How many lumens for a garage? Aim for 50 lumens per square foot for general use, or 100 lumens per square foot for a workshop. A standard two-car garage needs 6,000–8,000 lumens — typically 3–4 LED shop lights.
How many lumens for a garage — by size and use
| Garage size | Sq footage | General use | Workshop / detailed work |
|---|---|---|---|
| One-car garage | 12×20 ft (240 sq ft) | 3,200–4,800 lm | 6,000–10,000 lm |
| One-car + storage | 14×22 ft (308 sq ft) | 4,000–6,000 lm | 8,000–12,000 lm |
| Two-car garage | 20×20 ft (400 sq ft) | 6,000–8,000 lm | 12,000–16,000 lm |
| Two-car + workshop | 22×24 ft (528 sq ft) | 8,000–10,000 lm | 16,000–20,000 lm |
| Three-car garage | 30×22 ft (660 sq ft) | 10,000–13,000 lm | 20,000–26,000 lm |
| Large workshop | 24×30 ft (720 sq ft) | 12,000–14,000 lm | 24,000–28,000 lm |
The lumen rule for garages
Multiply your garage square footage by the target lumens per square foot to get your total. Then divide by the lumens per fixture to find how many lights you need.
Best garage light types — compared
| Fixture type | Typical lumens | Best for | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| LED shop light (4 ft) | 4,000–6,000 lm | General garage use | Easiest to install — plugs in or hardwired. Best value per lumen. |
| LED shop light (8 ft) | 7,000–10,000 lm | Large garages | Covers more area per fixture — fewer runs of cable needed |
| LED high bay (UFO) | 10,000–30,000 lm | High ceilings 10 ft+ | Best for tall garages or converted commercial spaces |
| LED wraparound | 3,500–5,000 lm | Low ceilings 8–9 ft | Slim profile — good for tight spaces |
| LED floodlight | 2,000–5,000 lm | Spot areas / workbench | Use to supplement general lighting at the workbench |
How many LED shop lights for a garage?
The most common garage light is a 4-foot LED shop light producing 4,000–5,000 lumens. Here’s how many you need by garage size:
| Garage size | 4,000 lm fixtures | 5,000 lm fixtures | Spacing |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-car (12×20 ft) | 2–3 fixtures | 2 fixtures | 6–8 ft apart |
| 2-car (20×20 ft) | 4–6 fixtures | 3–4 fixtures | 6–8 ft apart |
| 2-car workshop (22×24 ft) | 6–8 fixtures | 5–6 fixtures | 6 ft apart |
| 3-car (30×22 ft) | 8–10 fixtures | 7–8 fixtures | 6–8 ft apart |
Colour temperature for garages
Colour temperature (CCT) affects how easy it is to see clearly. For garages and workshops, cool white is better than warm white:
| CCT | Colour | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 4000K | Neutral white | General garage use — bright without being harsh |
| 5000K | Cool white | Workshop, car work, painting — best colour accuracy |
| 6500K | Daylight | Inspection work, bodywork, matching paint colours |
| 2700K–3000K | Warm white | Not recommended for garages — makes everything look orange |
What about watts — how many watts for a garage?
Focus on lumens, not watts. But as a rough guide for LED fixtures:
| LED watts | Approximate lumens | Equivalent old fluorescent |
|---|---|---|
| 20–25W LED | 2,000–2,500 lm | 4-ft single fluorescent tube |
| 40–45W LED | 4,000–5,000 lm | 4-ft twin fluorescent fixture |
| 60–65W LED | 6,000–7,000 lm | 8-ft twin fluorescent |
| 100W LED | 10,000–12,000 lm | 400W metal halide high bay |
Frequently asked questions
Calculate the exact number for your garage
Enter your garage dimensions and intended use — the calculator shows total lumens needed, fixture count, and spacing.
Open the Room Lumens Calculator →