A few commenters have said this, but the author is in the UK, we just don't have the roof space.

My detached house has less space for solar panels than some smaller homes because all faces of the hip roof are triangular; lots of houses nearby that are semi's or terraced actually end up having more roof space because their roof faces are rectangular.

I managed to have 14x 465W panels total added on the east and south faces of my home, but the installer wanted an extra 40% of the total system price to add 5 more panels (and the 15th they couldn't fit on the south face, for 6 total on the west) because they'd have had to erect additional scaffolding and who knows what else. That was an absurd additional cost so we didn't do it, but that additional generation late into the afternoon would have been great for our peak usage at dinner time. My suspicion is they simply didn't want to do it, because the cost just doesn't add up.

On an overcast day at this time of year I can generate nearly enough to power the "baseline" of the house, but currently I receive 24p/kWh to sell the energy back, and I can charge the batteries at 15p/kWh over night, so I can break even if I can generate just enough to export to cover the night-time charge of the batteries.

I haven't had them long enough to run through winter yet so we'll have to wait and see, but based on the end of this summer, I could probably cover the winter usage with export payback through summer at the current tariff rates when we were generating about 100% more than we were using per day.

I suspect the introductory tariff is far more generous than I'll have access to in a year's time when it expires though.