Royalty-Free Music for Solar Company Videos
Choose tracks for clean power updates, sustainability reports, wind, solar, hydro, and transition messaging

Solar videos need music that feels clear, steady, and credible. A residential install clip should make the work feel simple and professional. A savings explainer should leave room for the numbers. A commercial solar case study should sound confident without turning into a loud promo.
The wrong track can make a good solar video feel cheap, too dramatic, or too generic. The right track supports the message without pulling attention away from panels, crews, product details, customer benefits, or cost explanations.
Choose music based on the solar video type
Different solar videos need different music choices because each format has a different job, pace, and level of detail.
Solar installer videos
A solar installer video usually needs music with motion. The track should make the crew, equipment, and installation process feel organized. Light percussion, clean guitars, soft synths, and steady corporate tracks can work well when the edit shows roof work, panel placement, wiring, and final system checks.
Solar product demos
A solar product demo needs more space. The viewer has to understand the inverter, battery, monitoring app, mounting hardware, or panel features. Choose a track that stays under the voiceover and leaves room for clicks, product sounds, and captions.
Solar savings explainers
A savings explainer needs restraint. The music should support trust while the video explains monthly bills, incentives, payback periods, or long-term cost estimates. Avoid tracks that feel too emotional or too cinematic. The numbers should carry the point.
Residential and commercial solar videos
A residential solar video can feel warmer. Use music that supports home life, lower energy bills, and a cleaner daily routine. A commercial solar video can feel more structured, with a polished track that fits warehouses, offices, farms, schools, and municipal buildings.
Match the track to the buyer’s trust level
Solar buyers usually need clarity before excitement. They may be comparing installers, checking financing, reviewing savings claims, or trying to understand what happens during installation. Music should make the company feel organized, not flashy.
For a homeowner testimonial, pick a track that feels human and calm. Keep the music low during the customer’s voice. Let the story feel real. A track that sounds too glossy can make a simple testimonial feel staged.
For a paid social ad, choose a track that works fast. The first few seconds need clean energy and a clear beat, especially when the video opens with panels, a roof shot, or a strong text hook. Keep it simple enough for captions and spoken lines.
For a sales presentation or commercial proposal video, choose music that sounds professional and steady. The track should fit a business meeting, not a movie trailer. This helps the solar company explain project scope, expected output, installation timing, and long-term savings without sounding exaggerated.
For YouTube, website videos, social posts, ads, and client deliverables, the same rule applies. The track should support the buying decision. It should never compete with the proof.
Check the license before the video goes live
Solar company videos often count as business or commercial use. That includes ads, website videos, branded social posts, client work, product demos, sales videos, and case studies.
Before publishing, check that the music license covers the exact use. A track used in an internal draft may need broader permission when the final video becomes a paid ad, a client deliverable, or a company website asset.
Audiodrome is built for this kind of workflow. You can use royalty-free tracks in finished projects such as videos, ads, podcasts, presentations, social content, and client work, as long as the music stays embedded in the finished project. Keep the raw music file out of client handoffs. Keep the receipt, license terms, track name, and project details in your project folder.
This is especially useful for solar marketers and agencies that create repeat content. One campaign might include a 60-second homepage video, a 15-second paid ad, three short social clips, and a customer testimonial cutdown. A clear music license makes that process easier to manage.

