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Complete Warehouse Lighting Design Guide: Footcandles, Spacing, Wattage
Arlen Conan
Written By: Arlen Conan Last Update: June 05, 2026

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Complete Warehouse Lighting Design Guide: Footcandles, Spacing, Wattage

by ArlenConan 05 Jun 2026 0 comments

Key Takeaways

  • Warehouse storage areas need 10 footcandles (fc); picking aisles need 20–30 fc; packing and inspection stations need 50 fc per IES RP-7
  • Fixture spacing should not exceed 1.2–1.5× the mounting height for UFO high bay fixtures
  • Wattage planning: roughly 0.7–1.0W per sq ft for storage; 1.5–2.0W per sq ft for high-pick warehouses
  • Total lumens needed = (area × footcandles) ÷ (Coefficient of Utilization × Light Loss Factor)
  • Most LED retrofits of metal halide HID pay back in 18–36 months including utility rebates

Why Warehouse Lighting Design Matters

A well-designed warehouse lighting system does three things: it keeps workers safe by ensuring they can see hazards and read labels, it minimizes operating cost over the fixture's 50,000-hour lifespan, and it qualifies the facility for utility rebates that can offset 20–50% of the project cost. A poorly designed system fails all three — too few fixtures and workers misread inventory labels; too many fixtures and the facility pays double for electricity it doesn't need; uncertified fixtures and the rebate check never arrives.

This guide walks through the design process the way a lighting engineer approaches it: start with the application, calculate the requirement, choose the fixture, plan the layout, then verify the result. Every formula and value is referenced to the IES Lighting Handbook (10th edition) and IES RP-7 (American National Standard Practice for Industrial Lighting), the two documents that most U.S. building inspectors and insurance carriers use to evaluate warehouse installations.

Step 1: Establish the Footcandle Target by Zone

The footcandle (fc) is the U.S. measurement unit for light arriving at a surface, equal to one lumen per square foot. Warehouse spaces are rarely uniform — a single building usually has multiple zones with different visual demands, and each zone gets its own target.

The IES RP-7 standard publishes the following minimums for warehouse environments:

Warehouse Zone Recommended Footcandles Typical CCT
Bulk storage (low pick rate) 10 fc 5000K
Storage with picking activity 20–30 fc 5000K
Picking aisles (manual pick) 30 fc 5000K
Packing & shipping prep 50 fc 4000K–5000K
Inspection & quality control 75–100 fc 5000K
Loading docks (interior) 30 fc 5000K
Office & administrative 30–50 fc 3500K–4000K
Break rooms & restrooms 20 fc 3500K–4000K

A few practical notes: storage with only forklift traffic and no manual picking can stay at 10 fc; the moment workers are reading SKU labels or pulling items by hand, the requirement jumps to 20–30 fc. Color temperature (CCT) for warehouse work areas should be 5000K daylight — research consistently shows 5000K improves visual acuity and reduces error rates in inventory tasks compared to 3000K warm or 4000K neutral.

Step 2: Calculate Total Lumens Required

Once you have the footcandle target, calculate the total lumens needed for each zone using the lumen method:

Total Lumens = (Area in sq ft × Target Footcandles) ÷ (CU × LLF)

CU (Coefficient of Utilization) accounts for how efficiently the fixture's light reaches the work plane. It depends on room geometry, ceiling reflectance and fixture beam angle:

  • Open, light-colored warehouse (white ceiling, ≥30% reflectance): CU = 0.7
  • Standard warehouse with racking and medium reflectance: CU = 0.5
  • Dark, cluttered, or low-reflectance industrial space: CU = 0.4

LLF (Light Loss Factor) accounts for lumen depreciation over the fixture's life, dust accumulation on the lens, and temperature derating. For commercial LED fixtures, use LLF = 0.85.

Worked Example

A 200-ft × 300-ft warehouse (60,000 sq ft) with mixed pallet storage and active picking aisles. Average ceiling height 28 ft. Standard racking, moderate reflectance.

  • Target: 25 fc (split between 20 fc bulk storage and 30 fc picking)
  • CU = 0.5
  • LLF = 0.85
Total Lumens = (60,000 × 25) ÷ (0.5 × 0.85)
            = 1,500,000 ÷ 0.425
            = 3,529,412 lumens

This warehouse needs roughly 3.5 million lumens spread across the floor.

Step 3: Select the Fixture Wattage by Ceiling Height

LED high bay fixture wattage is chosen primarily based on mounting height. Going higher requires more lumens per fixture; going lower wastes lumens and creates glare.

Mounting Height GGJIA Recommended Wattage Lumens per Fixture Approximate Coverage
12–15 ft 100W UFO or Linear 14,000 lm 1,400 sq ft @ 10 fc
15–20 ft 150W UFO or Linear 21,000 lm 2,100 sq ft @ 10 fc
20–25 ft 200W UFO 28,000 lm 2,800 sq ft @ 10 fc
25–30 ft 240W UFO or 300W Linear 36,000–45,000 lm 3,600–4,500 sq ft @ 10 fc
30–40 ft 300W–400W UFO 45,000–60,000 lm 4,500–6,000 sq ft @ 10 fc

Continuing the example: with a 28-ft ceiling, a 240W UFO high bay (36,000 lm) is appropriate. To reach 3,529,412 lumens:

Fixture count = 3,529,412 ÷ 36,000 = 98 fixtures

For an even grid in a 200 × 300 ft space, that rounds cleanly to a 7 × 14 pattern (98 fixtures), with approximately 28 ft spacing in both directions.

Step 4: Verify Spacing with the Spacing Criterion

The Spacing Criterion (SC) is the maximum spacing between fixtures expressed as a multiple of mounting height. Exceed it and you get dark spots between fixtures; stay under it and the light distribution is even.

Fixture Type Spacing Criterion
UFO High Bay (120° beam) 1.2–1.5
Linear High Bay (90° beam) 1.0–1.3 in cross-beam direction; 1.5 along beam
Low Bay Flat Panel 0.8–1.0

For UFO fixtures at 28 ft mounting height, the maximum spacing is approximately:

Max Spacing = 1.5 × 28 ft = 42 ft

Our 28-ft grid spacing is well within the SC, so the layout will produce even light distribution. If the calculation had returned 50 ft spacing, we'd need to either drop to a smaller fixture (more units, tighter spacing) or accept some non-uniformity in low-importance zones.

Step 5: Plan for Lighting Controls

Modern warehouse lighting is rarely "on or off." Controls add 30–60% additional energy savings on top of the LED retrofit itself and often determine whether the project qualifies for the highest utility rebate tier.

0–10V Dimming

All GGJIA commercial fixtures accept 0–10V analog dimming, the most widely supported control protocol in commercial buildings. Dim to 10% during low-occupancy hours or when daylight from skylights supplements ambient light.

PIR Motion Sensors

Most warehouses have intermittent occupancy in storage zones — workers enter, pull items, leave. Add a PIR sensor on each fixture (sold as accessory) and program the fixture to dim to 10% when no motion is detected for 5 minutes, then ramp back to 100% when motion resumes. Typical energy savings on top of the LED retrofit: 40–60% in storage zones.

Daylight Harvesting

For warehouses with skylights or clerestory windows, install photocells on the fixtures closest to the daylight source. The fixtures dim automatically as daylight provides ambient illumination. Energy savings: 15–30% depending on daylight availability.

Time Clock & Building Management Integration

Most large facilities tie lighting to a building management system (BMS) for scheduled on/off and demand-response capability. 0–10V dimming integrates with virtually all commercial BMS platforms.

Step 6: Calculate the Energy & Cost Impact

This is where the design meets the spreadsheet.

Existing System (Baseline)

Assume the warehouse currently runs 98 × 400W metal halide HID fixtures, total connected load 39,200 W. At 4,000 operating hours per year (typical for 2-shift warehouse), annual energy:

39,200W × 4,000 hr ÷ 1,000 = 156,800 kWh/year

At a U.S. average commercial rate of $0.13/kWh: $20,384/year in lighting electricity.

LED Retrofit (Project)

Replacing with 98 × 240W LED UFO high bay fixtures: connected load 23,520 W.

23,520W × 4,000 hr ÷ 1,000 = 94,080 kWh/year

Annual cost: $12,230. Savings: $8,154/year on energy alone — a 40% reduction.

Adding Motion Sensors

Assume motion-sensor dimming captures 50% additional energy savings in 60% of the space (the storage zones, not the always-active packing area):

Net annual consumption = 94,080 × (1 − 0.5 × 0.6) = 65,856 kWh

Annual cost: $8,561. Savings vs HID baseline: $11,823/year (58% reduction).

Payback with Utility Rebate

At approximately $200 per DLC Premium high bay rebate (typical of major utilities like ConEd, PG&E, Eversource):

  • LED fixture cost: $150 × 98 = $14,700
  • Installation labor (electrical contractor): $50/fixture × 98 = $4,900
  • Total project cost: $19,600
  • Utility rebate (DLC Premium): $200 × 98 = $19,600
  • Net project cost: $0
  • Annual savings: $11,823
  • Payback period: immediate (rebate offsets project)

Most projects don't see 100% rebate coverage, but $50–$150 per fixture is common. Even at $50/fixture rebate, payback is roughly 16 months.

Step 7: Verify the Design with a Photometric Simulation

For projects above 10 fixtures, run a professional photometric simulation in DIALux or AGi32 before purchasing. The simulation will:

  • Map predicted footcandles across the floor (heatmap)
  • Verify uniformity ratio (target: max-to-min under 4:1 in work areas)
  • Identify dark spots requiring additional fixtures
  • Produce documentation suitable for permit submission and rebate processing

GGJIA provides free DIALux/AGi32 photometric layouts for projects of 10+ fixtures. Email support@ggjia-led.com with floor plan dimensions, ceiling height and target footcandle level; turnaround is typically 2 business days.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Designing only to the legal minimum. OSHA doesn't specify warehouse footcandles directly, and many sites use the bare-minimum 5 fc from construction-site standards. That's inadequate for pick-pack accuracy. Use IES RP-7 targets — 20–30 fc for active warehouse zones.
  2. Choosing wattage by guesswork. "Bigger is better" leads to over-illumination, wasted energy and glare. Use the calculation in Step 2, not pattern-matching from another facility.
  3. Forgetting the Light Loss Factor. Designs done without LLF over-promise day-one performance and under-deliver by year 3 once dust and aging set in. Always design with LLF = 0.85.
  4. Ignoring controls in the budget. Motion sensors add roughly $25–$50 per fixture but typically pay back in 6–18 months on energy savings alone, before utility incentives.
  5. Buying non-DLC fixtures. Even if the upfront price is lower, missing the utility rebate (often $50–$200 per fixture) makes the total project cost higher than the DLC alternative.
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