Lighting Size & Installation Guide
Lighting Size &
Installation Guide
Choosing the right fixture is as much about proportion as it is about light. This guide walks you through professional sizing formulas, room-specific rules, ceiling height considerations, and our curated product picks for every space.
Lighting is not only functional — it's a key design element in every room. The wrong size fixture can make a grand room feel claustrophobic, or a small room feel busy. Getting the scale right is one of the most impactful decisions you'll make when designing a space.
This guide gives you the professional formulas used by interior designers, with room-specific rules for chandeliers, pendants, flush mounts, sconces, and more.
How to Calculate the Right Size Light Fixture
Three professional formulas cover almost every fixture decision. Apply them in order — diameter first, then fixture height, then hanging height.
1 — Fixture Diameter
The most universally used formula for ceiling fixtures. Works for chandeliers, pendants, flush mounts, and semi-flush mounts.
2 — Fixture Height
Height matters as much as diameter. A fixture that's too short looks stubby; too tall and it overwhelms the space.
3 — Hanging Height Above a Surface
For fixtures hung above dining tables, kitchen islands, or countertops, hanging height determines both function and visual balance.
4 — Multiple Pendants
When hanging multiple pendants over a long surface, size each fixture relative to the surface below.
◈ Rule: Each pendant should be approximately ¼ the length of the surface below it. Space them evenly, leaving at least 6 inches clearance at each end.Ceiling Height Considerations
Ceiling height shapes every fixture decision — from what type of fixture you choose to how long the cord should be.
| Ceiling Height | Fixture Type | Min Floor Clearance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 ft Low | Flush / Semi-flush | 7 ft | Use shorter cords; avoid bulky downlights |
| 9–10 ft Standard | Pendant / Chandelier | 7 ft | Most fixtures designed for this range |
| 10–12 ft | Larger chandeliers | 7.5 ft | Extend cord; choose taller shades |
| 12 ft + | Oversized / Cluster | 8 ft | Consider multi-light clusters or grand chandeliers |
| Vaulted / Sloped | Any (check canopy) | 7 ft min | All Vakkerlight pendants include sloped-ceiling canopies |
Room-by-Room Sizing Guide
Every room has a different lighting logic. Use the tabs below to find sizing rules, fixture recommendations, and installation tips for your space.
Living Room
The living room is often the largest and most complex space to light. It benefits from layered lighting — ambient overhead, task lamps, and accent sconces working together.
📐 Fixture Diameter: Room Length (ft) + Room Width (ft) = Diameter in inches. Ensure at least 7 feet of clearance from the fixture bottom to the floor.| Room Size | Recommended Diameter | Floor Clearance |
|---|---|---|
| Under 150 sq ft | 14–22″ | Min 7 ft |
| 150–250 sq ft | 22–28″ | Min 7 ft |
| 250–400 sq ft | 28–36″ | Min 7.5 ft |
| 400+ sq ft / Open plan | 36–48″ or cluster | Min 8 ft |
Dining Room
The dining chandelier is the room's focal point. It should complement the table size without overwhelming the chairs or the diners.
📐 Key Rule: Fixture diameter should be ½ to ⅔ the width of the dining table. Hang 32–36 inches above the table surface.| Table Size | Single Fixture | Two Fixtures (each) |
|---|---|---|
| 36″ round / 4-seat | 16–22″ | 10–14″ |
| 48–60″ rectangular / 6-seat | 22–28″ | 14–18″ |
| 72–84″ rectangular / 8-seat | 28–36″ or two | 18–24″ |
| 96″+ farmhouse table | Use 2–3 pendants | 20–28″ |
Kitchen
Kitchen lighting is about task efficiency first, then aesthetics. Islands and peninsulas need strong, focussed pendant lighting — supplement with recessed and under-cabinet lights for full coverage.
📐 Key Rule: Each pendant = ¼ the length of the island. Hang 32–36 inches above the countertop. Space multiple pendants 24–30 inches apart (center to center).| Island Length | Pendants | Each Diameter | Hang Height |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 48″ | 1 | 10–16″ | 28–34″ above counter |
| 48–72″ | 2 | 10–14″ each | 28–34″ |
| 72–96″ | 2–3 | 10–16″ each | 28–36″ |
| 96″+ | 3 or 1 linear | 12–18″ / 48–72″ linear | 30–36″ |
Bedroom
Bedrooms need warm, layered light. The central ceiling fixture provides ambient coverage; bedside lamps or sconces handle reading and task lighting.
📐 Key Rule: Use the room dimension formula for the ceiling fixture. For bedside pendants, hang so the shade center sits at eye-level when seated in bed (typically 48–60 inches from the floor).| Use Case | Fixture Diameter | Height / Placement |
|---|---|---|
| Central ceiling pendant | Room formula (length + width in inches) | Min 7 ft from floor |
| Bedside pendant (hanging) | 8–14″ | 48–60″ from floor |
| Above-bed decorative pendant | 16–24″ | 72–84″ from floor |
| Bedside table lamp | See Bedside Sizing section | Eye-level when seated |
Bathroom
Bathroom lighting is about eliminating shadows, especially around the vanity. Side-mounted sconces outperform overhead vanity bars for facial task lighting.
📐 Key Rule: Sconces should be mounted 65–70 inches from the floor, flanking the mirror.| Fixture Type | Placement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vanity Sconces | 65–70″ from floor, either side of mirror | Most flattering for facial lighting |
| Overhead Vanity Bar | 24″ above mirror top | Use for smaller bathrooms without sconce space |
| Ceiling Flush Mount | Centred, room dimension formula | Ambient layer; combine with vanity lighting |
| Shower / Wet Zone | IP-rated recessed lights only | Must meet local electrical code requirements |
Entryway & Hallway
The entry chandelier sets the tone for the entire home. Going bold rarely looks wrong — the vertical drop of a dramatic fixture is particularly effective in double-height entries.
📐 Key Rule: Minimum 7 ft clearance from fixture bottom to floor. In two-storey entries, use the full vertical space.| Ceiling Height | Fixture Diameter | Drop / Cord Length |
|---|---|---|
| 8–9 ft | 12–20″ | Short — 18–24″ |
| 10–12 ft | 18–28″ | Medium — 30–42″ |
| Double height 14–20 ft | 24–40″ | Long — 48–96″+ |
Home Office
Office lighting should eliminate glare on screens while providing enough ambient light to prevent eye strain over long work sessions.
📐 Key Rule: Use the room dimension formula for the ceiling fixture. Place a dedicated desk lamp for task lighting — never rely on overhead alone.| Fixture Type | Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling flush / semi-flush | Ambient layer | Diffuse shades reduce screen glare |
| Desk lamp | Task lighting | Position to the left (right-handers) to avoid hand shadows |
| Recessed / track lighting | Larger offices | Direct away from screens; aim at walls or work surfaces |
| Floor lamp | Ambient fill / reading corner | Torchiere style bounces light off ceiling for soft fill |
Bedside Lamp Sizing
A bedside lamp that's too tall throws light in your eyes; too short and the shade hides behind the pillows.
| Lamp Part | Ideal Measurement |
|---|---|
| Total height | Equal to the height of the nightstand + 2–3 inches |
| Shade height | ½ to ⅔ of the total lamp height |
| Shade width (widest) | Twice as wide as the lamp base |
| Base height | ⅓ of the total lamp height |
| Base width (widest) | ½ of the shade width |
Browse by Fixture Type
Shop our full range of lighting by category — each collection is curated for a specific function, form, and room type.
Featured Products
Our most-loved fixtures across all categories — selected for craftsmanship, versatility, and design impact in every room type.
Bestselling Fixtures
Free US shipping · 30-day returns · Expert installation support