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Guide · Grid connection · DNO & regulation

G98 vs G99 solar explained Grid connection standards, Fast Track G99, and DNO applications

Every solar and battery system in the UK must be registered with the Distribution Network Operator before exporting to the grid. G98 is the simple post-installation notification for smaller systems. G99 is the formal pre-installation approval process for larger ones — but most domestic systems that need G99 qualify for Fast Track, which cuts the timeline from three months to four weeks. This guide covers which applies to your system, how each process works, and what to do if registration was never completed.

Written by solar engineers Independent technical advice No brand affiliation
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The 30-Second Answer

G98 vs G99: the core difference

Both G98 and G99 are Engineering Recommendations published by the Energy Networks Association that define how solar generators must connect to and interact with the UK's distribution grid. They replaced the older G83 and G59 standards in 2019. The fundamental difference is about size, process, and timing.

G98
For smaller systems
≤3.68 kW single-phase
Post-installation notification — no prior approval needed
Filed by the installer after installation, typically within 28 days
DNO acknowledges within ~5 business days — no technical review
Covers: most 3–4 kW solar-only installations
Retrospective filing is possible if missed
G99
For larger systems
>3.68 kW export single-phase
Pre-installation approval — must be approved before work begins
Formal application to DNO including system specifications
Fast Track route available for most domestic systems — 20 business days
Standard track: up to 65 business days for complex/large systems
May include conditions: export limits, reactive power, comms
G98 in Detail

G98: the notification procedure for smaller systems

G98 replaced Engineering Recommendation G83 in 2019. It covers single-phase micro-generators up to 3.68 kW, and three-phase generators up to 11.04 kW (three times the single-phase limit). The vast majority of pre-2020 domestic solar installations were registered under G83, and those registrations remain valid — no retrospective change is required.

1
Who files it and when

Under G98, the installer (the "competent person" — typically an MCS or NAPIT-registered electrician) files a notification with the DNO after installation, ideally before the system is commissioned but at most within 28 days. The homeowner does not file this themselves. You should receive a copy of the notification confirmation letter from either your installer or the DNO. If you never received one, there is a strong chance the notification was either not filed or was filed without being passed on to you.

Received a letter from your DNO? This is your G98 acknowledgement. It confirms the system is registered, states the date of notification, and may include a reference number. Keep it — you will need it for SEG applications, property sales, and insurance claims.
2
What the DNO does with a G98 notification

Almost nothing. G98 is a notification procedure, not an approval one — the DNO is being informed, not consulted. The DNO logs the notification, acknowledges receipt, and adds the generation unit to their network records. No network study is carried out. The DNO cannot reject a G98 notification; they can only acknowledge it. This is why G98 is fast and straightforward compared to G99.

The DNO uses G98 data for network planning — knowing how many small generators are connected to each feeder helps them manage voltage and capacity. This is also why, in areas with high solar density, the DNO may eventually require G99 even for small new systems — the cumulative effect of many G98-registered systems starts to affect the network.

3
Technical requirements set by G98

G98 sets the technical standards the inverter must meet to be connected: voltage limits (must disconnect if grid voltage goes outside ±10% of 230 V), frequency limits (must disconnect if frequency goes outside 47–52 Hz), reconnection delay (minimum 20 seconds after grid returns to normal range before the inverter reconnects), and anti-islanding protection (must disconnect from the grid within 2 seconds of a power cut).

All CE/UKCA-marked solar inverters sold in the UK are pre-configured to comply with G98. Your installer should verify the settings at commissioning and document them in the commissioning report.

4
G98 and export limits

G98 does not inherently impose an export limit — it is a connection notification, not an export consent. However, if your DNO's network is congested, they may require a zero-export configuration even for G98-registered systems. This is communicated separately, usually as a condition when the installer checks with the DNO before installation. If your system exports freely and the export causes no problems, you will not receive such a restriction. See our export limitation guide for full detail on how DNO limits work in practice.

G99 in Detail

G99: the approval process for larger systems

G99 replaced Engineering Recommendations G59 (for larger generators) and parts of G83 in 2019. It applies to any generator above the G98 thresholds, or in areas where the DNO requires formal assessment regardless of size. Unlike G98, G99 requires prior written approval from the DNO — you cannot legally connect a G99-scope system without the approval letter in hand.

1
When G99 applies

G99 is required when: your system's maximum export capacity exceeds 3.68 kW on a single-phase connection (or 11.04 kW on three-phase); you are in a DNO-designated constrained network area where G99 is required for all new generators regardless of size; you are upgrading an existing G98 system in a way that increases export capacity above the G98 threshold; or your system type requires additional technical assessment (three-phase large battery, virtual power plant participation, advanced reactive power control).

Common scenario: An existing 3.5 kW solar system with a new 5 kW GivEnergy hybrid inverter and battery. The original system was G98. The new inverter can export up to 5 kW. Because export capacity now exceeds 3.68 kW, a G99 application (typically Fast Track) is required before the new inverter is commissioned.
2
What a G99 application involves

A G99 application is submitted through the DNO's connections portal. Required information includes: the installation address and MPAN; the type and capacity of the generating unit (inverter make, model, rated export power); the type of connection (single-phase or three-phase); any storage component (battery capacity and max charge/discharge rate); proposed installation date; and the installer's MCS registration number and contact details.

Some DNOs also require a single-line diagram of the proposed installation and a copy of the inverter's G99 compliance certificate. Your installer should handle the application as part of the installation package — it should not fall to the homeowner to navigate the DNO portal.

3
What happens during DNO assessment

For standard (non-Fast-Track) G99, the DNO carries out a network capacity study — they model the effect of your proposed generator on the local feeder voltage, fault level, and thermal loading. If the study identifies a concern, the DNO may impose conditions: a hard export limit (e.g., 3.68 kW), a requirement for the inverter to support reactive power absorption (to help manage voltage rise), or a requirement to install a remote disconnect device allowing the DNO to curtail export in emergencies.

Installation cannot begin without approval: Unlike G98, you must wait for written G99 approval before the system is commissioned. A system connected without G99 approval is in breach of the distribution connection agreement. This can result in the DNO requiring disconnection and refusing future applications.
4
Conditions in G99 approval letters

The G99 approval letter is a legally binding document that specifies how the system may be connected. Conditions may include: a maximum export limit (must be configured in the inverter settings — not doing so is a compliance breach); a power factor or reactive power requirement; a requirement to notify the DNO before commissioning; a requirement for a G99 completion form to be returned after installation; and in some cases, a requirement for annual maintenance records. Keep the approval letter permanently — it is needed for property sales, insurance, and any future upgrade applications.

Fast Track G99

Fast Track G99: the four-week route for most domestic systems

Fast Track G99 was introduced to avoid making homeowners wait three months for a network study when their system is small enough that the DNO can assess it without detailed modelling. For the majority of domestic solar-plus-battery systems that exceed the G98 threshold, Fast Track is the applicable route. Understanding how it works — and its exact timeline rules — is important for planning an installation.

FT1
What Fast Track G99 actually is

Fast Track is a Stage 1 application within the G99 framework. It is available for generating installations that meet a set of standard parameters: single-phase inverters exporting up to 50 kW, or three-phase up to 50 kW total, using standard MCS-certified equipment and connecting in areas where the DNO does not have an immediate objection on network capacity grounds. The key distinction from standard G99 is the timeline: under Fast Track, the DNO has just 20 business days (approximately four weeks) to respond. Under standard G99, the timeline is 65 business days (approximately 13 weeks).

FT2
The deemed-approval rule

This is the most important aspect of Fast Track: if the DNO does not respond within 20 business days, the connection is deemed approved. The applicant can proceed with installation as if written approval had been received. This is a legal provision within Engineering Recommendation G99 designed to prevent DNO administrative delays from holding up compliant installations indefinitely.

In practice: Most DNOs respond to Fast Track applications within 5–10 business days for straightforward domestic systems. The deemed-approval provision is a safety net, not a common occurrence. However, if your installer submits a Fast Track application and the DNO approaches the 20-day deadline without responding, you are entitled to treat silence as approval and proceed — your installer should document the submission date and the elapsed time as evidence.
FT3
When Fast Track is and is not available

Fast Track is available when: the total export capacity is 50 kW or less; the equipment is standard (listed or type-tested); and the DNO's pre-application check does not flag the connection point as a network constraint area. Fast Track is not available — and standard G99 applies — when: the system is above 50 kW; the DNO has flagged the area as having capacity issues that require a network study; the connection involves non-standard equipment or configuration; or the application is for a variation to an existing G99 approval where the change increases export significantly.

Pre-application check recommended: Before submitting a formal Fast Track application, most DNOs offer a free pre-application enquiry where you provide the address and proposed system size, and they confirm whether Fast Track is available or whether a network study will be required. This avoids submitting an application only to be escalated to standard G99 track.
FT4
What Fast Track approval typically includes

A Fast Track G99 approval letter typically specifies: the maximum export limit (often set at the inverter's rated output, e.g., 5 kW, or reduced to 3.68 kW in certain areas); a requirement to configure the export limit in the inverter before commissioning; a G99 Stage 2 (commissioning) form to be returned by the installer after installation is complete; and contact details for DNO notification before the system goes live.

The export limit set in the Fast Track approval must be configured in the inverter settings. This is a legal compliance requirement — not just a recommendation. Your installer should verify and document this at commissioning. If the export limit was not configured at installation, it can usually be added retrospectively through the inverter portal, but you should confirm the correct value from your approval letter before making changes. See our export limitation guide for how inverter export limiting works in practice.

FT5
Fast Track timeline compared to standard G99 and G98

Understanding the timelines helps with installation planning — particularly for jobs where the customer wants a confirmed date.

G98
5 days
DNO acknowledgement (post-install). No block on installation date.
Fast Track G99
20 days
Must be submitted and approved before installation. Deemed approved if no response.
Standard G99
65 days
Network study required. Must be approved before installation. No deemed-approval rule.
Decision Guide

Which standard applies to my system?

The determining factor is your system's maximum export capacity — not the panel array size, battery capacity, or inverter generation rating. Export capacity is what the inverter can push onto the grid simultaneously at maximum output.

Solar-only system, 3.68 kW inverter or smaller (most pre-2020 installations)

G98 applies. Your installer should have filed a G98 notification (or G83 under the old standard). You should have a DNO acknowledgement letter. If you do not have one, contact your installer or DNO to check the record. Retrospective filing is possible.

Solar-plus-battery system, hybrid inverter rated above 3.68 kW export

G99 (likely Fast Track) applies. This covers most modern hybrid installations: GivEnergy 5 kW, Solis 6 kW, Growatt 6 kW, Fox ESS H3 6 kW, Sunsynk 5 kW. Your installer must have submitted and received G99 approval before commissioning. Check your documentation — you should have a G99 approval letter, not just an MCS certificate.

Adding a battery to an existing G98-registered solar system

Depends on the new inverter's export capacity. If you are replacing a 3.5 kW string inverter with a 3.68 kW hybrid inverter (same export capacity), a G98 variation notification may suffice. If you are replacing it with a 5 kW hybrid inverter, G99 Fast Track is required before work begins. Confirm with your installer before booking the installation — not after.

System above 50 kW, commercial installation, or DNO-flagged area

Standard G99 (network study required). Allow 13 weeks minimum from application submission. A network study fee is typically charged by the DNO. The approval may include complex conditions including reactive power management, remote disconnect, and ongoing monitoring requirements.

?
Bought a house with solar and unsure what paperwork exists

Check your conveyancing documents for a DNO letter. If one is not present, request the DNO check your property's MPAN for existing G98/G99 records. Our bought house with solar section covers the full process for understanding an inherited system, including how to check DNO registration status without the original installer's involvement.

Not sure which standard applies to your system?

A remote diagnostic includes a documentation review — we confirm your G98/G99 status, identify any compliance gaps, and advise on the correct path to resolve them.

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DNO Variations

Changing an existing approval: DNO variation applications

Once a G98 notification has been filed or G99 approval granted, changes to the system that affect grid connection parameters require a variation. The variation process is similar to the original application but usually faster, since the DNO already has your installation on record.

V1
What triggers a variation requirement

You need a variation to your existing registration when: you replace the inverter with a model of different capacity; you add a battery that increases export capacity; you add additional solar panels that change the generation unit's characteristics; you change the export limit settings beyond what the current approval allows; or your system changes from single-phase to three-phase. Minor changes — replacing like-for-like components with identical specifications — typically do not require a formal variation, but your installer should confirm this with the DNO before proceeding.

V2
Requesting a higher export limit through a G99 variation

If your current G99 approval includes an export limit that is lower than your inverter's capability, you can request a variation to increase it. Submit a variation application through the DNO's connections portal, explaining the proposed change. The DNO carries out a network assessment and may approve, approve with revised conditions, or decline if the network cannot support additional export. There is usually an administrative fee, and the timeline is typically 20 business days for smaller variations.

Common frustration: If your inverter is capable of 5 kW export but your G99 approval only allows 3.68 kW, you are not getting full value from your system. A variation application is the only legal route to increase this — you cannot simply change the setting in the inverter. See the export limit issues page if your current limit is causing problems.
V3
Escalating from G98 to G99 for an upgrade

When an existing G98-registered system is upgraded in a way that increases export capacity above 3.68 kW, you do not file a variation to the G98 registration — instead, you file a new G99 application (typically Fast Track). The G99 approval supersedes the G98 notification for the upgraded system. Your installer must submit the G99 application and receive approval before the new inverter or battery is commissioned, even if the physical solar panels are unchanged.

Missing Paperwork

What to do if G98 or G99 paperwork is missing

Many homeowners discover that their solar system was never registered with the DNO — either because the installer never filed the paperwork, the installer has since gone out of business, or the documentation was not passed on at point of sale. This is fixable in almost all cases.

1
Check if it was filed but not passed on to you

Many installers filed the notification correctly but never gave the homeowner a copy. Contact your DNO with your property's MPAN number (found on any electricity bill) and your installation address. Ask them to check whether a G98 notification or G99 application has been recorded for your property. If the DNO has a record, request a copy of the acknowledgement or approval letter.

2
Retrospective G98 notification

If the DNO has no record and your system is G98-scope (≤3.68 kW), retrospective notification is straightforward. An MCS or NAPIT-registered electrician can file the notification on your behalf using the system's MCS certificate details. Most DNOs accept retrospective G98 notifications without issue, as long as the installer can demonstrate the system meets G98 technical requirements. Cost is typically £50–£200 and takes 1–3 weeks.

3
Retrospective G99 for larger systems

If your system is G99-scope and was never approved, the DNO may require a full retrospective G99 application — essentially treating it as a new application. The DNO will carry out their standard assessment and may impose conditions including an export limit. If the system has been operating without approval and export has been causing network problems, the DNO may require temporary curtailment while the study is carried out. This is rare but does occur.

Installer gone bust? See our dedicated guide on recovering DNO paperwork when your installer has gone out of business — including how to check registration status, who can file retrospectively, and what documentation to request.
4
Why this matters beyond compliance

Missing DNO registration causes practical problems beyond the technical compliance issue: Smart Export Guarantee suppliers require DNO registration evidence before activating export payments — missing paperwork means you are not getting paid for exported power; home insurance policies often require grid-connected generation equipment to be correctly registered; and a property buyer's solicitor will flag missing DNO documentation as a legal issue during conveyance, potentially causing delays or reducing the sale price. Resolving registration proactively is much easier than dealing with it at exchange of contracts under time pressure.

FAQs

Frequently asked questions

G98 applies to solar systems exporting up to 3.68 kW single-phase. The installer notifies the DNO after installation — no prior approval is needed. G99 applies to larger systems or constrained network areas. It requires a formal DNO application and approval before installation begins. Most domestic systems that need G99 qualify for Fast Track G99, where the DNO must respond within 20 business days. Both G98 and G99 set the technical protection standards inverters must meet to connect to the UK grid.

Fast Track G99 is an expedited application route for generators between 3.68 kW and 50 kW export capacity that meet standard connection criteria. The DNO has 20 business days to respond — if they do not respond, the connection is deemed approved. Most domestic solar-plus-battery systems with 5–6 kW hybrid inverters qualify. It is not available if the DNO has flagged the local network as constrained or if the system is above 50 kW. Your installer should confirm eligibility via a pre-application enquiry to the DNO before submitting.

If the new hybrid inverter's export capacity exceeds 3.68 kW single-phase (even if the original solar system was G98-registered), a G99 Fast Track application is required before the new inverter is commissioned. This is one of the most commonly missed compliance steps in battery retrofit projects — the original solar MCS certificate and G98 notification do not cover the new, larger inverter. Your installer must submit G99 before starting work.

The system is non-compliant, but in most cases this is fixable. Retrospective G98 notification is almost always accepted by the DNO and costs £50–£200. For G99-scope systems that were never approved, a retrospective G99 application is more complex but possible. The practical consequences of no registration include: SEG export payments blocked, home insurance potentially invalidated, and problems at property sale. See our DNO paperwork recovery guide for the full process.

Yes, but only by submitting a formal variation application to your DNO. You cannot simply change the inverter setting without updated DNO approval. To request a higher export limit, submit a variation through the DNO's connections portal. The DNO will reassess network capacity at your connection point and may approve, approve with revised conditions, or decline. The variation process typically takes 20 business days. Requesting a lower limit is usually handled as an administrative variation and is faster.

Yes. Most SEG tariff applications require evidence of MCS certification and DNO registration (G98 acknowledgement or G99 approval letter) before export payments are activated. If your system was never registered, you cannot apply for SEG until registration is complete. Some suppliers will back-pay from the registration date once it is resolved; others only pay from the date the application is made. Check your preferred SEG supplier's policy before assuming retrospective payment is available.

Get help

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