LED lighting for schools includes a range of fixtures suited for classrooms, gymnasiums, sports fields, and parking areas. Typical products in this category feature flat panel lights for ceiling grids in classrooms, linear architectural fixtures for suspended installations, UFO-style high bays for gymnasiums, and pole-mounted flood or shoebox lights for outdoor spaces. These fixtures are physically installed above desks and learning areas, over gym floors, along hallways, and across parking lots or athletic fields.
This selection supports the lighting needs of educational facilities such as K-12 schools, colleges, and training centers. Commercial & Industrial Lighting Solutions are offered for both indoor and outdoor school environments, with products positioned throughout academic buildings, sports complexes, and campus grounds. The layout and form factors are tailored to fit the physical structure of each space, from standard ceiling grids in classrooms to open gymnasiums and exterior site layouts.
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- SKU:LLS-LN-4FT-T8-18-5-C-25P | Web ID:2652Availability: 100 In Stock Ships 3-5 Days
- Lumens: 2160
- Replaces: 32 Watt Fluorescent
- Color Temp: 5000K
- CRI: 80+
- Rated Life: 50,000 hours
- Dimmable: No
- Beam Angle (Std): 140°
- Dimensions (in): 4 ft
- Weight (lbs): 1 lb
Starting At$250.00 - SKU:LLS-LN-8FT-T8-36-5-F-25P | Web ID:2654Availability: 90 In Stock Ships 3-5 Days
- Lumens: 4320
- Replaces: 8ft Fluorescent
- Color Temp: 5000K
- CRI: 80+
- Rated Life: 50,000 hours
- Dimmable: No
- Beam Angle (Std): 120°
- Dimensions (in): 8 ft
- Weight (lbs): 3 lbs
Starting At$990.00 - SKU:LLS-LN-8FT-T8-44-65-C-25P | Web ID:2655Availability: 30 In Stock Ships 3-5 Days
- Lumens: 5700
- Replaces: 8ft Fluorescent
- Color Temp: 6500K
- CRI: 80+
- Rated Life: 50,000 hours
- Dimmable: No
- Beam Angle (Std): 120°
- Dimensions (in): 8 ft
- Weight (lbs): 3 lbs
Starting At$500.00 - SKU:MLLG-LS-LED-T8HO-4-24A-CC-25P | Web ID:2281Back in Stock 7/20
- Lumens: 1620 | 2025 | 2430 | 3240
- Replaces: Fluorescent Strip
- Color Temp: 3500K | 4000K | 5000K | 5700K | 6500K
- CRI: 80+
- Rated Life: 50,000 hours
- Dimmable: No
- Beam Angle (Std): 140°
- Dimensions (in): 4 ft
- Weight (lbs): 16.5 lbs per carton
Starting At$385.00
What Are LED Lighting Fixtures for Schools?
LED lighting fixtures for schools are commercial lighting products used across classrooms, corridors, gyms, libraries, cafeterias, offices, parking lots, building entrances, exterior walkways, and outdoor sports areas. School lighting needs to support learning, supervision, safety, athletics, after-hours activities, and long-term maintenance planning across many different spaces.
A school campus can include several lighting applications in one project. Classrooms may use LED panels or troffers, gyms may use LED high bays, sports fields may use pole-mounted LED sports lights, and parking lots may use LED area lights or shoebox fixtures. This page provides a broad overview of LED lighting for schools and educational facilities. For detailed gym or sports field layout guidance, use the dedicated gym lighting and sports field lighting pages.
Selection and Installation Note: Product specifications, wattage, lumen output, color temperature, voltage, dimming, controls, emergency compatibility, impact resistance, mounting method, certifications, and warranty coverage vary by model. Confirm the selected product specification before ordering. For classrooms, gyms, sports fields, parking areas, egress areas, emergency lighting, or code-sensitive school projects, verify requirements with the school facilities team, project specifier, local inspector, district requirements, and a licensed electrical professional.
Recommended Foot-Candles for School Lighting
School lighting requirements vary by room type, age group, activity, ceiling height, visual task, controls, daylight, and local requirements. Use the widget below as early planning guidance for common school spaces. Final fixture selection, quantity, layout, and controls should be verified for the specific school building or campus area.
School Lighting Applications
Most school lighting projects include several different fixture types. A classroom fixture is not the same as a gym fixture, and a gym fixture is not the same as a sports field light. Choosing the right product depends on the space, ceiling height, activity, occupancy, fixture protection, and maintenance access.
| School Area | Common Lighting Approach |
|---|---|
| Classrooms | LED panels, troffers, or linear fixtures that provide comfortable general light for reading, writing, screens, and instruction. |
| Hallways and corridors | LED panels, linear fixtures, or strip fixtures that provide consistent circulation lighting and support supervision. |
| Libraries and media centers | LED panels, troffers, or linear fixtures selected for reading areas, shelving, computer zones, and collaboration spaces. |
| Cafeterias and multipurpose rooms | LED panels, high bays, or linear fixtures depending on ceiling height, room use, dimming needs, and event flexibility. |
| School gyms | LED high bays or impact-resistant gym fixtures designed for higher ceilings, ball impact exposure, and activity areas. |
| School sports fields | LED sports lights or flood lights designed around pole height, field size, aiming, glare, and spill-light control. |
| Parking lots and bus loops | LED area lights, shoebox lights, or wall packs used for vehicle circulation, pedestrian routes, entrances, and campus access. |
Classroom LED Lighting
Classrooms need comfortable, consistent illumination for reading, writing, instruction, computer use, presentations, and group activities. LED panels and troffers are common choices because they fit many standard ceiling grids and provide even general light across the room.
Many schools prefer neutral white lighting, often around 3500K to 4000K, while some task-heavy or utility spaces may use 5000K. Color-selectable fixtures can be useful when a district wants flexibility during installation or across different room types.
| Classroom Factor | What to Confirm |
|---|---|
| Ceiling grid | Confirm whether existing openings use 2x4, 2x2, 1x4, linear, or another fixture format. |
| Color temperature | Choose a color temperature that supports visual comfort and district preference. Field-adjustable fixtures may help standardize inventory. |
| Dimming | Confirm whether classrooms need dimming for presentations, testing, videos, or flexible instruction. |
| Controls | Review occupancy sensors, daylight controls, wall controls, and building automation compatibility. |
| Emergency operation | Confirm emergency backup or egress requirements where applicable. |
LED Lighting for School Gymnasiums
School gym lighting needs to support physical education, assemblies, recreational play, practices, and school sports. Gyms often need higher-output fixtures because of ceiling height and court size, and fixture durability matters because balls and equipment may contact the fixtures or lenses.
This page covers school gym lighting at a high level. For detailed fixture selection, mounting height, gym foot-candle ranges, impact protection, and gym-specific layouts, use the dedicated LED gym lighting page.

Before conversion to LED

School gymnasium after conversion to LED Lighting Supply UFO fixtures
Case Study: Conversion of 400 Watt metal halide lighting to LED Lighting Supply 160 Watt LED UFO High Bay at Tri-City College Prep in Prescott, AZ
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Before: 400 Watt Metal Halide High Bays |
After: 160 Watt LED UFO High Bay | 26400 Lumens |
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Lighting Plan We Created for the Customer
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Lighting Plan |
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Gymnasium Lighting Installation Plan Metrics
- Mounting height: 24 ft
- Fixture Used: LLS-HB-200A-CC-[C]: 120 / 160 / 200 Watt Adjustable UFO High Bay | 19800 to 33000 Lumens | 4000K / 5000K | 100-277V | White or Black Housing
- FC achieved: 52 FC
- Uniformity (Avg/Min): 2.25
LED Lighting for School Sports Fields
School sports fields may need LED sports lights, flood lights, or stadium-style fixtures depending on the sport, field size, pole layout, level of play, surrounding properties, and after-hours use. These projects should account for field coverage, glare control, spill light, pole height, controls, and maintenance access.
School fields may include football, soccer, baseball, softball, track areas, and multi-use athletic spaces. This page summarizes the school-campus side of the project. For detailed field-specific guidance, use the dedicated sports field and sport-specific pages.

LED Lighting for School Parking Lots and Campus Exteriors
School parking lots, bus loops, drop-off lanes, building entrances, exterior walkways, and service areas need reliable outdoor lighting for students, staff, visitors, deliveries, and after-hours activities. LED area lights, shoebox lights, wall packs, canopy lights, and exterior linear fixtures may all be used depending on the space.
Exterior school lighting should be reviewed for pole height, fixture aiming, glare, light spill, pedestrian routes, cameras, controls, and local requirements. Parking and exterior lighting should not create excessive glare toward classrooms, roads, neighboring properties, or athletic areas.
Why a School Lighting Plan Helps
A school lighting plan helps review fixture quantity, placement, light levels, uniformity, controls, and possible dark spots before the fixtures are ordered. This is useful because a school campus may include many different lighting conditions in one project, from classrooms and corridors to gyms, parking lots, and athletic areas.
| Lighting Plan Review | Why It Matters for Schools |
|---|---|
| Classroom layouts | Helps confirm fixture count, spacing, glare, and comfortable light for learning tasks. |
| Gym layouts | Helps review court coverage, ceiling height, impact exposure, and activity areas without duplicating detailed gym design guidance. |
| Sports fields | Helps review pole layout, fixture aiming, field coverage, glare, and spill light before installation. |
| Parking and exterior areas | Helps identify dark zones, overlit areas, glare toward drivers, and coverage around entrances and walkways. |
| Controls planning | Helps coordinate occupancy sensors, dimming, scheduling, daylight controls, and after-hours use. |
Request a school lighting plan
How to Choose LED Lighting for Schools
Start by separating the campus into room and area types. A classroom, corridor, gym, sports field, parking lot, and entry canopy all have different lighting requirements. Choosing by fixture wattage alone can lead to uneven light, glare, poor controls compatibility, or unnecessary energy use.
| Selection Factor | What to Confirm |
|---|---|
| Space type | Separate classrooms, corridors, gyms, offices, cafeterias, exterior areas, parking lots, and sports fields before selecting fixtures. |
| Ceiling height | Classrooms may use panels or troffers, while gyms and multipurpose spaces may need high bays or other higher-output fixtures. |
| Fixture durability | Gyms, corridors, utility areas, locker rooms, and exterior areas may need more durable fixtures, lenses, or housings. |
| Color temperature | Use consistent color temperature within related areas where possible. Avoid mixing noticeably different color temperatures in the same hallway or room group. |
| Controls | Review occupancy sensors, dimming, daylight harvesting, scheduling, after-hours control, and building automation compatibility. |
| Emergency requirements | Confirm emergency lighting, egress lighting, backup systems, and local code requirements for applicable areas. |
| Maintenance access | Review fixture locations, lift access, ceiling access, pole access, and long-term service needs before ordering. |
Benefits of LED Lighting in Schools
- Energy efficiency: LED fixtures can reduce energy use compared with older fluorescent, HID, or metal halide systems, with actual savings depending on wattage, controls, operating hours, and existing conditions.
- Reduced maintenance: LED fixtures can reduce routine lamp and ballast replacement, especially in high-ceiling gyms, corridors, parking lots, and exterior areas.
- Improved light quality: Properly selected LED fixtures can provide more consistent light for classrooms, offices, libraries, gyms, and campus spaces.
- Controls compatibility: Many LED systems can support dimming, occupancy sensors, daylight controls, scheduling, or building automation depending on the selected fixture.
- Instant-on operation: LED fixtures reach usable output quickly compared with HID systems that require warm-up time.
- Campus-wide consistency: Field-adjustable fixtures may help standardize wattage and color temperature across different school spaces.
- Lower disruption over time: Long-life LED fixtures can reduce maintenance interruptions in classrooms, gyms, and high-traffic areas.
Common School Lighting Mistakes
- Using one fixture type everywhere: Classrooms, gyms, corridors, cafeterias, parking lots, and sports fields need different fixture types and layouts.
- Choosing gym fixtures from a catalog only: Gym lighting should account for ceiling height, court use, impact exposure, controls, and glare.
- Letting sports field details overtake the school page: School sports fields should be summarized here, with detailed layouts handled on the sports field pages.
- Mixing color temperatures: Inconsistent color temperature across hallways or connected areas can make a building look uneven.
- Ordering panels before confirming ceiling grids: Older school buildings may not match drawings, so fixture size should be verified before ordering.
- Skipping dimming and controls review: Classrooms, libraries, gyms, cafeterias, and corridors may need different control strategies.
- Ignoring emergency lighting: Egress and emergency requirements should be reviewed before fixture selection.
- Using low-durability fixtures in impact-prone areas: Gyms, corridors, locker rooms, and utility areas may require more durable fixtures or lenses.
- Overlooking maintenance access: High ceilings, poles, and exterior fixtures should be selected with long-term service access in mind.
Safety and Performance Certifications
Available certifications and ratings vary by model and may include UL Listed, ETL Listed, DLC, DLC Premium, wet-location ratings, IP ratings, IK impact ratings, dimming compatibility, controls compatibility, emergency backup compatibility, and other safety or performance listings. Confirm the required listing, voltage, wattage, lumen output, color temperature, controls compatibility, environmental rating, mounting method, and application suitability on the selected product specification before ordering.
School lighting projects should also confirm classroom visual comfort, gym impact exposure, sports field requirements, parking lot lighting needs, exterior glare control, emergency lighting requirements, controls, and local installation requirements before ordering.
Warranty and Warranty Support
Warranty coverage varies by model. Many LED fixtures for schools include a 5-year warranty, with warranty support based in the USA. Confirm warranty coverage, voltage, controls compatibility, emergency compatibility, mounting method, environmental rating, operating temperature, and application restrictions on the selected product specification before ordering. If an issue occurs, our support team can help review the product, application, and warranty claim process.
Request a school lighting plan, and our Product Specialists can help review classrooms, corridors, gyms, parking areas, exterior spaces, sports fields, controls, and product specifications.
LED School Lighting Frequently Asked Questions
What's the Best Color Temperature for Classroom Lighting
For most schools, a 4000K color temperature provides balanced, neutral white light, which is ideal for learning environments. While 3500K can be used for a warmer ambiance, 4000K remains the standard. Our color-selectable panels allow adjustments between 3000K and 5000K, offering flexibility to adapt to changing needs.
How Bright Should Classroom Lighting Be
Classroom lighting should deliver 30 to 50 foot-candles to ensure visual comfort and effective task performance. The Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) recommended practices provide detailed guidance on achieving the right illuminance and uniformity for educational settings.
Is it Best to Use 1x4s, 2x4s, or 2x2 Panel Lights in a Classroom
Choose panel sizes that match your existing ceiling grid to minimize installation costs. 2x4 LED panels are often preferred as they offer double the output of 2x2 or 1x4 panels while maintaining similar efficiency, making them suitable for most classrooms.
How Many Lights Do You Need Per Classroom
The number of fixtures required depends on room size, ceiling height, and desired illumination levels. To ensure optimal lighting, request our complimentary lighting analysis, which includes professional photometric calculations for precise light distribution and uniformity.
What are the Best LED High Bays to Replace 400-Watt Metal Halide Gym Fixtures
We recommend LED high bays ranging from 150 to 240 watts to replace 400-watt metal halides. These fixtures provide equivalent or superior illumination while reducing energy consumption by approximately 60 percent.
What are the Best LED Sports Light Fixtures to Replace 1000 Metal Halide
Our 400-watt and 600-watt LED spot flood fixtures are designed to replace 1000 to 1500 watt metal halide systems. They offer high lumen output and precise beam control, ensuring that athletic fields meet or exceed current lighting standards.
How Easy Is it to Replace Old Gymnasium Lights with LED Fixtures
LED retrofits are designed to connect to existing electrical infrastructure, allowing most installations to be completed in a day with minimal disruption to school activities.
What are the Foot Candle Recommendations for a School Gymnasium
LED gymnasium lighting should provide at least 50 foot-candles for general activities, with higher levels recommended for competitive sports and broadcast requirements.
Can You Dim LED Classroom Lights
All our classroom fixtures support dimming. They are compatible with 0-10V or 1-10V dimming switches, which require low-voltage wiring. This feature allows teachers to adjust lighting levels for various activities.
Can You Add Motion Sensors for School LED Gym Lights
Most UFO lights are compatible with motion sensors, which can automatically dim fixtures to 20-30 percent output when the area is unoccupied, enhancing energy savings during off-hours.












