Lighting Cost Calculator

Calculate the total cost of running all your light fixtures. Enter total fixture wattage, hours of use, and electricity rate for a full lighting cost estimate.

About the Lighting Cost Calculator

Lighting accounts for about 10–15% of the average household's electricity bill, and significantly more in commercial settings. Whether you're managing a home, office, warehouse, or retail space, understanding the total cost of your lighting helps you identify savings opportunities and budget accurately.

This calculator takes the total wattage of all your light fixtures and multiplies by hours of daily use to produce daily, monthly, and annual cost estimates. It's perfect for comparing the cost of different lighting layouts, evaluating retrofit projects, or simply understanding what portion of your electric bill goes to lighting.

For residential users, common lighting wattages range from 500–1,500 watts total across a home. Commercial spaces like offices may run 5,000–20,000 watts or more depending on square footage and fixture type. Switching to LED fixtures typically cuts lighting energy by 50–75%.

Precise measurement of this value supports sustainable energy planning and helps organizations reduce their environmental impact while maintaining operational performance and comfort levels.

Why Use This Lighting Cost Calculator?

Knowing your total lighting cost helps you evaluate LED retrofit projects, compare fixture layouts, and allocate energy budgets. This calculator makes the math instant for any number of fixtures at any wattage. Having accurate metrics readily available streamlines utility bill analysis, budget forecasting, and investment planning for energy efficiency projects and renewable energy installations.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Add up the wattage of all light fixtures you want to calculate (e.g., 30 bulbs × 10W = 300W).
  2. Enter the total fixture wattage.
  3. Enter the average hours per day the lights are on.
  4. Enter your electricity rate per kWh.
  5. View daily, monthly, and annual lighting cost.
  6. Compare before and after wattage to evaluate LED upgrades.

Formula

Cost = Total Fixture Watts × Hours per Day × Days / 1,000 × Rate ($/kWh)

Example Calculation

Result: $15.96/month

Total fixture wattage of 500W running 8 hours/day for 30 days: 500 × 8 × 30 / 1,000 = 120 kWh. At $0.13/kWh, the monthly lighting cost is 120 × $0.13 = $15.60.

Tips & Best Practices

Residential vs Commercial Lighting Costs

A typical home might have 500–1,500 watts of total lighting and run 3–8 hours/day, costing $10–$50/month. A 5,000 sq ft office with fluorescent fixtures could run 3,000–8,000 watts for 10+ hours/day, costing $100–$300/month. LED retrofits reduce these costs by 50–75%.

Calculating ROI for LED Upgrades

To calculate LED retrofit payback: subtract the new LED cost from the old annual cost, then divide the upfront investment by the annual savings. Most residential LED projects pay back in under 1 year. Commercial projects typically pay back in 1–3 years with significantly longer fixture life.

Smart Lighting Controls

Beyond LED bulbs, smart controls like dimmers, occupancy sensors, daylight sensors, and timers further reduce lighting costs by 20–50%. In commercial buildings, lighting controls are often required by energy codes and can qualify for utility rebates.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of my bill is lighting?

Lighting typically accounts for 10–15% of a residential electricity bill and 20–40% of a commercial bill. The exact percentage depends on the type of bulbs used, hours of operation, and other energy loads in the building.

How do I calculate total fixture wattage?

Count each fixture and multiply by its bulb wattage. For example, 30 recessed lights with 9W LEDs = 270W total. Add all fixture groups together for the total. Check bulb wattage on the bulb itself or the fixture label.

Is it cheaper to leave lights on or turn them off?

For LED and incandescent bulbs, always turn them off when leaving a room. The myth about turn-on surges only applied to old fluorescent tubes. Modern LEDs have negligible startup energy, so turning them off always saves money.

How much can occupancy sensors save?

Occupancy sensors can reduce lighting energy by 30–75% in intermittently used spaces like hallways, restrooms, storage rooms, and conference rooms. They cost $20–$50 each and typically pay for themselves within a year.

What is the most energy-efficient lighting?

LED lighting is the most energy-efficient option available, converting about 40–50% of energy to light (compared to 10% for incandescent). LEDs produce 80–150 lumens per watt, several times more than any other technology.

How do I estimate hours of use?

For residential lighting, 3–5 hours/day is typical for common areas and 1–2 hours for bedrooms and bathrooms. Commercial spaces may run lights 10–14 hours/day. Smart switches or timers can log actual usage data.

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