Tottenham Hotspur are set to install 3,770 solar panels across the roof of their stadium, according to a planning application filed with the London Borough of Haringey. The panels would cover most of the roof, with certain areas of the north and south stands excluded.
With each panel rated at 435W, the full installation would generate around 1.64MW — enough, the club says, to power as many as 850 homes annually. Installation is scheduled to begin in September and run for three months, putting completion by the end of 2026, more than seven years after Spurs left White Hart Lane for their current 62,850-capacity home, which also hosts concerts, NFL games and other non-football events alongside a growing group of summer signings.
It’s been a busy transfer window — De Zerbi’s first in charge — with six new arrivals already through the door. Martin Dubravka, Andy Robertson and Marcos Senesi arrived on free transfers from Burnley, Liverpool and Bournemouth respectively, before Jan Paul van Hecke became the first fee-based signing at £52m from Brighton. Spurs then broke their transfer record twice in quick succession: first with Mateus Fernandes’ £85m move from West Ham, then with Sandro Tonali’s £100m arrival from Newcastle just days later.
That level of spending follows back-to-back 17th-place Premier League finishes, with survival only confirmed on the final day of 2025/26 — two points above West Ham. The lack of European football this season means De Zerbi’s squad can focus solely on improving their league position, starting away at Brentford on August 22.

