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Solar Irrigation Pumps India: Sizing, Cost & PM KUSUM Guide (2026)

Borewell submersible pump with water flowing for agricultural irrigation

A solar irrigation pump is a water pumping system powered entirely by solar panels — no diesel, no grid electricity, no fuel bills. The panels generate DC electricity during daylight hours, which directly drives a pump (surface or submersible) to lift water from a well, borewell, pond, or canal into your irrigation system. In India, where diesel pump running costs can reach ₹800–1,200 per day and grid power for agriculture is unreliable in most states, solar irrigation pumps have become the most practical alternative for farms of 1 acre and above. Sound too good to be true? It isn't — but the sizing matters a lot.

This guide covers everything a farmer needs to know: types of solar pumps, how to size the system for your farm, real costs, PM KUSUM subsidy details, and the five questions our team at R-Solar gets asked on every site visit.

Surface Pump vs Submersible Solar Pump: Which One Do You Need?

The first decision is the pump type — and it depends entirely on your water source depth.

  • Surface solar pump: Sits above ground; draws water from depths up to 7–8 metres (open wells, ponds, canals, tanks). Cheaper to install, easier to maintain. Best for farmers with open water sources.
  • Submersible solar pump: Installed inside a borewell or deep well; handles depths from 15 to 200+ metres. The standard choice for most Indian agricultural borewells, where water tables have dropped to 20–50 metres in many districts of MP, Rajasthan and Maharashtra.

In our experience across 300+ solar pump installations in Madhya Pradesh, over 80% of agricultural clients need a submersible system — because their borewells are deeper than 15 metres. If you are unsure, a quick borewell depth measurement before purchase saves you from buying the wrong pump type entirely.

Borewell submersible pump with water flowing for agricultural irrigation

Solar Pump HP Sizing: How Much Power Does Your Farm Need?

HP (horsepower) determines how much water the pump can deliver per day. The sizing formula is simple: area × crop water requirement × safety margin. Here is a practical reference table for central Indian conditions (300+ sunny days/year, 8–9 peak sun hours/day):

HP Daily output (30m depth) Suitable farm size Typical crop
1 HP 40,000–50,000 L 1–1.5 acres (drip) Vegetables, soybean, wheat
2 HP 80,000–100,000 L 2–3 acres (drip) Cotton, maize, horticulture
3 HP 120,000–150,000 L 3–5 acres (drip/sprinkler) Banana, sugarcane, onion
5 HP 200,000–250,000 L 5–10 acres (any method) Large farms, multi-crop
7.5–10 HP 350,000–500,000 L 10–25 acres Commercial, community use

Our recommendation: always size up by one HP class from the minimum. A 3 HP system for a 2-acre banana farm will serve you better than a 2 HP system struggling at peak summer demand — and the cost difference is typically ₹40,000–60,000, far less than one season of unmet water stress.

Solar array installed beside crop field powering the irrigation system

Solar Irrigation Pump Cost in India (2026)

The total installed cost of a solar pump system covers panels, pump, controller, mounting structure, and wiring. Prices have dropped 35% over the past five years — and are still falling. Current market benchmarks:

  • 1 HP surface system: ₹1.5–2 lakh installed
  • 2 HP submersible: ₹2–2.8 lakh installed
  • 3 HP submersible: ₹2.5–3.5 lakh installed
  • 5 HP submersible: ₹4–6 lakh installed
  • 7.5 HP submersible: ₹6.5–9 lakh installed

For a farmer currently spending ₹600/day on diesel (common for a 3 HP diesel pump running 6 hours), the payback period on a ₹3 lakh solar system is under 2 years — even without any subsidy. With the PM KUSUM subsidy, payback drops to under 12 months.

PM KUSUM Scheme: The 60% Subsidy You Should Know About

PM KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Uttham Mahabhiyan) Component B provides standalone solar pumps of 2 HP to 10 HP to individual farmers. The subsidy structure:

  • Central government: 30% of benchmark cost
  • State government: 30% of benchmark cost (varies by state — MP, Rajasthan and Maharashtra offer the full 30%)
  • Farmer's share: 40% — which can be financed via KCC or bank loan

The application process varies by state but generally involves: (1) registration on the state agriculture or energy department portal, (2) land ownership documents, (3) borewell or water source verification, and (4) bank account for subsidy disbursement. Processing times range from 3 to 9 months depending on the state's queue. In Madhya Pradesh, applications go through the MPUVN portal.

One thing we tell every farmer who asks: apply first, then wait. Don't hold off on solar because you're waiting for subsidy approval — if you have an urgent irrigation need, buy now and apply for the subsidy simultaneously. The subsidy can often be claimed retroactively within 6 months of installation.

What R-Solar Has Learned from 300+ Agri Installations in MP

We have installed solar water pump systems across Barwani, Khargone, Sendhwa, and surrounding districts of Madhya Pradesh — mostly for smallholder farmers with 2–10 acres under cultivation. Here is what the data from those installs tells us that you won't find in a brochure:

  • Borewell depth matters more than HP. A farmer in Sendhwa with a 120-foot borewell and a 3 HP pump got less water than his neighbour with a 60-foot borewell and a 2 HP pump. Head pressure (depth) is a bigger constraint than motor size at medium depths.
  • East-facing panels outperform west-facing in morning-peak irrigation schedules. Most farmers in our region water in the early morning. A 10–15° east tilt from due south can add 8–12% effective morning output.
  • The cheapest inverter is the most expensive decision. We have seen three no-name MPPT controllers fail within 18 months. A quality MPPT controller costs ₹8,000–15,000 more than a no-brand alternative — and saves two replacements and one crop cycle of downtime.
  • Drip + solar is a compounding investment. Farmers who combine a solar pump with drip irrigation reduce their water requirement by 40–50%, effectively doubling the area their solar system can serve — or halving the HP they need to buy.

If you're in MP and want a site assessment before committing to a system, R-Solar offers free pre-installation borewell depth checks and solar resource assessments for farms in our service area.

Solar Pump Maintenance: What to Expect

Solar irrigation pumps have no moving parts in the electrical system — panels and controllers require almost no maintenance. The pump itself is the only mechanical component. Maintenance checklist:

  • Panels: Clean monthly with water (a wet cloth is enough). Dust accumulation reduces output by 15–25% in the pre-monsoon season in central India. Don't use soap — it leaves residue.
  • Submersible pump: Service annually. Check impeller and motor seals. A well-maintained submersible pump lasts 8–12 years.
  • MPPT controller: Check connections and firmware every 6 months. Surge protectors should be replaced every 3 years in lightning-prone areas.
  • Structure and mounting: Inspect for corrosion and fastener tightness after every monsoon season.

The honest answer on lifespan: quality solar panels carry a 25-year performance warranty (80% output at year 25). The pump is the weakest link at 8–12 years. Budget ₹15,000–25,000 for a pump replacement at year 10 — it's still far cheaper than 10 years of diesel.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a solar irrigation pump cost in India?

A solar irrigation pump system in India costs between ₹1.5 lakh and ₹6 lakh installed, depending on HP capacity. Under the PM KUSUM scheme, the central and state governments together subsidise 60% — a farmer's actual outlay on a 5 HP system can be as low as ₹1.6–2.4 lakh.

What HP solar pump do I need for 1 acre?

For 1 acre under drip irrigation, a 1 HP solar pump is generally sufficient — delivering 40,000–50,000 litres per day from 30-foot depth. For flood or furrow irrigation, or water-intensive crops like banana and sugarcane, use a 2–3 HP pump.

What is the PM KUSUM scheme for solar pumps?

PM KUSUM Component B offers individual farmers a standalone solar water pump (2–10 HP) with 60% subsidy — 30% from the central government and 30% from the state government. The farmer pays 40%, which can also be financed via bank loan. Apply through your state agriculture or energy department portal.

Surface pump or submersible pump — which is better for agriculture?

Use a surface solar pump if your water source is less than 7–8 metres deep (open well, pond). Use a submersible pump if your borewell is deeper than 8 metres — which covers most agricultural borewells in India. R-Solar recommends submersible systems for 80% of our agricultural clients in Madhya Pradesh.

Do solar irrigation pumps work on cloudy days?

Yes, at reduced output. On a 30–50% cloud cover day, the pump runs at 30–50% of rated capacity. In central India (300+ sunny days/year), cloud downtime is minimal. For fixed-schedule irrigation needs, a small battery buffer or conventional backup pump is recommended.