Kitchen Lighting
Kitchen Lighting FAQs
What size pendant light do I need for a kitchen island?
Pendants between 12 and 20 inches wide suit most standard kitchen islands. For a 6-foot island, two pendants 14 to 16 inches wide spaced 30 inches apart (measured center to center) give balanced coverage. For an 8-foot island, use three pendants or two slightly larger ones. Hang any pendant 30 to 36 inches above the countertop. The fixture's bottom edge should sit just below eye level when you're standing at the counter.
How many lumens do I need for kitchen lighting?
Plan for 3,000 to 4,000 lumens total in an average 150 to 200 square foot kitchen. Break that across three layers: ambient (ceiling pendants or flush mounts), task (under-cabinet strips and focused pendants over prep zones), and accent (small pendants or sconces). Each prep zone needs 450 to 800 lumens of direct task light. Use dimmable LED fixtures across all three layers so you can drop the kitchen to 20 percent brightness for evening use.
Should kitchen lighting match the faucet finish?
They don't need to match exactly, but keeping finishes within one or two tones of each other reads as intentional. The 70/30 rule works well: pick one dominant finish for 70 percent of the visible metal (usually the faucet and cabinet hardware) and use a second finish for the remaining 30 percent (pendants and accent pieces). Brass pairs with gold, champagne, or aged brass faucets. Matte black works with almost any faucet finish. Polished nickel reads as a neutral and bridges warm and cool metals.
What is the best lighting layout for a galley kitchen?
For galley kitchens under 10 feet wide, use a single flush mount or linear fixture 36 to 48 inches long, centered along the ceiling. Add under-cabinet LED strips at 250 to 400 lumens per linear foot on both runs of cabinets to eliminate shadow on the counter. Skip pendants in galleys narrower than 5 feet because they crowd the walking space. If your galley opens to a dining area, use two small flush mounts 4 to 5 feet apart instead of one long fixture.
What color temperature is best for kitchen lighting?
Most kitchens look best at 2700K to 3000K, which reads as warm white and flatters wood cabinets, natural stone, and warm metal finishes. Go to 3500K to 4000K only if your kitchen has cool-toned surfaces like white quartz, stainless appliances, and gray cabinets. Avoid anything above 4000K in a residential kitchen because it reads as commercial and makes food look unappetizing. If you can't decide, pick dimmable bulbs with adjustable color temperature (tunable white) so you can shift between 2700K and 4000K on one fixture.
How many recessed can lights do I need in a kitchen?
Use one 4-inch or 6-inch recessed light per 15 to 20 square feet of kitchen floor space. A 150 square foot kitchen needs 8 to 10 cans; a 250 square foot kitchen needs 12 to 16. Space them 3 to 4 feet apart in a grid pattern, with an extra light directly over the sink and prep zones. Pair cans with pendants over the island because cans alone tend to read flat. Use dimmable LED trims in the 2700K to 3000K range.
Can I put a chandelier in a kitchen?
Yes. Chandeliers work well in kitchens with 9-foot or taller ceilings, either centered over the island or over a kitchen table. Pick a chandelier no wider than two-thirds of the island or table width. For a 6-foot island, look at 36 to 48 inch chandeliers. For an 8-foot island, use 48 to 60 inches. Hang it with the bottom 30 to 36 inches above the counter or 30 to 34 inches above the table. Chandeliers read more formal than pendants, so match finish and materials to the rest of the kitchen.
What height should I hang a chandelier over a kitchen table?
Hang the bottom of the chandelier 30 to 34 inches above the tabletop for 8-foot ceilings. For each additional foot of ceiling height above 8 feet, add 3 inches to the drop. A 10-foot ceiling puts the chandelier at 36 to 40 inches above the table. The chandelier's widest point should measure roughly half the table's width. For a 48-inch round table, choose a 24 to 26 inch chandelier. For a 72-inch rectangular table, use 30 to 36 inches.
Do I need under-cabinet lighting or is overhead enough?
Under-cabinet lighting is not optional if you cook regularly. Overhead fixtures cast shadows onto the counter from your body when you stand at the counter, which means the exact spot where you chop, read recipes, and plate food sits in the darkest part of the room. LED strip lights at 250 to 400 lumens per linear foot installed under every upper cabinet fixes this. Use 2700K to 3000K to match your overhead fixtures. Hardwired strips look cleaner than plug-in, but plug-in works fine for rentals.
How do I light a kitchen with low ceilings?
For ceilings under 8 feet, skip pendants and use flush mounts or semi-flush mounts that hang no more than 4 to 6 inches from the ceiling. Pick fixtures wider than they are tall (disc and saucer silhouettes work best). Add recessed can lights on a separate dimmer for task layering. Avoid chandeliers because anything hanging below 6 inches crowds the sightline and feels oppressive. If you want the pendant look over an island, use a flush-mounted linear fixture instead.