Every solar inverter datasheet lists the number of MPPTs prominently — but few buying guides explain why this matters. A 110 kW inverter with 12 MPPTs and a 150 kW inverter with 7 MPPTs have fundamentally different yield profiles depending on the roof or array layout. This article explains what an MPPT actually does, why the count matters, and how to choose the right MPPT architecture for your project.

What is MPPT?

Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) is the algorithm an inverter uses to find the optimal operating voltage of a PV string. A PV string's I-V curve has one "knee" — the maximum power point — that shifts continuously with irradiance, temperature, and module condition. The MPPT controller adjusts the operating point dozens of times per second to keep the string at peak power.

The key insight: each MPPT tracks one independent voltage. If multiple strings share an MPPT, all strings are forced to operate at the same voltage — even when their individual optimal voltages differ. The mismatch loss is real and measurable.

When does string mismatch matter?

ScenarioMismatch sourceTypical yield loss
Single roof, same orientation, cleanNone — strings match closely< 0.5%
Two roof orientations (East + West)Different irradiance timing2–4%
Partial shading from chimney / treeOne string fully or partially shaded3–10% on shaded string
Bifacial modules, partial soilingDifferent rear-side gain per row1–3%
Aging system (5+ years)Individual module degradation1–2% (worsens with age)

Sungrow's MPPT architectures

Sungrow's commercial inverter lineup shows two distinct philosophies:

Picking the right architecture

MPPT voltage range matters too

Beyond MPPT count, the MPP voltage range determines how many modules you can put in series. A wider range gives you more design flexibility. Sungrow's SG-CX-P2 series has MPP range 180–1000 V — typically 18–28 modules per string. The SG150CX MPP range starts at 200 V, slightly narrower but supports 48 A per string for current-generation high-power modules.