SolarEdge begins residential solar inverter exports to Europe

Smart energy technology firm SolarEdge Technologies Inc. has announced it has begun shipping single-phase residential solar inverters to Italy, France, and the Netherlands as of late 2025.
Produced at SolarEdge’s Austin, Texas manufacturing facility, the inverters include a new “single SKU” product concept, which the company says will significantly improve its inventory management. Company officials call this jump across the Atlantic Ocean is a “milestone” in SolarEdge’s global export strategy.
“These shipments reflect our commitment to delivering U.S.-manufactured excellence to customers around the world,” says Pascal de Boer, SolarEdge’s general manager of Europe. “This solution combines power, intelligence, and simplicity. By offering technology that simplifies operations, we help installers and distributors reduce complexity while increasing flexibility, especially important in fast-evolving solar markets.
“This is a significant step forward in accelerating business growth in Europe.”
The shipments are the next step for SolarEdge after the firm began initial product shipments to Australian during Q3 2025. In addition to sending over residential inverters at the end of last year, the company says shipments of commercial and industrial (C&I) solar products is set to begin sometime in early 2026.
“With single SKU, our intention is to simplify everyday logistics and operations for installer and distributor customers,” says Marty Rogers, general manager of North America at SolarEdge. “For an installer: simplified part count, for distribution: it means simple fulfillment simple order entry less mistakes. Whether PV-only or storage & backup systems, new installations or servicing, there is one single inverter part number solution to buy, design with, stock in the warehouse and in the trucks. Less part numbers to manage, meaning less confusion, less mistakes.”
SolarEdge’s new wide-ranging concept
The new, simplified single SKU product will be known as the Multirange product class in Europe, SolarEdge says. The new concept consolidates all solar power classes into a single inverter for simplification of logistics and installation for customers and corporate partners.
“These are U.S. manufactured products, which are in demand from certain customers (largely C&I) because of our competitive differentiation on cybersecurity vis a vis the Chinese competition,” Rogers says. “It is also the first expansion of the Single SKU concept (multi-range in EU) which greatly simplifies our customers’ logistics and planning.
The company’s residential inverter systems are designed with backup functionality and energy storage support through the SolarEdge ONE energy management system. Touted as an “AI-based personal energy assistant,” the ONE is capable of energy storage support, EV charging integration, grid service support and “future-ready” smart home energy features, the firm says.
The new feature will be a mainstay of SolarEdge’s upcoming products, including the residential solar-focused Nexis solution, representatives say. Sporting simplified and stackable components, plus ease of installation, Rogers says Nexis is a “game changer” for the residential solar market, and an answer to homeowner feedback.
“We heard and understood our customer community’s wishes and challenges they face in the field, and with Nexis we are providing them with a powerful, robust, elegant, and scalable design, that makes installations easy and helps them grow their business,” he says. “Nexis is simple to install with one click stackable lego-like inverter & battery block design, flexible for future upgradability, provides multiple connection points that make a complex site easier to navigate in the field.”
Future inverter models across the C&I segment of the European market will also see changes as the company aims to bring down its SKU numbers.
Nexis modules currently support 13kW in continuous on-grid power, and a Nexis inverter can support between one and 16 battery blocks, the company says. SolarEdge also plans to continue the single SKU approach with its Nexis products for “easier logistics and operations.”