Colour temperature is the single most common lighting mistake in home renovation — and the one that’s hardest to fix after the fact. This guide covers every Kelvin value from 2700K to 6500K, which rooms each suits, and why the difference between warm white and cool white matters more than brightness.
What is colour temperature?
Colour temperature describes the colour appearance of a light source — how warm (yellowish) or cool (bluish) the light looks. It is measured in Kelvin (K) and has nothing to do with how hot the bulb gets physically.
The term comes from physics: when a metal object is heated, it glows — first red, then orange, then yellow-white, then bluish-white as it gets hotter. Light sources are rated against this scale. A candle flame is around 1,800K. A clear blue sky is around 10,000K. Most indoor lighting falls between 2,700K and 6,500K.
Counter-intuitive fact: Higher Kelvin = cooler, bluer light. Lower Kelvin = warmer, more amber light. Many people assume “warmer” means a higher number — it’s the opposite.
The Kelvin scale — visual guide
| Kelvin range | Name | Appearance | Best applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1800–2200K | Ultra warm / candlelight | Deep amber — very warm | Decorative filament bulbs, mood lighting, restaurants |
| 2700K | Warm white | Soft yellowish white | Bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms, hospitality |
| 3000K | Soft white / warm LED | Slightly less yellow than 2700K | Kitchens, living rooms, hotels, retail |
| 3500K | Neutral warm | Balanced — neither warm nor cool | Retail, open plan offices, commercial spaces |
| 4000K | Neutral / cool white | Crisp, clean white | Kitchens (task), bathrooms, offices, commercial |
| 5000K | Daylight / cool white | Bright, slightly blue-white | Garages, workshops, display lighting, photography |
| 6500K | Daylight | Blue-white — like overcast sky | Inspection areas, colour matching, commercial display |
Room-by-room guide — which CCT for every room
2700K vs 3000K — what’s the actual difference?
This is the most common colour temperature question — and the answer is: less than you think when you’re buying bulbs, more than you think when you compare them side by side.
3000K vs 4000K — which is better for kitchens?
This is genuinely contested among lighting designers. Here’s the case for each:
Case for 3000K: Kitchens are social spaces as much as functional ones. 3000K creates a warm, inviting atmosphere that encourages people to linger. It flatters food presentation. Most Michelin-starred restaurant kitchens (the ones you see, not the back of house) use 3000K or warmer.
Case for 4000K: Kitchens are work spaces where you need to see clearly. 4000K gives better visibility for food safety (is the chicken cooked?), surface cleanliness, and label reading. The EN 12464-1 standard recommends at least 500 lux at 3000–4000K for domestic kitchens.
The best solution: Use 3000K for the ambient ceiling lights and pendants, and 3500K–4000K for the under-cabinet task lighting. Two circuits, two CCTs, both on dimmers. The visual separation of the two zones means the difference isn’t jarring — and you get the best of both.
Mixing colour temperatures — rules
Mixing CCTs in one space is common and can work well — but there are rules:
- Maximum difference: 500K in the same field of view. 2700K and 3000K together is fine. 2700K and 4000K together looks wrong.
- Separate by function: ambient and task can have different CCTs if clearly separated (ceiling vs worktop).
- Never mix on the same surface: Two downlights of different CCTs pointing at the same wall will show a visible seam.
- Accent lighting can go warmer: A 3000K room with 2200K filament accents works because accents are intentionally decorative, not functional.
CCT and CRI together — both matter
Colour temperature tells you the colour of the light. CRI (Colour Rendering Index) tells you how accurately colours are rendered under that light. You need both to specify lighting correctly.
| CRI | Colour accuracy | Best for | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| CRI 80 | Good — standard | Corridors, utility areas | Acceptable minimum |
| CRI 90 | Very good | Living areas, kitchens, retail | Recommended for all visible lighting |
| CRI 95 | Excellent | Artwork, makeup, food display | Specify where colour accuracy is critical |
| CRI 97+ | Near perfect | Museum, surgery, colour grading | Premium — significantly more expensive |
Colour temperature and sleep — the science
Blue light (high Kelvin — 5000K+) suppresses melatonin production, the hormone that makes you sleepy. This is why bright cool-white lighting in the evening makes it harder to fall asleep.
The research shows that the critical window is 2–3 hours before sleep. During this time, switching to warm light (2700K or lower) and reducing brightness to under 50 lux significantly improves sleep onset and quality.
- Before 6pm: Any CCT is fine — your circadian rhythm isn’t affected yet
- 6pm–9pm: Shift to 3000K or warmer — dim main lights, use lamps
- 9pm–bedtime: 2700K maximum — dim to 10–30% — avoid overhead lighting
- Night lighting: 1800–2200K at 1–5 lux — dim red-tinted night lights
Commercial and office colour temperature
Commercial spaces have different requirements from residential. Standards specify minimum CCT and illuminance together:
| Space | Recommended CCT | Target lux | Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open plan office | 3000K–4000K | 500 lux | EN 12464-1 |
| Meeting rooms | 3000K–4000K | 300–500 lux | EN 12464-1 |
| Reception / lobby | 3000K | 200–300 lux | EN 12464-1 |
| Retail (general) | 3000K–3500K | 500–750 lux | IES RP-2 |
| Retail (fashion) | 2700K–3000K | 500–750 lux | IES RP-2 |
| Retail (food) | 2700K–3000K | 500–1,000 lux | IES RP-2 |
| Hospital ward | 3000K–4000K | 300 lux | EN 12464-1 |
| Industrial / warehouse | 4000K–5000K | 200–500 lux | IES RP-7 |
| Car showroom | 3500K–4000K | 750–1,500 lux | IES RP-2 |
Frequently asked questions
Is warm white or cool white better?
Neither is universally better — they suit different applications. Warm white (2700K–3000K) is better for relaxation spaces like bedrooms and living rooms. Cool white (4000K+) is better for task-oriented spaces like offices, garages, and workshops. Most homes use warm white throughout with cooler task lighting in specific zones.
What colour temperature is closest to natural daylight?
Midday sunlight is approximately 5500K–6000K. Overcast sky is 6500K–7500K. “Daylight” bulbs are typically rated at 5000K–6500K. Note that daylight changes throughout the day — sunrise and sunset are around 2000–3000K, which is why these feel warm and relaxing.
Can I change colour temperature after installing fixed lights?
With standard fixed-CCT bulbs, no — you’d need to replace the bulbs or fixtures. If you install tunable white (CCT-adjustable) LEDs or smart bulbs, you can adjust the colour temperature freely via app or controller. This is worth considering for living areas where you want flexibility.
Does colour temperature affect energy consumption?
No — colour temperature has no direct effect on energy use. A 9W LED at 2700K uses the same power as a 9W LED at 6500K. What varies slightly is the lumen output — cooler CCTs tend to be slightly more efficient (more lumens per watt) than very warm CCTs, but the difference is small and rarely worth considering in fixture selection.
Why do my LED lights look different colours even though they’re the same CCT?
This is a binning problem. LEDs are manufactured with natural variation in colour output and are sorted into bins — groups of similar CCT. Cheap LED products use wide bin tolerances (up to 7-step MacAdam ellipse), meaning two bulbs labelled “3000K” could look visibly different. Premium products use tight binning (2-step MacAdam) for consistent colour across all fixtures. If you have visible colour differences across your lighting, this is the cause.
