation desk feasibility study for your church and/or hall. You provide a year of electricity bills and a few roof photos; we provide a PCC-ready feasibility report within 7 working days, including indicative system size, expected generation, capex range, available grant routes, and payback model.
We will be honest if your numbers do not add up — that happens, particularly for very small Sunday-only churches with no hall and no grant route available. In that case we will tell you the most realistic alternative (often: hall solar later, LED lighting and pew-heater controls now). The PCC then has a clear decision to make.
Request a free feasibility for your Hull church or call us on +44 800 123 4567.
Postcodes covered in Hull
- HU1
- HU2
- HU3
- HU4
- HU5
- HU6
- HU7
- HU8
- HU9
- HU10
- HU11
- HU13
- HU16
- HU17