Understanding UL 61730: The Safety Standard Every Solar Buyer Should Know

What Is UL?
UL (Underwriters Laboratories) is a globally recognized third-party safety testing organization founded in 1894. In the US, UL is accredited by OSHA as a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) — which means its certifications carry legal weight. When a product bears the UL mark, an independent lab has physically tested samples of that product and verified it meets specific safety standards.
UL certification is not a self-declaration. The manufacturer cannot simply fill out a form. UL engineers test actual production samples, and manufacturers must maintain ongoing factory inspections to keep certification active.
UL 61730: The Current Standard
UL 61730 is the current safety standard for flat-plate photovoltaic modules in North America, adopted in 2019 to replace the older UL 1703 standard. It aligns directly with the international IEC 61730 standard — meaning a panel certified to UL 61730 meets the same safety requirements as panels used in utility-scale installations in Europe, Australia, and Japan.
UL 61730 has two parts:
- UL 61730-1: Construction requirements — how the panel must be built, what materials are acceptable, how junction boxes must be sealed
- UL 61730-2: Safety qualification testing — a comprehensive series of pass/fail tests the panel must survive
What Does UL 61730 Actually Test?
Mechanical Tests
- Static load test: Panel survives 2,400 Pa (equivalent to 50 mph wind) applied to front and back for 1 hour each
- Hail impact test: 25mm ice balls fired at 23 m/s (51 mph) at 11 points — no cracking, delamination, or power loss >5%
- Thermal cycling: 200 cycles between -40°C and +85°C while connected
- Humidity freeze: 10 cycles with 85% humidity followed by -40°C freeze
- Damp heat: 1,000 hours at 85°C and 85% relative humidity
- Wet leakage current: Panel immersed in water while at full rated voltage
- Dielectric withstand: High-voltage test at 2× system voltage + 1,000V
- Ground continuity: All exposed metal parts connected to ground terminal
- Class A (highest), B, or C rating based on fire spread on a simulated roof structure
- Class A is required in most US jurisdictions — all SolarDirect panels carry Class A rating
ETL Listing: The Equivalent Alternative
ETL Listed on Renogy products means tested by Intertek — a different OSHA-accredited NRTL testing to the same UL 61730 standard. ETL Listed panels are fully accepted by AHJs and utilities across the US and Canada. ETL = UL for compliance purposes.
How to Verify Certification
Don't trust the label alone. Verify at:
- UL Product iQ: productiq.ul.com — search by manufacturer or model
- Intertek (ETL): biq.intertek.com — ETL listed products database
What Happens With Uncertified Panels?
Installing uncertified panels:
- Violates NEC 690: Article 690 requires listed equipment for PV systems
- Voids homeowner's insurance: Most policies exclude non-listed electrical equipment damage
- Prevents grid connection: Utilities won't permit interconnection with unlisted equipment
- Fails permit inspection: AHJs will require panel replacement


