Convert lumens to watts for LED, CFL, halogen, and incandescent bulbs. Compare energy efficiency, annual cost, and find equivalent bulb wattages.
The Lumens to Watts Calculator helps you find the right light bulb by converting between lumens (brightness) and watts (energy use) across all major bulb technologies. Since the phase-out of traditional incandescent bulbs, shopping for lighting has shifted from wattage to lumens, but many people still think in terms of watts.
This tool bridges that gap by showing you exactly how many watts each bulb type needs to produce a given brightness level. A 60-watt incandescent produces about 800 lumens, but an LED achieves the same brightness with only 8-10 watts — saving up to 85% on energy costs. Our calculator covers LED, CFL, halogen, and incandescent technologies with real-world efficiency data.
Beyond simple conversion, the calculator estimates your annual electricity cost per bulb, total savings when upgrading from older technology, bulb lifetime comparisons, and CO2 emissions reductions. Whether you're retrofitting an entire home, choosing fixtures for a renovation, or just replacing a burned-out bulb, this calculator provides all the data you need to make an informed, energy-efficient choice. It is especially useful when the package lists lumens but you still want to compare against an older wattage benchmark.
Use this calculator when you know how bright a space should be but still think in older wattage terms or want to compare bulb technologies directly. It helps with bulb replacement, retrofit planning, and estimating whether an LED swap is worth it on energy cost alone. That makes shopping for bulbs much quicker when you are comparing a few different package labels.
Watts = Lumens / Luminous Efficacy (lm/W); Annual Cost = (Watts / 1000) × Hours/Day × 365 × $/kWh; Savings = Old Annual Cost − New Annual Cost
Result: LED: 9W (vs 60W incandescent), saves $11.17/year
An 800-lumen LED bulb uses only 9 watts compared to 60 watts for an incandescent, saving $11.17 per year at 5 hours daily use and $0.12/kWh.
The shift from watts to lumens began with the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which set efficiency standards that effectively phased out most incandescent bulbs. Lumens measure the total visible light emitted by a source, while watts measure the electrical power consumed. The ratio of lumens to watts — called luminous efficacy — varies dramatically by technology: incandescents achieve just 12-17 lm/W, halogens 16-24 lm/W, CFLs 50-70 lm/W, and LEDs 80-120+ lm/W.
Each lighting technology has distinct advantages. Incandescent bulbs produce warm, flattering light with perfect color rendering but waste 90% of energy as heat. Halogen bulbs are slightly more efficient with excellent color quality, making them popular for task and accent lighting. CFLs offer good efficiency but contain mercury and take time to reach full brightness. LEDs dominate modern lighting with the highest efficiency, longest lifespan, instant-on capability, and no hazardous materials.
When evaluating a lighting upgrade, consider total cost of ownership: purchase price plus electricity cost over the bulb's lifetime. A $1 incandescent bulb that lasts 1,000 hours actually costs over $10 in electricity, while a $3 LED lasting 25,000 hours costs only $30 total in electricity — providing 25 times more light-hours for roughly half the total cost. Multiply these savings across every fixture in your home to see why LED retrofitting is one of the easiest ways to reduce your energy bill.
A traditional 60-watt incandescent produces approximately 800 lumens. An LED equivalent uses only 8-10 watts for the same brightness. That is why lumens are the better number to compare on the package.
LEDs are more efficient, producing 80-120 lumens per watt compared to 50-70 lm/W for CFLs. LEDs also last 2-3 times longer and contain no mercury. In most homes, LEDs are the easier long-term choice.
Watts measure energy consumption, not brightness. Different technologies produce different amounts of light per watt, so lumens give a consistent measure of actual light output. That keeps comparisons fair across bulb types.
Switching from incandescent to LED typically saves 75-85% on lighting electricity costs. A household switching 20 bulbs can save $150-200 per year. The exact amount depends on how long the lights are on each day.
Quality LED bulbs are rated for 15,000-50,000 hours. At 5 hours daily use, a 25,000-hour LED lasts about 13-14 years. That long lifespan is a big part of the total savings.
Not all LED bulbs are dimmable. Look for bulbs specifically labeled as dimmable, and ensure your dimmer switch is LED-compatible to avoid flickering. Matching the bulb and switch matters just as much as the wattage equivalent.