Definition
DALI (Digital Addressable Lighting Interface, standardized as IEC 62386) is a two-way digital communication protocol specifically designed for lighting control. Unlike analog control methods (0-10V, TRIAC), DALI assigns a unique address to each luminaire, enabling individual control, status monitoring, and energy reporting. A single DALI bus supports up to 64 addresses, with each luminaire capable of storing 16 scene presets. DALI-2 (2014) added interoperability certification between manufacturers, and D4i (DALI-2 + integrated bus power supply) is the current standard for luminaire-level lighting control with mandatory energy and diagnostics data. DALI is the foundation of smart building lighting — enabling daylight harvesting, occupancy-based control, circadian scheduling, and granular energy analytics per luminaire.
Key Data
| Parameter | Value / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Bus topology | 2-wire polarity-free bus (daisy-chain, star, or tree — any topology except ring) |
| Max addresses per bus | 64 (DALI) or 128 (DALI-2 with extended addressing) — each luminaire has unique short address |
| Max bus length | 300m at 1.5mm² wire — signal degrades beyond this |
| Communication | Bidirectional: luminaire reports status, lamp failure, energy consumption, and emergency test results back to controller |
| D4i requirements | IEC 62386 Parts 251 (luminaire data), 252 (energy reporting), 253 (diagnostics). Mandatory for new luminaire-level controls. |
| Cost premium vs 0-10V | $15-40 per fixture — pays back in 2-5 years via energy savings and reduced recommissioning |
Application Guide
Large office (100+ fixtures)
DALI-2 with D4i luminaires, per-fixture energy monitoring, daylight harvesting
30-40% energy savings, ESG reporting data, workspace reconfiguration without rewiring
Retail (scene-based)
DALI-2 with scene controllers, tunable white, 16 scenes preset
Morning/day/evening/sale/event scenes; CCT adjustment for seasonal window displays
Warehouse (simple on/off/dim)
0-10V or DALI — DALI if networked energy reporting required
Group control sufficient for open areas; DALI premium only justified for multi-tenant or ESCO-managed facilities
Conclusion & Procurement Recommendation
For B2B procurement: specify DALI-2 and D4i certification for any project above 50 luminaires in commercial spaces. The marginal cost ($15-40/fixture) is recovered through 30-40% energy savings (daylight + occupancy) and future-proofing for workspace changes. Always specify interoperability: require DALI-2 certification (not just 'DALI compatible') to ensure multi-vendor systems work together. For emergency lighting: DALI emergency (IEC 62386 Part 202) enables automated monthly function tests and annual duration tests per EN 50172 — eliminating manual testing labor for large facilities.