Hello
we are planning a new semi-detached house.
We want to install a photovoltaic system later on.
We will get the right half shown in the photo. Orientation is southwest.
The photovoltaic system will of course be installed on the southwest side facing the garden.
The black area is the 3x5 m (10x16 ft) terrace, which will later be covered with a fixed terrace roof measuring 4 m (13 ft) deep and 5.5 m (18 ft) wide.
My question is whether it will still be possible to install a photovoltaic system on the roof once the fixed terrace roof is there?
If the terrace roof is on the southwest side in the garden, it will no longer be possible to set up scaffolding.
For maintenance or in case of problems, access to the photovoltaic system will be necessary later on (is access without scaffolding not possible?)
Or can the photovoltaic system be installed without scaffolding?
The house will have a gable roof and 2.5 full stories.
we are planning a new semi-detached house.
We want to install a photovoltaic system later on.
We will get the right half shown in the photo. Orientation is southwest.
The photovoltaic system will of course be installed on the southwest side facing the garden.
The black area is the 3x5 m (10x16 ft) terrace, which will later be covered with a fixed terrace roof measuring 4 m (13 ft) deep and 5.5 m (18 ft) wide.
My question is whether it will still be possible to install a photovoltaic system on the roof once the fixed terrace roof is there?
If the terrace roof is on the southwest side in the garden, it will no longer be possible to set up scaffolding.
For maintenance or in case of problems, access to the photovoltaic system will be necessary later on (is access without scaffolding not possible?)
Or can the photovoltaic system be installed without scaffolding?
The house will have a gable roof and 2.5 full stories.
Deliverer schrieb:
You should carefully calculate whether it makes more sense to handle a bit more tax paperwork for five years in order to reclaim the input tax (VAT). Since this is particularly beneficial for large systems with a relatively low self-consumption rate, it is probably not practical for most people to have a system over 10 kWp classified as a hobby activity.These are unrelated matters. The hobby classification concerns income tax—the input tax (VAT) can still be reclaimed even if the system is classified as a hobby activity.D
Deliverer22 Jan 2022 11:07That's right. There was something. Since none of our systems fit into the scheme, I probably didn’t look into it thoroughly enough.
@halmi: I said nothing different. The amateur setups (up to 10 kW peak) have nothing to do with the renewable energy surcharge on self-consumption (up to 30 kW peak). Both are separate steps in the right direction with unnecessary, artificial limits.
@halmi: I said nothing different. The amateur setups (up to 10 kW peak) have nothing to do with the renewable energy surcharge on self-consumption (up to 30 kW peak). Both are separate steps in the right direction with unnecessary, artificial limits.
The original question was quite simple: why is the system being planned with 11 kWp instead of the supposed 10 kWp? My answer was that the old 10 kWp limit no longer exists, and now it doesn't matter whether I plan 9.99 or 11 kWp.
How you handle it with the tax authorities is up to you.
Nothing more, nothing less. Ten posts later, the discussion is somewhere completely different, and it’s overtalked to death…
How you handle it with the tax authorities is up to you.
Nothing more, nothing less. Ten posts later, the discussion is somewhere completely different, and it’s overtalked to death…
D
Deliverer22 Jan 2022 11:38halmi schrieb:
that there is no longer a 10 kWp limit as before, and now it does not matter whether I plan 9.99 or 11 kWp.People are just talking nonsense because that is not true. A new artificial limit of 10 kWp has been introduced.When I spoke with the tax office back then about registering the system for VAT purposes, the official clearly advised me to choose the <10 kWp rule, as otherwise they would eventually classify it as a hobby activity.
If I calculate for the tax office that I am not making a profit with 6.x cents per kWh within the scope of depreciation, wouldn’t they still be able to classify it as a hobby activity?
VAT excluded as usual.
If I calculate for the tax office that I am not making a profit with 6.x cents per kWh within the scope of depreciation, wouldn’t they still be able to classify it as a hobby activity?
VAT excluded as usual.
Similar topics