Lighting Consumer: Watts, Lumens, or Foot Candles - Which is Most Important?
When selecting LED lighting for your facility, three fundamental measurements drive performance and costs: Watts, Lumens, and Foot Candles. Understanding these specifications helps contractors, facility managers, and engineers make informed decisions for indoor facilities and outdoor spaces. These measurements form the foundation of lighting performance analysis and guide effective purchasing decisions.
This guide explains what these measurements mean, why they matter for your project, and which factors should influence your lighting decisions.
Watts: Understanding Energy Consumption
What Watts Actually Measure
Watts measure the electrical power a lighting fixture consumes, not its brightness output. This distinction is crucial when transitioning from traditional lighting technologies to LED systems. While watts were historically used to estimate brightness in incandescent bulbs, this approach doesn’t apply to LED technology.
Impact on Operating Costs
Utility companies bill based on kilowatt-hours consumed. A 150-watt LED fixture typically uses 60-75% less energy than a 400-watt Metal Halide fixture while delivering comparable or superior light output. However, actual energy savings depend on usage patterns, local utility rates, and specific fixture performance.
Lumens and Lumens Per Watt: Measuring Light Output
Understanding Lumens
Lumens quantify the total amount of visible light emitted by a fixture. Unlike watts, lumens directly indicate brightness output. This measurement helps determine whether a fixture produces sufficient light for your application.
Evaluating Efficiency with Lumens Per Watt
Lumens per watt measures lighting efficiency – how much light output you receive per unit of energy consumed. Current LED technology typically delivers 100-180+ lumens per watt, compared to 50-100 lumens per watt for traditional technologies.
Consider this comparison of two LED fixtures:
- 200 Watt LED Fixture at 100 lumens per watt = 20,000 total lumens
- 100 Watt LED Fixture at 200 lumens per watt = 20,000 total lumens
Both fixtures produce identical light output, but the second consumes half the energy. While higher-efficiency fixtures often have higher upfront costs, the energy savings typically offset this difference over the fixture’s operational life.
Note: Total cost of ownership includes purchase price, installation, energy consumption, and maintenance costs over the fixture’s lifespan.
Foot Candles (and Lux): Measuring Illuminance
What Foot Candles Measure
Foot candles measure illuminance – the amount of light reaching a surface, expressed as lumens per square foot. This measurement indicates how bright a space appears and whether it meets requirements for specific tasks or safety standards.
Practical Application
When designing commercial, industrial, or sports field lighting systems, foot candle requirements guide fixture selection and placement. Different applications require different illuminance levels – office work typically needs 30-50 foot candles, while precision manufacturing may require 100+ foot candles.
Lux is the metric equivalent of foot candles (1 foot candle = 10.764 lux). Both measurements serve the same purpose in lighting design.
Factors Affecting Foot Candle Measurements
Actual illuminance depends on fixture output, mounting height, beam angle, surface reflectance, and spacing. Professional photometric analysis considers these variables to ensure adequate and uniform lighting.
Which Measurement Matters Most for Your Project?
Effective lighting decisions require considering multiple factors:
- For energy efficiency analysis: Compare watts and lumens per watt ratings
- For adequate brightness: Evaluate total lumens and beam distribution
- For space illumination planning: Calculate the required foot candles for your application
- For comprehensive evaluation: Consider color temperature, dimming capabilities, and beam angles
Important: LED lighting installation should be performed by qualified electrical contractors in accordance with local codes and regulations. Energy savings calculations are estimates, and actual results vary based on usage patterns, utility rates, and system design.

