Parking Lot Lighting Calculator

Layout & Pricing

Parking Lot Lighting Layout Calculator
Estimate pole count, spacing, footcandles, and IES RP-8 compliance

Parking Lot Layout Results

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Poles / Fixtures
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Pole Spacing
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Edge Setback
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Est. Avg Footcandles
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Lot Area (sq ft)
Note: This layout is a planning estimate based on lot dimensions, pole height, and IES RP-8 targets. It does not account for pole placement constraints, light trespass at property lines, obstructions, specific fixture photometrics, or local ordinance requirements including full-cutoff dark sky compliance. Uniformity ratio (avg/min) for most commercial lots should not exceed 4:1 per IES RP-8. For a full photometric design using IES files, contact FSG's lighting team. Standards are published by the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) and referenced in DOE building lighting guidelines.
Get a Professional Lighting Design

Already know how many poles and fixtures you need -- or want a rough cost estimate for an LED upgrade? Use the cost estimator below. Fixture count auto-fills from the layout calculator above, or enter your own number.

Parking Lot LED Retrofit Cost Estimator
Budgetary estimate for LED fixture and installation costs

Auto-fills from layout calculator above

Pole replacement adds $800-$1,500 per pole

Budgetary Cost Estimate

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Estimated Total
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Est. Cost per Fixture
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Fixtures
LED Fixture Material (installed price) -
Installation Labor -

Estimated Total Project Cost -
Note: This is a budgetary planning estimate only. Actual costs vary based on site conditions, existing wiring and conduit, pole condition, permit requirements, utility costs, local labor rates, and project scope. Material pricing reflects current LED area light market rates including standard markup. Labor is estimated at a commercial installation midpoint and may vary by region and project complexity. Pole replacement estimate is $800-$1,500 per pole midpoint. This estimate does not include electrical service upgrades, trenching, or photometric engineering fees. For an accurate project quote, contact FSG's commercial lighting team.
Get an Accurate Project Quote

How to Use This Parking Lot Lighting Calculator

The parking lot lighting layout calculator above estimates the number of poles and fixtures needed to illuminate a commercial parking lot to IES RP-8 standards. Enter your lot dimensions, pole height, lot type, and fixture selection -- the calculator returns pole count, pole spacing, edge setback, estimated average footcandles, and a compliance check against IES RP-8 targets for your lot classification.

The cost estimator below converts that fixture count into a budgetary project estimate for an LED retrofit. It accounts for fixture material cost, installation labor, and optional pole replacement. Use the layout calculator first to determine your fixture count, then the cost estimator to get a ballpark budget before contacting FSG for a formal quote. For measuring existing light levels in your parking lot, use our Foot Candle Calculator with a digital light meter.

IES RP-8 Parking Lot Lighting Standards

The Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) RP-8 standard (Recommended Practice for Parking Facilities) sets footcandle targets and uniformity requirements for commercial parking lots and structures. These are the values this calculator uses to evaluate your layout. IES RP-8 also requires a maximum uniformity ratio (average/minimum) of 4:1 for most surface lots and 6:1 for parking structures.

Lot ClassificationIES RP-8 Target (avg fc)Min fcMax Uniformity RatioNotes
Low Activity Surface Lot0.5 fc avg0.1 fc4:1Residential, long-term storage, low-use areas
Medium Activity Surface Lot1.0 fc avg0.2 fc4:1General commercial, office, retail daytime
High Activity Surface Lot2.0 fc avg0.5 fc4:1Retail, entertainment, high-use lots, nighttime
Parking Structure -- General3.0 fc avg1.0 fc6:1Interior parking structure general areas
Parking Structure -- Entry/Exit5.0 fc avg2.0 fc3:1Entry and exit ramps, day/night transition zones
Hospital / Medical Facility2.0 fc avg0.5 fc4:1Emergency and after-hours access requires good illumination
High Security / 24-Hour3.0 fc avg1.0 fc4:124-hour operations, high-security facilities

Parking Lot Pole Height and Fixture Selection Guide

Pole height is the single most important variable in parking lot lighting design. Taller poles cover more area per fixture, reducing the number of poles needed and lowering installation costs -- but require higher-output fixtures to maintain adequate footcandle levels at grade. The relationship between pole height, fixture output, and pole spacing follows the inverse square law: doubling the pole height reduces the illuminance at grade to one quarter unless fixture output is increased proportionally.

Pole HeightTypical Pole SpacingRecommended FixtureLumen RangeBest For
12-15 ft25-35 ftLED Area Light -- Small6,000-10,000 lmSmall lots, canopies, pedestrian areas
15-20 ft35-50 ftLED Area Light -- 100-150W10,000-16,000 lmStandard commercial lots, strip mall parking
20-25 ft50-65 ftLED Area Light -- 150-200W16,000-22,000 lmMid-size retail, office park, hospital lots
25-30 ft60-80 ftLED Area Light -- 200-240W20,000-30,000 lmBig box retail, shopping center, large commercial
30-35 ft70-100 ftLED Floodlight / High Mast28,000-40,000 lmLarge facility lots, distribution center, stadium
35-40 ft90-120 ftHigh Mast LED -- 400W+40,000+ lmIntermodal, airport, campus, high mast applications

Worked Example: 300x150 ft Retail Parking Lot

A 300x150 ft high-activity retail parking lot with 25 ft poles and LED area light fixtures at 20,000 lumens per fixture.

Inputs

  • Lot: 300 ft x 150 ft = 45,000 sq ft
  • Pole Height: 25 ft
  • Lot Type: High Activity (2.0 fc IES RP-8 target)
  • Fixture: LED Area Light 200W at 20,000 lm
  • CU: 0.25 (typical outdoor, wide spacing, dark surroundings)

Calculation

Pole Spacing = Pole Height x 2.5 = 25 x 2.5 = 62.5 ft Edge Setback = Spacing / 2 = 62.5 / 2 = ~31 ft Cols along length = round(300 / 62.5) = 5 columns Rows along width = round(150 / 62.5) = 2 rows Total Poles = 5 x 2 = 10 poles Est. Avg fc = (10 x 20,000 x 0.25) / 45,000 = 1.1 fc IES RP-8 target for high activity: 2.0 fc -- below target, increase output or add poles

Frequently Asked Questions

Per IES RP-8 (Recommended Practice for Parking Facilities), footcandle requirements vary by lot classification. Low-activity lots (residential, storage) need 0.5 fc average. General commercial lots need 1.0 fc average. High-activity retail and entertainment lots need 2.0 fc average. Parking structures require 3.0 fc for general areas and 5.0 fc at entry and exit ramps. These are averages -- IES RP-8 also requires a maximum uniformity ratio of 4:1 (average to minimum) to prevent dark spots that create safety hazards.
Parking lot pole spacing is primarily driven by pole height and fixture output. As a general rule, poles are spaced at 2 to 3 times the pole height for standard LED area lights. A 25 ft pole typically spaces at 50 to 75 ft apart. The edge setback -- distance from the lot edge to the first pole -- is typically half the pole spacing. Tighter spacing improves uniformity but increases pole and installation costs. A photometric layout using actual fixture IES files is the most accurate way to determine final spacing before installation.
For a standard commercial parking lot with 20-25 ft poles targeting 1.0 to 2.0 footcandles, LED area light fixtures in the 16,000 to 24,000 lumen range are typical. At 15-20 ft poles, 10,000 to 16,000 lumens is usually sufficient. For 30 ft and taller poles, 28,000 to 40,000 lumens or more may be needed to maintain adequate footcandle levels at grade. The fixture type and output selection in the layout calculator above will auto-recommend based on your pole height. Always verify with a photometric design for final fixture specification.
LED parking lot lighting retrofit costs typically range from $200 to $500 per fixture installed for a fixture-only retrofit, depending on fixture size, pole height, and local labor rates. Projects that require pole replacement add $800 to $1,500 per pole. For a standard 10-pole commercial parking lot, total installed costs for a fixture-only LED upgrade typically run $2,500 to $5,000. Larger lots and high-mast installations are priced separately. Use the cost estimator above for a budgetary estimate specific to your fixture count and pole height, then contact FSG for a formal project quote.
A full cutoff fixture directs all light downward and prevents light from escaping above the horizontal plane of the fixture. Most municipalities and dark-sky ordinances require full cutoff fixtures for parking lot lighting to minimize light trespass onto adjacent properties and sky glow. LED shoebox area lights are typically full cutoff by design. If your facility is near residential areas or is subject to local lighting ordinances, confirm your fixture selection meets full cutoff requirements before installation. FSG's lighting team can verify compliance for your specific location and project.
A fixture-only LED retrofit for a standard commercial parking lot (10-20 poles) typically takes one to two days of installation time. Projects requiring pole replacement, new conduit runs, or electrical service upgrades take longer -- typically one to two weeks depending on scope. Permitting timelines vary by jurisdiction and can add one to four weeks to the project schedule. FSG handles permitting, material procurement, and installation as a turnkey service, which simplifies project management for facility managers and property owners.

Ready for a parking lot lighting upgrade?

FSG designs and installs commercial parking lot lighting for retailers, property managers, hospitals, universities, and industrial facilities nationwide. Turnkey service from photometric design through installation and commissioning.

Disclaimer: Layout and cost results are planning estimates only and are not engineered specifications. Parking lot lighting design must account for specific fixture photometrics, pole placement constraints, light trespass, local ordinances, dark sky requirements, electrical service capacity, and site conditions. Always have final lighting designs reviewed by a licensed electrical contractor or lighting engineer before installation. IES RP-8 standards are published by the Illuminating Engineering Society. Cost estimates reflect budgetary ranges and do not constitute a project bid or contract.