The number of recessed lights (also called can lights, pot lights, or downlights) depends on three factors: room size, ceiling height, and what you use the room for. According to the IES Lighting Handbook, 10th Edition (the ANSI-accredited industry standard used by professional lighting designers), different rooms require different brightness levels measured in foot-candles (fc). Kitchens need 30–40 fc for safe food preparation, home offices need 30–50 fc for focused desk work, while bedrooms only need 10–20 fc for relaxation.
The calculation has two steps. First, determine total lumens: multiply your room’s square footage by the IES foot-candle target. For a 168 sq ft kitchen at 40 fc, that’s 6,720 lumens. Divide by your fixture’s lumen output (typically 800 for a 6-inch LED) to get 9 fixtures. Second, verify the grid: space fixtures at half the ceiling height (4 ft apart for 8-ft ceilings) and keep the first row 2–3 ft from walls. The calculator uses whichever method requires more fixtures, ensuring both adequate brightness and even coverage with no dark spots.
According to IES and IALD (International Association of Lighting Designers) guidelines, the spacing formula is ceiling height divided by 2. For 8-foot ceilings, space lights 4 feet apart. For 9-foot, 4.5 feet. For 10-foot, 5 feet. For 12-foot vaulted ceilings, 6 feet apart. Maximum recommended spacing is 6 feet regardless of ceiling height — beyond this, you’ll see visible dark zones between fixtures even with wide-beam LEDs.
For ceilings above 10 feet, the IALD recommends increasing fixture lumen output by approximately 20% for every 2 additional feet of height. This compensates for the inverse-square law of light intensity — a light at 12 feet delivers roughly 56% the illumination at floor level compared to the same fixture at 8 feet. Our calculator applies this adjustment automatically.
One critical point most online calculators miss: for bedrooms, living rooms, and other low-activity spaces, even grid spacing often delivers significantly more foot-candles than needed. This is why a dimmer switch is not optional — it’s essential. Install enough fixtures for uniform coverage (no dark spots), then use the dimmer to reduce brightness to your preferred comfort level.
Recessed lights go by several names depending on region and style. In the US, they’re commonly called can lights (named for the cylindrical metal housing) or recessed cans. In Canada, the standard term is pot lights. Professional lighting designers and British English speakers use downlights. The newest variant — LED wafer lights (also called slim lights or disc lights) — eliminates the traditional housing can entirely, mounting flush against the ceiling with a slim LED disc. Wafer lights cost $8–15 each and work especially well in shallow ceilings where traditional 7.5-inch-deep housings won’t fit. This calculator works for all types.
Most online recessed lighting calculators use a single simplified formula. This tool uses a 3-mode calculation engine verified against IES Lighting Handbook standards: grid-based calculation for high-activity rooms (kitchens, offices, garages) where dense, even coverage matters for task lighting; lumen-based calculation for low-activity rooms (bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms) where fewer fixtures at wider spacing avoid over-lighting; and narrow-room mode for hallways and closets where a single row of fixtures is the practical layout.
Additional features you won’t find on competing calculators: fixture size affects lumen range (4-inch outputs 400–750 lm vs 6-inch at 600–1000 lm, with adjusted pricing); an existing lights input for renovation projects that calculates only the additional fixtures needed; color temperature recommendations by room type; and a cost estimate based on current 2026 retail pricing from Home Depot and Amazon.
DIY materials cost $23–50 per light (IC-rated housing at $15–35 plus LED retrofit trim at $8–15). Add $20–30 for an LED-rated dimmer switch and $10–25 for a hole saw matched to your fixture size. A typical 9-light kitchen project runs $207–450 in materials. Professional installation adds $150–250 per fixture including wiring, bringing a 9-light kitchen to approximately $1,550–2,700 total. Per the National Electrical Code (NEC), a standard 15-amp residential circuit can safely power up to 12 LED recessed fixtures at 10–12 watts each. Larger installations may require a new dedicated circuit ($200–500 for an electrician to install).