LED Strip Lighting: The Complete Buyer’s Guide

LED strip lighting is the most versatile lighting product available — but choosing the wrong voltage, brightness, or IP rating is an expensive mistake. This complete buyer’s guide covers everything from 12V vs 24V, lumens per metre, IP ratings, driver sizing, voltage drop, and room-by-room installation advice.

Lighting Guide
LED Strip Lighting: The Complete Buyer’s Guide
Everything you need to choose, size, install, and power LED strip lights — from a single kitchen run to a whole-house installation. Updated 2025.

What is LED strip lighting?

LED strip lights (also called LED tape, ribbon light, or flex strip) are flexible circuit boards with LED chips mounted at regular intervals, supplied on a roll. They can be cut to length, bent around corners, and stuck to almost any surface using the adhesive backing.

They’ve become the most versatile lighting product available — used for under-cabinet kitchen lighting, cove and ceiling lighting, staircase edge lighting, TV bias lighting, architectural accents, outdoor landscape lighting, and commercial display lighting.

Unlike a fixed fixture, strip lights let you put light exactly where you need it — along a shelf edge, inside a cabinet, under a step, or around a ceiling recess — without cutting holes or running conduit.

Types of LED strip — which to choose

TypeBest forKey featureNotes
Single colour (white)Task and ambient lightingSimplest, most efficientChoose CCT carefully — can’t change after install
Tunable white (CCT)Living rooms, bedroomsAdjustable warm to cool whiteNeeds 2-channel driver or smart controller
RGBAccent and entertainment16 million coloursColour mixing at distance — visible seams up close
RGBWAccent + white light neededRGB plus dedicated white chipBetter white quality than RGB alone
RGBWW / RGBCCTPremium installsFull colour + tunable whiteMost expensive — needs smart controller
High-density / COBVisible runs, cove lightingNo visible dots — seamless lightCOB (chip-on-board) gives linear continuous light
Neon flexSignage, curvesDiffused neon-like appearanceNot cuttable at short intervals — check cut points
COB vs SMD: Standard SMD strips have visible individual LED dots when viewed at an angle — especially noticeable in cove lighting where the strip is partially visible. COB (chip-on-board) strips give a continuous line of light with no dots. For any installation where the strip itself might be seen, specify COB.

How bright? Lumens per metre explained

LED strip brightness is measured in lumens per metre (lm/m). This is the number you need to plan your lighting — not watts per metre.

Lumens per metreBrightness levelBest applications
200–400 lm/mLow — accent onlyStair edge lights, display cabinet, TV bias
400–700 lm/mMedium — decorative/ambientCove lighting, bedroom accent, shelf lighting
700–1,000 lm/mGood — ambient lightingCove main light, kitchen ambient, living room
1,000–1,500 lm/mHigh — task capableUnder-cabinet task lighting, retail display
1,500+ lm/mVery high — commercialReplacing fluorescent, workshop, commercial

Quick rule for under-cabinet kitchen lighting: aim for 400–600 lm/m minimum. For worktop task lighting that replaces a dedicated fixture, target 800–1,000 lm/m.

Calculate lumens and power for your strip run →

12V vs 24V — which voltage system?

This is the most important technical decision when specifying LED strip. Both voltages are safe low-voltage DC systems, but they behave very differently over distance.

Property12V strip24V stripWinner
Max run length before voltage drop3–5 metres7–10 metres24V
Voltage drop sensitivityHigh — noticeable dimming at end of runLow — more forgiving24V
Cable size requiredLarger for same currentSmaller cable, same power24V
AvailabilityVery widely availableWidely availableEqual
Smart controller choiceLarge selectionGood selection12V (marginally)
Colour consistency over runCan vary at run endMore consistent24V
Always choose 24V for runs over 3 metres. The voltage drop problem on 12V is real and ruins otherwise well-planned installations — the end of the strip is visibly dimmer than the start. 24V halves the current for the same power, which cuts voltage drop to one quarter.
48V systems are now available for commercial and architectural installations. They allow runs up to 20+ metres from a single feed point. Overkill for most residential uses but increasingly used in commercial cove and linear lighting.

Colour temperature and CRI for LED strip

LED strips are available in a wide range of colour temperatures. Choose based on the room and application:

CCTAppearanceBest roomsAvoid in
2700KWarm white — incandescent-likeBedroom, living room, restaurantKitchens (makes food look yellow)
3000KWarm white — LED standardKitchen, living room, hospitalityWorks almost everywhere
3500KNeutral warmRetail, open plan officesResidential bedrooms
4000KNeutral whiteKitchen task, bathrooms, officesBedrooms, romantic settings
6500KDaylight / cool whiteGarages, workshops, displayLiving areas — too clinical

CRI — why it matters for strip lights

CRI (Colour Rendering Index) measures how accurately the light renders colours compared to natural daylight. For LED strips:

  • CRI 80 — standard, fine for accent and decorative use
  • CRI 90+ — recommended for kitchens, living areas, anywhere food or skin tones matter
  • CRI 95+ — retail, art display, photography applications

The price difference between CRI 80 and CRI 90 strip is small — always specify CRI 90+ for visible lighting in living spaces.

IP rating — indoor vs outdoor LED strip

IP ratingProtectionBest forNotes
IP20No moisture protectionDry indoor locations onlyCove, under cabinet, display cabinets
IP44Splash proofBathrooms (not direct shower)Suitable for Zone 2 bathroom areas
IP65Dust tight + water jetsKitchens, covered outdoorSilicone sleeve — some light loss
IP67Temporary immersionOutdoor ground level, deckingFully encapsulated in resin
IP68Continuous immersionPonds, underwater featuresSpecialist product — high cost
Don’t use IP20 strip outdoors. Even in covered areas, moisture ingress will destroy the strip within months. Use IP65 minimum for any outdoor installation, IP67 for ground-level or decking applications where water can pool.

Power supplies and driver sizing

Every LED strip installation needs a constant-voltage LED driver (power supply). The driver converts mains AC to the correct DC voltage (12V or 24V) and must be correctly sized for the load.

Sizing your power supply

Never run a driver at 100% of its rated wattage. Load it to a maximum of 80% — this extends the driver’s life and prevents overheating.

Formula: Driver wattage needed = (Strip W/m × total metres) ÷ 0.80

Example: 14.4W/m strip, 5 metre run
Load = 14.4 × 5 = 72W
Driver needed = 72 ÷ 0.80 = 90W minimum → buy a 100W driver
Strip power (W/m)Run lengthTotal loadDriver size (at 80%)
9.6W/m (24V)5m48W60W driver
14.4W/m (24V)5m72W100W driver
14.4W/m (24V)10m144W2× 100W drivers
19.2W/m (24V)5m96W120W driver
24W/m (24V)5m120W150W driver
Calculate drivers for your strip run →

Voltage drop — the most common installation mistake

Voltage drop is the single biggest cause of failed LED strip installations. It occurs because the resistance of the copper conductors in the strip causes the voltage to fall along the run — the end of the strip is dimmer than the start.

How much voltage drop is acceptable?

Maximum 3% voltage drop from the driver output to the end of the strip. On a 24V system, that’s 0.72V maximum. On a 12V system, 0.36V maximum — which is why 12V strips are so much more sensitive to run length.

Solutions for voltage drop

  • Use 24V instead of 12V — halves the current, quarters the voltage drop
  • Feed from both ends — connect the driver to both the start and end of the strip using parallel cables
  • Use larger cable — increase cable cross-section from 0.75mm² to 1.5mm² or 2.5mm²
  • Split into shorter runs — use multiple drivers with shorter runs from each
  • Centre feed — place the driver at the midpoint of the run, halving the effective length in each direction
Check voltage drop for your run →

Dimming and smart control

LED strip lights can be dimmed in several ways, depending on your driver and control system:

Control typeHow it worksBest for
Trailing-edge (TRIAC) dimmerPhase-cut dimming — cheapest optionSingle-colour simple installs
0-10V / PWM dimmerSignal wire controls dim levelCommercial and architectural
DALI controllerDigital addressable — scene controlCommercial, multi-zone
Smart (WiFi/Bluetooth)App or voice controlResidential, RGB/tunable white
RF remote controllerRadio frequency remoteSimple residential RGB
For RGB and RGBW strips: you need an RGB controller, not a standard dimmer. A standard dimmer only controls one channel — it can’t mix colours. Use a smart controller (Wled, Govee, Philips Hue gradient, or similar) for colour-changing applications.

Installation — step by step

1
Plan your run and measure
Measure the total length of strip needed. Add 10% for waste at cut points. Note where the driver will be positioned and the cable route from driver to strip start.
2
Choose and size your driver
Calculate total strip wattage (W/m × total metres). Size your driver at 125% of total load (80% loading rule). Choose a driver rated for the correct voltage (12V or 24V) and IP rating for the location.
3
Check voltage drop
Calculate voltage drop for your run length and cable size. If over 3%, either split the run, use larger cable, or feed from both ends. Never skip this step for runs over 3m.
4
Prepare the surface
Clean the surface with isopropyl alcohol and allow to dry completely. The adhesive backing fails on dusty or greasy surfaces — especially in kitchens. For aluminium profiles, no adhesive is needed.
5
Install the aluminium profile (recommended)
Aluminium LED profiles (channels) protect the strip, provide a diffused finish, and act as a heat sink. Mount the profile first, then slide the strip in. End caps and diffuser covers clip on last.
6
Stick and connect
Peel the backing and press the strip firmly — especially at corners. Use solderless connectors at cut points and corners. Solder joints are more reliable for permanent installs.
7
Wire the driver
Connect the driver output to the strip input using correctly sized cable (1.5mm² minimum for most residential runs). Ensure polarity is correct — LED strips are polarity sensitive. Connect the driver input to a fused spur or the control system.
8
Test before sealing
Power up and check the full run for even brightness, correct colour, and no flickering. Check the driver for excessive heat after 30 minutes. Fix any issues before closing up profiles or finishing.

Applications — room by room

Under-cabinet kitchen lighting

The most popular LED strip application. Mount at the front of the upper cabinet, facing downward onto the worktop. Use IP20 strip in a slim aluminium profile with a frosted diffuser. Specify 3000K–4000K at CRI 90+ for accurate food colours. Target 400–600 lm/m minimum — higher for a dedicated task light.

Cove and ceiling lighting

Indirect lighting bounced off the ceiling from a recessed ledge or cove. Requires high-output strip — 700–1,000 lm/m minimum — because light is lost in the bounce. The ceiling needs to be white or near-white for efficiency. Use COB strip to avoid dot patterns on the ceiling. Set the cove lip at least 100mm deep to hide the strip from view.

Staircase lighting

LED strip along the front edge of each step (riser or tread edge) creates a dramatic safety-lit staircase. Use IP44 if the stairs are near the front door where moisture could be an issue. Motion sensor control is ideal — lights activate as you approach. 200–400 lm/m is sufficient for step marking; it should not be the primary stair lighting.

TV bias lighting

Strip behind the TV reduces eye strain and improves perceived contrast. Specify 6500K to match screen colour temperature, or use an Ambilight-style controller that matches screen colours in real time. Target 10% of screen luminance for the bias light — typically 200–300 lm/m at low brightness.

Outdoor landscape and garden

Use IP67 strip minimum. 24V systems are preferred for longer outdoor runs. Waterproof connectors at all joints. Keep drivers in weatherproof enclosures rated IP65 or better. For path edge lighting, bury-rated IP68 strip in an aluminium channel.

Frequently asked questions

How long can an LED strip run be?

The maximum practical run from a single feed point depends on voltage and strip power. As a rule of thumb: 12V strips up to 3–5 metres, 24V strips up to 7–10 metres. Beyond these distances, voltage drop causes visible dimming at the far end. Use multiple driver feed points or a 48V system for longer runs.

Can LED strips be cut?

Yes — but only at the marked cut points, typically every 25mm, 50mm, or 100mm depending on the strip. Cutting anywhere else breaks the circuit. The cut mark is usually indicated by a scissor symbol or a dotted line between LEDs.

Do LED strips get hot?

LED strips generate some heat — mainly from the driver circuitry. High-density strips (14W/m+) generate enough heat to reduce LED life if not managed. Always install high-power strips in aluminium profiles which act as heat sinks. Never coil or bunch strips — heat build-up will cause early failure.

What’s the difference between LED strip and LED tape?

Nothing — they’re the same product. LED strip, LED tape, ribbon light, and flex strip all refer to the flexible PCB with LED chips. The terminology varies by country and manufacturer.

Can I connect two strips together?

Yes, using solderless strip connectors or by soldering. Ensure the total combined length stays within the voltage drop limit for your system. If connecting to extend a run, the combined wattage must stay within the driver’s rated capacity (at 80% loading).

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