
LED ceiling light: choose the right watts, lumens and beam angle
Who one LED ceiling light If you want to buy something, you almost always stumble upon three numbers that determine whether the light is good or annoying: Watts, Lumens and Beam angle. Many people still go for the “watt number like before,” but with LEDs, watts mainly say something about the power consumption, not about how bright a room really feels.
This guide gives you a clear procedure (with general rules, examples and tables) so that your ceiling light neither dazzles nor remains too dark.
Briefly in advance: Which number stands for what?
- Watts (W): electrical power, roughly speaking the consumption.
- Lumens (lm): Luminous flux, i.e. how much light the lamp emits in total.
- Lux (lx): Illuminance on a surface. Note: Lux = lumens per square meter (simplified).
- Beam angle (degrees): how wide the light is distributed. The larger the angle, the “flatter” and more uniform the illumination appears.
If you want to delve deeper into the basics, this post is helpful as a supplement: Watt and lumen, what's the difference?
Step 1: Choose the right lumens (instead of just comparing watts)
The simple formula
For initial, surprisingly accurate planning:
Required lumens = desired lux × room area (m²)
Example: 18 m² living room, target 150 lx
18 × 150 = 2,700 lm
This is a good starting point for them Basic brightness. In practice, there are three typical corrections:
- Dark walls, wooden ceilings, lots of textiles: rather +10 to +30%, because more light is “swallowed”.
- Very high ceilings (over approx. 2.7 m): often +10 to +25%, because the light has to “fall” further.
- You consciously use multiple light sources (Floor lamps, Wall lights, accent light): then the ceiling light can be slightly lower as basic light.
If you would like to calculate this systematically (including planning factors and room examples), use this in-depth guide: LED lighting: This is how you calculate lumens per m² correctly
Practical values: Typical lux targets for living spaces
There is no “one” number for living spaces because usage and light layers are crucial. As a practical guide:
| Room/area | Typical target area for basic light | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Living room | 100-200 lx | Less is often enough for TV evenings; additional zone lighting is needed for reading |
| bedroom | 75–150 lx | Warm and rather soft, additional reading light by the bed |
| Kitchen (basic light) | 200–300 lx | Work surfaces need extra light, often significantly more |
| hallway | 100-200 lx | Uniformity counts so that it looks safe |
| Bathroom (basic light) | 200–300 lx | Plan the mirror area separately, observe protection levels |
| Home office (basic lighting) | 200–300 lx | Desk needs additional task lighting |
Note: In addition to the lumen and beam angle, the IP protection class is also crucial for bathrooms. There is a current guide for this BUYnBLUE-Blog: Bathroom ceiling light: combine bright, safe and homely
Example table: From room size to lumens (basic light)
To give you a quick feel, here are typical combinations. I calculate 150 lx (middle of the living room) and 250 lx (middle of the kitchen/office).
| Room size | Living room (150 lx) | Kitchen/office (250 lx) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 m² | 1,500 lm | 2,500 lm |
| 15 m² | 2,250 lm | 3,750 lm |
| 20 m² | 3,000 lm | 5,000 lm |
| 25 m² | 3,750 lm | 6,250 lm |
These values are ideal for “one number per room”. In real concepts, the basic light is often deliberately reduced because accent and zone lighting create the comfort zone.

Step 2: Classify watts correctly (and derive them from lumens)
The following applies to LED ceiling lights: Watt is not a measure of brightness. Two lights with the same wattage can appear differently bright because efficiency, optics (diffuser), driver and thermal design vary.
Nevertheless, one can roughly estimate watts from lumens using an assumed efficiency.
- Many LEDs are roughly in the range of 80 to 120 lm/W (depending on quality and operating conditions).
Table of thumb: rethink lumens in watts
| Target lumens | approx. watts at 80 lm/W | approx. watts at 100 lm/W | approx. watts at 120 lm/W |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,500 lm | 19W | 15W | 13W |
| 2,500 lm | 31W | 25W | 21 W |
| 3,000 lm | 38W | 30W | 25W |
| 5,000 lm | 63W | 50W | 42W |
How to use the table correctly:
- If a ceiling light has 3,000 lm and consumes 45 W, it is not automatically “bad”, but it is worth taking a closer look at the workmanship, light distribution and, if necessary, dimmability.
- If a luminaire promises very few watts with a lot of lumens, check the data sheet, light quality and whether these are marketing values.
Step 3: Choose the right beam angle (so that it doesn't glare or become spotty)
The Beam angle describes how wide the light emits its light. This is particularly important for ceiling lights because otherwise you will quickly have one of two problems:
- Too tight: bright center, dark corners (“spot effect”).
- Too wide with too few lumens: everything looks even, but overall too dark.
What does “wide” mean in ceiling lights?
- approx. 30–60°: more of a spot, good for accents, pictures, niches, zones.
- approx. 90-120°: very common for general lighting, good compromise.
- approx. 120-180°: flat, typical for panels, lights with a strong diffuser or indirect concepts.
Recommendations by room type
| space | Recommendation beam angle | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Living room (basic light) | 100–120° | evenly without harsh shadows |
| bedroom | 100–180° (rather soft) | relaxed, not too directed effect |
| hallway | 120–180° | uniform illumination for safety |
| Kitchen (basic light) | 90–120° | good area, work light separately |
| Home office (basic lighting) | 90–120° | so that it doesn't become “office-hard”, but sufficiently bright |
Important: The higher the ceiling, the more likely you are to benefit from one wider Angle or from several light points so that the walls are bright and the room does not press “from above”.

The most common wrong combinations (and how to avoid them)
1) Many lumens, narrow angle, clear coverage
This quickly acts like a construction spotlight: very bright in the center, unpleasant glare when looking up.
Better:
- Increase the angle or choose diffuse cover.
- Alternatively, reduce the lumen and supplement it with standing, wall or indirect light.
2) Very wide angle but not enough lumen
The luminaire “can” cover a large area, but the total amount of light is not enough. Result: subjectively bleak.
Better:
- Increase lumens or plan multiple ceiling lights.
- For large rooms, combine basic light + zone light (then not everything has to come above the ceiling).
3) Just one central ceiling light for everything
This is the classic: The room is bright but uncomfortable, or cozy but too dark for tasks.
If you want a modern, homely concept, the 3-layer principle helps as a structure: Plan LED lighting: 3-layer light for the entire home
Mini checklist: Read the data sheet of an LED ceiling light correctly
Before you buy, check these points in the technical information:
- Lumens (lm): fits the room size and usage?
- Beam angle (°): rather flat for basic light, narrower for accents?
- Dimmable (yes/no): useful when a room has several situations.
- Color temperature (Kelvin): warm white for coziness, more neutral for functional zones. (In-depth: What is Kelvin?)
- CRI / Ra (color rendering): the higher, the more natural the colors appear (practical especially in the kitchen, bathroom, dressing room).
If you're specifically looking for flat, modern solutions, this overview will be helpful: Flat LED ceiling lights: modern, efficient, versatile
FAQ
How many lumens does an LED ceiling light need per m²? As a rough guide, the basic light in many living rooms is often between 100 and 200 lx, i.e. 100 to 200 lumens per m². The kitchen, bathroom or office are often higher up.
Is more watts automatically better for LEDs? No. Watt primarily describes consumption. Lumens are crucial for brightness, and the beam angle and light distribution are also crucial for the effect in the room.
What beam angle makes sense for a ceiling light in the living room? For uniform basic light, 100 to 120° is often a good range. Much narrower angles are suitable for accents (e.g. picture, shelf).
Why does a light with many lumens sometimes still seem dark? Often the beam angle is very wide, the ceiling is very high, or dark surfaces absorb light. Even a heavily tinted diffuser can “cost” light.
Do I need a dimmable ceiling light? If the room has multiple uses (TV, guests, reading, cleaning), dimming is almost always a comfort gain. It is important that the dimmer and LED driver are compatible.
Find an LED ceiling light that really fits (and not just on paper)
If you carefully select lumens, watts and beam angle, light immediately appears of higher quality. The last step is to find the right lamp in terms of design, proportion and material.
BUYnBLUE offers a curated selection of modern designer lights made from high-quality materials free shipping worldwide, 14 day return policy and 24/7 support. And if you are planning a pendant light or a chandelier instead of a ceiling light: these models can be used BUYnBLUE customized for free (e.g. cable length, ceiling rose, color) so that they exactly match your room height and floor plan.
Take a look at the collection and let us help you choose: BUYnBLUE discover

