Types of Inverters — Off-Grid, Grid-Tied and Hybrid Explained

10 min read

Not all inverters are the same. A solar panel on a rooftop, an off-grid cabin, a grid-connected home that wants to export surplus power, and a factory motor drive all use inverters — but devices that are entirely different in design, function, and capability. Understanding the four main types of inverters is essential for choosing the right one, avoiding costly compatibility mistakes, and getting the most from your energy system.

The four main inverter types — an overview

Inverters are categorised primarily by how they connect to power sources and where the AC output goes. The four types cover the full range of applications from a simple battery-to-appliance converter to a complex multi-source energy management system:

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Off-grid (Stand-alone)
Operates independently from the grid. Takes DC from batteries (charged by solar, wind, or generator) and produces AC for local loads. The inverter is the sole AC source.
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Grid-tied (On-grid)
Synchronises output with the utility grid. Converts solar or other DC generation to grid-compatible AC. Can export surplus energy. Does not operate without grid connection.
Hybrid
Combines off-grid and grid-tied capability. Manages solar, battery, grid and load simultaneously. Can operate with or without grid connection. The most flexible type.
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Variable Frequency Drive (VFD)
Industrial inverter for motor control. Converts AC mains to DC then back to variable-frequency AC. Controls motor speed and torque. Not for general power conversion.

Deep dive — each type explained

Select each type to see how it works, what it includes, and when to use it:

Side-by-side comparison

AttributeOff-gridGrid-tiedHybridVFD
Grid connection None required Required Optional Mains input
Battery storage Essential Not included Integrated Not applicable
Solar MPPT input ~ Some models Standard Standard
Grid export Primary feature Optional
Works during grid outage Always Shuts down From battery
Anti-islanding protection Not needed Required by law Built-in Not applicable
Output frequency Fixed 50/60 Hz Locked to grid Fixed 50/60 Hz Variable 0–400 Hz
Typical power range 500 W – 10 kW 1 kW – 1 MW+ 3 kW – 30 kW 0.2 kW – 1 MW+
Complexity / cost Medium Medium Higher Medium–high
Best application Remote sites, cabins, boats Grid-connected solar homes Homes wanting independence + grid backup Industrial motors, pumps, fans

MPPT explained — why it matters for solar inverters

Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) is one of the most important features in any solar inverter, yet it is also one of the least understood. Understanding it helps you compare inverter specifications meaningfully.

The problem MPPT solves

A solar panel does not produce a fixed voltage and current. Both vary continuously depending on sunlight intensity, panel temperature, and how much current is being drawn. At any given moment, there is a specific combination of voltage and current that extracts the maximum available power from the panel — this is called the Maximum Power Point.

If the inverter simply draws current at a fixed voltage, it will almost never be at the Maximum Power Point. In real-world conditions, a solar system without MPPT can waste 20–30% of available energy.

How MPPT works

An MPPT controller continuously measures the panel voltage and current, calculates the power being produced (P = V × I), slightly adjusts the operating point, and checks whether power increased or decreased. It repeats this process hundreds of times per second, continuously tracking the moving maximum power point as conditions change.

Power Voltage MPP — maximum power point Fixed voltage — suboptimal MPPT tracks this point up to 30% energy lost without MPPT P-V curve

Single MPPT vs multiple MPPT inputs

Higher-end inverters offer two or more independent MPPT inputs, allowing panels on different roof faces (different orientations or tilt angles) to be tracked independently. If panels on an east roof and a west roof are connected to a single MPPT input, the tracker must compromise — neither string is at its maximum power point. Separate MPPT inputs eliminate this compromise and significantly increase total yield in mixed-orientation installations.

What to look for in specifications: When comparing solar inverters, look for: number of MPPT inputs, maximum input voltage per MPPT, MPPT voltage range (wider is better for flexible stringing), and MPPT efficiency (99%+ is excellent). Do not rely on peak efficiency alone — MPPT efficiency at partial load is equally important in cloudy climates.

Which inverter type do you need?

Answer two questions to identify the right inverter type for your situation:

1. What is your energy source?
Hybrid is increasingly the default choice for new residential solar installations. The price premium over a grid-tied-only inverter has narrowed significantly, and the flexibility — self-consumption optimisation, backup power, time-of-use tariff management — makes the additional cost worthwhile for most homeowners. Consider hybrid unless your installation is specifically optimised for maximum-export economics.
Next in this series
How to read an inverter datasheet — watts, efficiency and key specifications explained
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