Recessed Lighting Calculator

Recessed Lighting Calculator -- Free Commercial Tool

Your Layout Results

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Fixtures Needed
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Fixture Spacing
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Wall Offset
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Est. Footcandles
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Rows
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Columns
Fixture Layout Preview
Note: This layout is a planning estimate based on room dimensions, ceiling height, and brightness level. It does not account for fixture beam angle, surface reflectances, obstructions, architectural features, daylight contributions, or local code requirements -- all of which affect real-world light levels. For a precise photometric design using actual fixture IES data, contact FSG's lighting team. Professional lighting design standards are published by the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) and referenced in U.S. Department of Energy building lighting guidelines.
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What This Recessed Lighting Calculator Does

This free tool helps facility managers, electrical contractors, and property owners quickly estimate the number of recessed downlight fixtures needed to properly illuminate any commercial space. By entering your room dimensions, ceiling height, space type, and fixture size, the calculator applies professional lighting design formulas based on IESNA (Illuminating Engineering Society of North America) standards to recommend a fixture count, spacing, wall offset, and estimated footcandle level.

This calculator is designed specifically for recessed downlights -- the round, can-style fixtures that install flush with the ceiling. Select a brightness level based on your space type, choose your fixture, and get an instant fixture count, spacing, wall offset, estimated footcandles, and a visual layout preview. Results include a fixture grid preview showing your exact layout. For warehouses and industrial facilities using high bay or low bay fixtures, see our Warehouse Lighting Calculator.

How to Use the Recessed Lighting Calculator

  1. Enter Room Dimensions

    Measure the length and width of the space in feet, wall to wall. Also enter the floor-to-ceiling height -- this directly influences how far apart fixtures should be spaced. For irregularly shaped rooms, calculate the primary zone first and treat alcoves separately.

  2. Select a Brightness Level

    Choose the brightness level that matches how the space will be used. Low (10 lm/sqft) suits storage areas, corridors, and parking. Medium (20 lm/sqft) covers general offices, retail floors, and lobbies. High (30 lm/sqft) works for task areas, classrooms, and healthcare. Very High (50 lm/sqft) applies to commercial kitchens, display areas, and inspection zones. These levels are based on IES lm/sqft guidelines -- 1 lm/sqft equals 1 footcandle at the work surface.

  3. Choose Your Fixture Type

    Select the downlight size you plan to install and the lumen output field fills in automatically with a typical value. If you have a spec sheet, override the lumen value with the exact number for more precise results. Not sure which fixture you need? Select "I don't know" and the calculator will estimate based on your ceiling height.

  4. Review Your Results

    The calculator returns total fixture count, recommended spacing, wall offset, estimated footcandles delivered, and a rows x columns grid layout. It also checks your result against the IESNA target for your space type and flags whether the layout meets, exceeds, or falls short of standard.

Brightness Level Reference by Space Type

The four brightness levels in this calculator are based on IES (Illuminating Engineering Society) lm/sqft guidelines. Since 1 lm/sqft equals 1 footcandle at the work surface, these levels map directly to IES footcandle targets for commercial spaces.

Brightness LevelLm/SqFt (= fc)Typical Applications
Low10 lm/sqftStorage rooms, parking garages, corridors, inactive areas
Medium20 lm/sqftGeneral office, open retail floor, lobby, restaurant dining, hospital corridor
High30 lm/sqftTask work areas, classrooms, libraries, exam rooms, conference rooms
Very High50 lm/sqftCommercial kitchens, retail display / accent zones, inspection areas

These are planning estimates for initial fixture count and layout. A professional photometric design applies additional factors including coefficient of utilization, light loss factor, fixture beam angle, and surface reflectances for greater accuracy.

Recessed Lighting Calculation Example

A worked example using the formula this calculator applies -- a 40x30 ft open office with 10 ft ceilings using 6-inch LED downlights at Medium brightness (20 lm/sqft).

Inputs

  • Room: 40 ft x 30 ft = 1,200 sq ft
  • Ceiling Height: 10 ft
  • Brightness Level: Medium (20 lm/sqft) -- general office
  • Fixture: 6-inch LED Downlight at 1,000 lm

Calculation

Total Lumens Required = Area x Lm/SqFt = 1,200 x 20 = 24,000 lumens required Number of Fixtures = 24,000 / 1,000 lm = 24 fixtures Fixture Spacing = Ceiling Height x 0.6 = 10 x 0.6 = 6 ft Wall Offset = Spacing / 2 = 6 / 2 = 3 ft

Frequently Asked Questions

The standard rule of thumb is to space recessed fixtures at a distance equal to half to two-thirds the ceiling height. For a 10-foot ceiling, fixtures should be 5 to 7 feet apart. The wall offset -- distance from the first fixture to the wall -- is typically half the fixture-to-fixture spacing. This calculator uses ceiling height x 0.6 as a balanced commercial default.
The 6-inch LED downlight is the most common choice for commercial spaces -- it delivers around 1,000 lumens and suits standard 9–12 ft ceilings in offices, retail, and healthcare. The 4-inch and 5-inch options work well for accent lighting, lower ceilings, or tighter spacing. The 8-inch fixture suits larger rooms or ceilings up to around 14–16 ft. For ceilings above 16 ft, troffers or high-bay fixtures are typically more appropriate than recessed downlights.
A footcandle (fc) is a unit of illuminance equal to one lumen of light per square foot of surface area. It measures how much light actually reaches a surface -- not how bright a bulb is. IESNA and OSHA use footcandle targets to define minimum lighting requirements for commercial facilities. Designing to meet or exceed these standards protects occupants and helps avoid compliance issues during inspections or tenant buildouts.
This calculator is designed for recessed downlights in commercial spaces with ceiling heights up to around 20 feet. For warehouses, distribution centers, and manufacturing facilities that use high bay or low bay fixtures, the calculation method is significantly different. Use our Warehouse and Industrial Lighting Calculator instead -- it's built specifically for those environments and ceiling heights.
This calculator provides a reliable general estimate based on standard IESNA formulas and is useful for early planning, budgeting, and initial layouts. For permitted work, construction documents, or complex facilities, a full photometric analysis using manufacturer IES files is the appropriate next step. FSG's lighting team performs complete photometric designs for commercial projects of any size.
Spacing refers to the distance between individual fixtures. Layout refers to the overall arrangement pattern -- typically a grid of rows and columns. This calculator determines both: it gives you fixture-to-fixture spacing and wall offset, and calculates a rows x columns grid based on your room dimensions. Total fixture count is rows multiplied by columns.

Understanding Your Lighting Layout Results

A lighting layout is the planned arrangement of fixtures across a ceiling grid, designed to deliver uniform illuminance at the required footcandle level for a given space. The layout preview above shows your fixture arrangement as a grid of dots -- each dot represents one fixture positioned at the calculated spacing interval across both the length and width of the room.

Three numbers define any lighting layout: fixture count, fixture spacing, and wall offset. Fixture spacing is the center-to-center distance between adjacent fixtures -- the calculator uses ceiling height x 0.6 as a balanced default for commercial spaces, which keeps the spacing-to-height ratio at 0.6, within the IESNA recommended range of 0.5 to 1.0 for recessed downlights. Wall offset is half the fixture spacing, which positions the first row and column of fixtures away from the perimeter walls to avoid shadows and uneven coverage at the edges of the space.

The LED lighting layout formula used here is the standard IESNA lumen method: total lumens required equals area times target footcandles, divided by the product of the coefficient of utilization and the light loss factor. The fixture count is then total lumens required divided by lumens per fixture, rounded up to the next whole number and reconciled with the grid layout derived from the spacing formula.

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Disclaimer: Results are estimates based on standard IESNA lighting formulas and are intended for planning purposes only. Actual fixture counts may vary based on fixture beam angle, mounting height, reflectances, obstructions, and local code requirements. Always consult a licensed electrical contractor or lighting engineer before finalizing any commercial lighting installation.