Panasonic EverVolt H 410W vs JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W wins this comparison by a decisive margin. It offers better long-term durability with 25-year warranty. For most residential installations, the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is the stronger choice.
Key Differences
- • Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is rated at 410W while JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W is rated at 430W, a 20W difference.
- • JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W achieves 22% efficiency vs 21.6% for the other, a 0.4 percentage point gap.
- • Panasonic EverVolt H 410W comes with a 25-year product warranty vs 15 years for the other.
- • Panasonic EverVolt H 410W has a superior temperature coefficient of -0.26%/°C vs -0.29%/°C, retaining more power in hot climates.
- • Panasonic EverVolt H 410W uses HJT (Heterojunction) cells while JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W uses TOPCon N-type cells, representing different technology generations.
Specifications Breakdown
Module Efficiency
The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W achieves 22% module efficiency compared to Panasonic EverVolt H 410W's 21.6%, meaning JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W converts 0.4 percentage points more sunlight into electricity per square meter. In practical terms, the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W produces 210.0 watts per square meter of panel area while the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W produces 220.2 W/m². For rooftop installations where space is limited, this efficiency gap determines how many kilowatts you can fit on your available roof area. Over a 25-year system life, even a small efficiency advantage compounds into meaningful additional energy production.
Power Output
The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W delivers 430W per panel versus 410W for the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W, a 20W difference per module. To build an 8 kW residential system, you would need 20 Panasonic EverVolt H 410W panels or 19 JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W panels. Choosing the higher-wattage option saves 1 panel, reducing total racking hardware, wiring, and installation labor costs. Higher wattage per panel is particularly valuable for commercial-scale installations where panel count directly impacts balance-of-system costs.
Temperature Coefficient
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W has a temperature coefficient of -0.26%/°C versus -0.29%/°C for the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W. On a hot summer day when cell temperature reaches 65°C (40°C above the 25°C STC baseline), the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W retains 94.8% of its rated power while the other retains 94.2%. While the numerical gap is modest, it still accumulates over decades of summer production, especially in southern latitudes with prolonged peak heat hours.
Warranty Coverage
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is backed by a 25-year product warranty and 25-year performance guarantee, while the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W offers 15-year product and 30-year performance coverage. The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W provides 10 additional years of defect protection, covering manufacturing issues, material failures, and premature performance loss. Based on their published degradation rates (0.5% first year then 0.35%/year for Panasonic EverVolt H 410W; 1% first year then 0.4%/year for JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W), after 25 years the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W should retain approximately 91.1% of original output versus 89.4% for the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W. This 1.7 percentage point gap in end-of-life output meaningfully impacts lifetime energy economics.
Physical Dimensions & Weight
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W measures 1722×1134×30mm and weighs 21.5 kg, while the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W measures 1722×1134×30mm at 21 kg. 1.95 m² of panel area for the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W versus 1.95 m² for the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W. Their weights are closely matched, so neither panel imposes a significantly different structural load on the mounting system. Similar footprints mean both panels fit comparably on standard residential rooftop configurations.
Specification Comparison
| Specification | Panasonic EverVolt H 410W | JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W |
|---|---|---|
| Power | 410W | 430W |
| Efficiency | 21.6% | 22% |
| Power Density | 19.5 W/sq ft | 20.5 W/sq ft |
| Cell Type | HJT (Heterojunction) | TOPCon N-type |
| Bifacial | Yes | Yes |
| Weight | 21.5 kg | 21 kg |
| Temp Coefficient | -0.26%/°C | -0.29%/°C |
| Snow Load | 5400 Pa | 5400 Pa |
| Wind Load | 2400 Pa | 2400 Pa |
| Product Warranty | 25 years | 15 years |
| Performance Warranty | 25 years | 30 years |
| Degradation (Year 1) | 0.5% | 1% |
| Annual Degradation | 0.35% | 0.4% |
| Country | Japan | China |
5-Dimension Head-to-Head Analysis
1. Efficiency & Power Density
Winner: JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430WThe JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W achieves 22% efficiency versus 21.6% — a 0.4 percentage point advantage. On a typical 30-panel residential roof, this translates to approximately 0.6 kW more total system capacity, or 3 kWh more annual production in an average US location.
2. Hot Climate Performance
Winner: Panasonic EverVolt H 410WThe Panasonic EverVolt H 410W has a better temperature coefficient of -0.26%/°C versus -0.29%/°C. On a 45°C summer day (20°C above STC), the winner retains 94.8% of rated power versus 94.2%. The difference is modest but accumulates over 25 years of summer production.
3. Durability & Warranty
Winner: Panasonic EverVolt H 410WPanasonic EverVolt H 410W leads with a 25-year product warranty versus 15 years. Panasonic EverVolt H 410W degrades more slowly at 0.35% per year versus 0.4%. After 25 years, expect 91.1% vs 89.4% of original output for Panasonic EverVolt H 410W and JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W respectively.
4. Power Output
Winner: JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430WThe JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W delivers 430W versus 410W per panel — 20W more. For an 8 kW system, you need 19 panels with the higher-wattage option versus 20 panels, saving 1 panels and the associated racking and labor costs.
5. Cell Technology
Winner: Panasonic EverVolt H 410WThe Panasonic EverVolt H 410W uses HJT (Heterojunction): HJT (Heterojunction) combines crystalline silicon with amorphous silicon layers, delivering the best temperature coefficient and bifacial gains, but at higher manufacturing cost. The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W uses TOPCon N-type: TOPCon (Tunnel Oxide Passivated Contact) adds a thin tunnel oxide layer to reduce recombination losses, achieving higher efficiency than PERC while being manufacturable on existing production lines. HJT (Heterojunction) represents a newer generation technology with a longer performance runway as manufacturing matures.
Panasonic EverVolt H 410W
DISCONTINUED: Panasonic exited solar manufacturing in 2023. The EverVolt H delivered 410W HJT performance in a compact residential format backed by Panasonic's 25-year complete warranty.
Pros
- + 25-year product warranty
- + HJT technology
- + Excellent temperature performance
- + Compact design
Cons
- - DISCONTINUED - no longer manufactured
- - No new units available
- - No ongoing product support
JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W
The Tiger Neo S is JinkoSolar's compact N-type residential panel, delivering 430W in a space-efficient format for standard roof sizes.
Pros
- + Compact N-type panel
- + Good residential size
- + JinkoSolar quality
- + 30-year warranty
Cons
- - Lower wattage vs larger models
- - Moderate efficiency
- - Standard sizing
Choose Panasonic EverVolt H 410W If...
- ✓ Long-term warranty protection is a top priority and you plan to stay in your home for 25+ years
- ✓ You live in a hot climate (Arizona, Texas, Florida) where heat performance matters
- ✓ You want maximum output retention over the system's 25-30 year lifespan
- ✓ You prefer newer cell technology with a longer performance improvement runway
- ✓ No longer available for new installations.
Choose JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W If...
- ✓ Your roof space is limited and you need maximum power per panel
- ✓ You want fewer panels to reach your target system size, reducing racking and labor costs
- ✓ You prefer newer cell technology with a longer performance improvement runway
- ✓ Standard residential rooftops wanting compact N-type performance from JinkoSolar.
Our Recommendation
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is the decisive winner in this solar panel comparison, outperforming the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W in 3 of 5 dimensions. Unless you have a specific requirement that the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W uniquely addresses, the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is the stronger choice for virtually every installation scenario.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better, Panasonic EverVolt H 410W or JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W?
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W wins this comparison by a decisive margin. It offers better long-term durability with 25-year warranty. For most residential installations, the Panasonic EverVolt H 410W is the stronger choice.
Which panel is more efficient, Panasonic EverVolt H 410W or JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W?
The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W at 22% module efficiency. Higher efficiency means more watts per square foot of roof space, which is critical for space-constrained installations. The difference of 0.4 percentage points translates to approximately 20W per panel under standard test conditions.
Which has a better warranty, Panasonic EverVolt H 410W or JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W?
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W comes with a 25-year product warranty and 25-year performance guarantee. The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W offers 15-year product and 30-year performance warranties. Panasonic EverVolt H 410W provides 10 additional years of product coverage.
Which panel performs better in hot weather?
The Panasonic EverVolt H 410W has a temperature coefficient of -0.26%/°C and the JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W is -0.29%/°C. Panasonic EverVolt H 410W retains more power in heat — important in states like Arizona, Texas, and Florida. A lower (less negative) temperature coefficient is better.
How many Panasonic EverVolt H 410W vs JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W panels do I need for an 8 kW system?
For an 8 kW system: you need 20 Panasonic EverVolt H 410W panels (410W each) or 19 JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W panels (430W each). The JinkoSolar Tiger Neo S 430W requires fewer panels, saving on racking hardware and installation labor.
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Last updated: February 2026