Lighting Units Converter — All-in-One

Lux (lx)
Light arriving at a surface. One lumen per square metre. The SI standard for illuminance.
E = Φ / A
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Footcandle (fc)
Imperial illuminance. One lumen per square foot. Widely used in US lighting specifications.
1 fc = 10.764 lx
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Lux at distance
Illuminance falls as the square of distance. Doubling distance quarters the lux (inverse square law).
E = I / d²
Inverse square law — illuminance vs distance
Source E E/4 E/9 d 2d 3d 0
Lux ↔ Footcandles
Most common illuminance conversion. Used constantly in international specs.
lux →
46.5footcandles
fc →
538.2lux
Formula
fc = lux ÷ 10.764
lux = fc × 10.764
Lux from lumens + area
How many lumens does it take to hit a target lux over a given area?
lumens
200lux
18.6footcandles
Formula
E (lux) = Φ (lm) ÷ A (m²)
Lux from candela at distance
Point source illuminance. At 2× distance, lux drops to ¼. This is the inverse square law.
candela
metres
111.1lux (nadir, perpendicular)
10.3footcandles
Formula
E = I (cd) ÷ d² (m²)
Off-axis: E = I × cos(θ) ÷ d²
💡
Lumen (lm)
Total light output from a source in all directions. The quantity on the bulb box.
Φ (phi)
📊
Lm/m² = Lux
When lumens land on a surface, they become lux. Spread the same lumens over a larger area and lux falls.
E = Φ / A
🔢
Lumens in a cone
A focused beam captures only part of the total lumen output. The cone formula calculates how much.
Φ = 2π I (1−cosθ/2)
Same lumens, different areas — lux changes
1000 lm over 5 m² 200 lux 1000 ÷ 5 = 200 1000 lm over 20 m² 50 lux 1000 ÷ 20 = 50
Lumens from lux + area
How many lumens are needed to achieve a target illuminance over a space?
target lux
6000lumens required
Formula
Φ (lm) = E (lux) × A (m²)
Lumens in a beam cone
Total flux within a cone of a given beam angle, assuming uniform candela intensity I.
candela
beam angle °
lumens in cone
Formula
Φ = 2π × I × (1 − cos(θ/2))
Lumens → area at target lux
Given a fixture’s lumen output, what area can it illuminate at a target level?
lumens
target lux
4.0m² coverable
43.1sq ft
Formula
A = Φ (lm) ÷ E (lux)
🔦
Candela (cd)
Luminous intensity — brightness in a specific direction. Does not depend on distance.
I (intensity)
📡
CBCP
Center Beam Candlepower — peak intensity at the center of a spotlight beam. The “punch” number.
cd at 0°
🌐
Steradian (sr)
Solid angle unit. Full sphere = 4π sr. A hemisphere = 2π sr. Used in candela-to-lumen conversion.
I = Φ / Ω
Candela from lux at distance
Back-calculate the required intensity to hit a target illuminance at a given distance.
target lux
metres
1800candela required
Formula
I (cd) = E (lux) × d² (m²)
Candela from lumens
Average candela for an isotropic (omnidirectional) source. Real fixtures concentrate light, so CBCP will be higher.
lumens
63.7cd (avg, isotropic source)
Formula
I = Φ ÷ (4π) = Φ ÷ 12.566
4π = full sphere in steradians
Off-axis illuminance
Illuminance on a tilted surface. At 30° off-axis at 3m, what lux hits the surface?
candela
metres (to surface)
angle °
lux on tilted surface
Formula
E = I × cos(θ) ÷ d²
These conversions are specific to photometric planning — beam geometry, mounting heights, and spacing. They connect directly to the IES File Reader and Mounting Height Calculator.
Beam diameter at mounting height
How wide is the beam footprint on the floor for a given fixture and ceiling height?
beam angle °
height (m)
2.18metres diameter
7.2feet diameter
Formula
D = 2 × h × tan(θ ÷ 2)
Required beam angle from target diameter
What beam angle fixture do you need to achieve a desired footprint at a given height?
target diameter (m)
height (m)
53.1degrees beam angle
Formula
θ = 2 × atan(D ÷ (2 × h)) × (180/π)
Spacing-to-mounting-height ratio
S/MH ratio determines if fixtures are spaced for good uniformity. Ideal range: 0.8–1.2 for general.
spacing (m)
mounting height (m)
1.33S/MH ratio
Interpretation
<0.5 Heavy overlap · 0.5–0.8 Tight · 0.8–1.2 Ideal · 1.2–1.5 Marginal · >1.5 Dark gaps
Inverse square law checker
If you know lux at distance 1, what lux at distance 2? Works for any point source.
lux at d₁
d₁ (m)
d₂ (m)
125lux at d₂
Formula
E₂ = E₁ × (d₁ ÷ d₂)²
lm/W
Lumens per watt — how efficiently electricity is converted to light. Higher is better.
η = Φ / P
🔥
Incandescent
8–16 lm/W. Most energy wasted as heat. A 60W bulb produces ~800 lm and 54W of heat.
~12 lm/W
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LED
80–200+ lm/W. State-of-the-art chips exceed 220 lm/W in lab conditions.
~120 lm/W typical
Lumens from watts + efficacy
Predict a fixture’s lumen output from its wattage and typical technology efficacy.
watts
lm/W efficacy
1540lumens output
Formula
Φ (lm) = P (W) × η (lm/W)
Efficacy from lumens + watts
Calculate a fixture’s efficacy. Compare against reference values below to assess quality.
lumens
watts
120.0lm/W
Formula
η = Φ (lm) ÷ P (W)
Energy saving from upgrade
Compare old vs new fixture wattage to find energy reduction percentage.
old watts
new watts
85%energy reduction
51 Wwatts saved per fixture
Formula
Saving % = (1 − P_new / P_old) × 100
TechnologyTypical efficacyEnergy wasted as heatStatus
Incandescent8–16 lm/W~90%Largely phased out
Halogen15–25 lm/W~85%Being phased out
CFL compact fluorescent40–70 lm/W~75%Declining
T8 fluorescent tube70–100 lm/W~60%Being replaced by LED
Metal halide60–100 lm/W~70%Being replaced by LED
LED residential (standard)80–120 lm/W~50%Current standard
LED commercial (quality)120–170 lm/W~40%Best practice
LED (high-performance)170–220+ lm/W~25%State of the art
Watts, volts, amps
Ohm’s law for AC power. Enter any two to get the third.
volts
amps
60watts
W ÷
volts
0.50amps drawn
Formula
P (W) = V × I (amps)
kWh energy consumption
How much energy does a lighting circuit use? Essential for cost calculation.
total watts
hours per day
1.60kWh per day
584kWh per year
Formula
kWh = W × h ÷ 1000
Annual electricity cost
Running cost of a lighting circuit over a year.
watts
hrs/day
¢/kWh rate
$93.44per year
Formula
Cost = W × h × 365 × rate ÷ 100000
Typical illuminance levels by application
ApplicationTypical luxFootcandlesNotes
Moonlight0.1 lux0.01 fcNatural reference
Corridor / stairwell50–100 lux5–9 fcSafety minimum
Bedroom / relaxed living100–200 lux9–18 fcAmbient only
Living room (standard)150–300 lux14–28 fcGeneral living
Office — general300–500 lux28–46 fcEN 12464-1 office
Kitchen (task surfaces)400–700 lux37–65 fcCountertop work
Retail (general)500–1000 lux46–93 fcProduct display
Retail (accent/display)1000–3000 lux93–278 fcSparkle and focus
Drawing / detailed work750–1500 lux70–139 fcEN 12464-1 drawing
Operating theatre10,000–100,000 lux930–9300 fcSurgical field
Outdoor — overcast day1,000–10,000 lux93–930 fcDaylight reference
Direct sunlight100,000 lux9,290 fcNatural maximum
Lighting unit symbol reference
UnitSymbolMeasuresConversion
LumenlmTotal luminous flux1 lm = 1 cd × sr
LuxlxIlluminance (lm/m²)1 lux = 1 lm/m²
FootcandlefcIlluminance (lm/ft²)1 fc = 10.764 lux
CandelacdLuminous intensity1 cd = 1 lm/sr
Candela per m²cd/m²Luminance (surface brightness)1 cd/m² = 1 nit
NitntLuminance (display/surface)1 nit = 1 cd/m²
SteradiansrSolid angleFull sphere = 4π sr ≈ 12.57 sr
Lumen per wattlm/WLuminous efficacyHigher = more efficient
Key formulas
Illuminance (lux)
E = Φ / A        (lm ÷ m²)
E = I / d²         (cd ÷ m²)
E = I·cos(θ) / d²    (off-axis)
1 fc = 10.764 lux
Beam geometry
D = 2h·tan(θ/2)   (beam diameter)
θ = 2·atan(D/2h)   (beam angle)
E₂ = E₁·(d₁/d₂)²    (inv. square)
S/MH ideal: 0.8–1.2
Flux & intensity
Φ = E · A          (lm = lux × m²)
I = Φ / 4π         (isotropic)
Φ_cone = 2π·I·(1−cosθ/2)
η = Φ / P          (lm/W)
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