The definitive reference for outdoor lighting IP ratings: application-by-application requirements, full first-digit and second-digit breakdown, IP65 vs IP66 vs IP67 vs IP68 comparison, why IP68 isn't always the best choice, and how to specify ingress protection correctly per IEC 60529.
IP rating (Ingress Protection rating, per IEC 60529) is an international standard that classifies the degree of protection provided by an enclosure against intrusion of solid objects (dust, tools, fingers) and water. The code consists of the letters \"IP\" followed by two digits — e.g., IP65. The first digit (0–6) indicates solid particle protection; the second digit (0–8) indicates water ingress protection.
For outdoor lighting, IP rating is arguably the single most important specification because it determines whether a fixture will survive rain, dust, snow, pressure washing, or submersion. An under-specified IP rating leads to water ingress, corrosion, LED failure, and electrical hazards — typically within the first 12 months. An over-specified IP rating wastes money and can cause thermal issues that shorten LED lifespan.
The IP code format is IP XY where X = solid protection (0–6) and Y = water protection (0–8). An \"X\" means the digit was not tested. For example, IPX4 means water protection level 4 was tested, but solid protection was not.
Choosing the right IP rating is not about picking the highest number — it's about matching protection to the specific environmental exposure. IP65 covers 90% of outdoor above-ground use cases including rain, dust, and hose-down cleaning. IP68 is not automatically better — it only certifies submersion under manufacturer-specified conditions, and fully sealed IP68 housings can trap heat and condensation. This guide gives you the exact IP rating for every outdoor application.
The complete IP digit reference tables below show every protection level defined by IEC 60529. Use these to decode any IP rating and understand exactly what each digit certifies.
| Digit | Protection Level | Effective Against | Typical Outdoor Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | No protection | — | Indoor only. Never use outdoors. |
| 1 | >50 mm objects | Back of hand, large tools | Indoor only. Not suitable for outdoor. |
| 2 | >12.5 mm objects | Fingers, medium tools | Indoor only. Not suitable for outdoor. |
| 3 | >2.5 mm objects | Thick wires, small tools | Indoor only. Not suitable for outdoor. |
| 4 | >1 mm objects | Most wires, screws, large insects | Protected outdoor (under eaves/canopies). |
| 5 | Dust-protected | Dust ingress limited (no harmful deposits) | General outdoor. Acceptable for most applications. |
| 6 | Dust-tight | Complete protection against dust ingress | Harsh outdoor (desert, industrial, coastal). Gold standard. |
| Digit | Protection Level | Test Conditions | Typical Outdoor Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | No protection | — | Indoor only. Never use outdoors. |
| 1 | Dripping water (vertical) | 10 mm/min, 10 min | Indoor only. |
| 2 | Dripping water (15° tilt) | 10 mm/min, 10 min × 4 positions | Indoor only. |
| 3 | Spraying water (60°) | 10 L/min, 5 min minimum | Indoor only. Not sufficient for rain. |
| 4 | Splashing water (all directions) | 10 L/min, 5 min minimum | Light outdoor — sheltered locations, garden paths, under eaves. |
| 5 | Water jets (6.3 mm nozzle) | 12.5 L/min, 3 m distance, 3 min minimum | Standard outdoor — wall lights, parking lots, street lights. Handles rain. |
| 6 | Powerful water jets (12.5 mm) | 100 L/min, 3 m distance, 3 min minimum | Severe outdoor — floodlights, coastal, pressure-wash areas. |
| 7 | Temporary immersion (up to 1 m) | 30 min at 1 m depth | Underground vaults, in-ground uplights, areas with standing water. |
| 8 | Continuous immersion | Per manufacturer spec (depth & duration) | Pool lights, fountain lights, submerged marine lighting. |
The table below lists the minimum recommended IP rating for every common outdoor lighting application. These values represent the practical minimum — upgrading by one level (e.g., IP44 → IP54, IP65 → IP66) always provides a safety margin for unexpected exposure.
| Outdoor Application | Minimum IP Rating | Solid Protection | Water Protection | Exposure Conditions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🌿 Garden Path / Landscape | IP44 | >1 mm objects (4) | Splashing (4) | Rain splash, irrigation overspray, insects | Minimum acceptable outdoor rating. Upgrade to IP65 for exposed locations. |
| 🏠 Wall Light (Under Eave) | IP44 | >1 mm objects (4) | Splashing (4) | Partial rain protection from eaves | Only suitable when protected by roof overhang. Otherwise use IP54. |
| 🧱 Wall Light (Exposed) | IP54 | Dust-protected (5) | Splashing (4) | Direct rain, wind-driven rain, dust | Minimum for exposed vertical surfaces. Common residential wall fixture spec. |
| 🅿️ Parking Lot / Street Light | IP65 | Dust-tight (6) | Water jets (5) | Heavy rain, dust, vehicle spray, hose cleaning | Standard for commercial outdoor. Covers 90% of above-ground applications. |
| 💡 Floodlight / Area Light | IP66 | Dust-tight (6) | Powerful water jets (6) | Storm-driven rain, pressure washing, coastal salt | Upgrade from IP65 for extreme weather or pressure-wash maintenance routines. |
| 🏊 Pool / Fountain Light | IP68 | Dust-tight (6) | Continuous immersion (8) | Permanent submersion, water pressure, chemical exposure | Must verify manufacturer's specific depth/time parameters. Check chlorine resistance. |
| 🕳️ Underground Vault / In-Ground | IP67 | Dust-tight (6) | Temporary immersion (7) | Standing water, soil moisture, occasional flooding | IP67 minimum. IP68 if flood-prone. Must also support vehicle load rating if in driveway. |
| 🌊 Coastal / Marine Outdoor | IP66 + Marine Grade | Dust-tight (6) | Powerful water jets (6) | Salt spray, high humidity, corrosive atmosphere | IP66 minimum + 316 stainless steel or marine-grade aluminum. Salt fog test (ASTM B117) recommended. |
Not all IP ratings are created equal — each level represents a fundamentally different protection capability. Here's what you actually get (and give up) at each common outdoor rating:
Key takeaway: IP65 is the optimal specification for 90% of outdoor above-ground lighting. It provides complete dust protection and water jet resistance at the best cost-to-performance ratio. IP66 adds protection against pressure washers and extreme storms. IP67/IP68 should only be specified when the fixture will be submerged or buried — using IP68 above ground wastes money and can reduce LED lifespan due to trapped heat.
One of the most pervasive myths in outdoor lighting is that IP68 is automatically superior to lower ratings. This is incorrect for most above-ground applications. IP68 certifies continuous immersion under manufacturer-specified conditions — which could be as little as 1 meter for 30 minutes (barely beyond IP67). The IP code itself does not define the test parameters for digit 8; each manufacturer sets their own. Two \"IP68\" fixtures can have wildly different capabilities: one tested at 1 m / 30 min, another at 10 m / 24 h. Always request the manufacturer's IP68 test parameters before specifying. Furthermore, fully sealed IP67/IP68 housings trap heat (reducing LED lifespan by ~30% per 10°C rise) and can accumulate internal condensation from day-night thermal cycling — a problem IP65 fixtures with breather vents avoid entirely. For above-ground outdoor lighting, IP65 or IP66 is the correct specification. Reserve IP68 exclusively for submerged applications.
Bollard or spike-mounted path lights. Protected from direct jet washing but exposed to rain and irrigation.
Wall-mounted sconces and bulkheads on exposed facades. Direct rain and dust exposure.
Pole-mounted area and street lights. Heavy rain, dust, vehicle splash, and occasional hose-down cleaning.
High-power wide-area floodlights. Storm-driven rain, coastal salt spray, and pressure washer maintenance.
Recessed ground lights for tree uplighting and architectural facade grazing. Standing water and soil moisture.
Fully submerged LED fixtures. Continuous water immersion with chlorine/salt chemical exposure.
Use this table to quickly match your outdoor application to the correct IP rating, supplementary ratings, and fixture type.
| Outdoor Application | Recommended IP | IK Rating | CCT | Material | Suggested Fixture |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garden Path / Landscape | IP44 (IP65 preferred) | IK06 | 3000K | Aluminum / Stainless | LED bollard or spike light, 600-1000 lm |
| Exterior Wall Light | IP54 | IK06 | 3000K | Die-cast aluminum | LED wall lantern or bulkhead, 800-1200 lm |
| Parking Lot / Street Light | IP65 | IK08 | 4000K | Die-cast aluminum | LED area / street light, 5000-15000 lm |
| Floodlight / Stadium | IP66 | IK08–IK10 | 4000–5000K | Marine-grade aluminum | LED floodlight, 10000-50000 lm |
| In-Ground Uplight | IP67 | IK10 + Drive-over | 3000–4000K | 316 Stainless steel | LED in-ground uplight, 1500-3000 lm, load-rated |
| Pool / Fountain Light | IP68 | N/A (submerged) | RGBW / 3000K | 316 Stainless / Bronze | LED pool light, 12V DC, verify depth rating |
| Coastal Outdoor | IP66 + Marine | IK08 | 4000K | 316 SS / Marine Al | LED area light with salt spray certification |
For standard outdoor lighting projects, specify: IP65 as the default rating for all above-ground fixtures — parking lots, street lights, wall lights, and landscape. This single specification covers 90% of outdoor use cases. For floodlights and coastal installations, upgrade to IP66. For in-ground fixtures, IP67 minimum (IP68 if flood-prone). For pools and fountains, IP68 with documented manufacturer test parameters (depth and duration). Always pair IP rating with IK impact rating — IK08 minimum for public areas, IK10 for high-vandalism zones. Verify operating temperature range (-20°C to +50°C minimum) and request thermal test data for IP66+ fixtures to ensure LED lifespan isn't compromised by sealed-housing heat buildup. For coastal/marine environments, specify 316 stainless steel or marine-grade aluminum with ASTM B117 salt fog certification — standard IP ratings do not address corrosion. Budget for breather-vent-equipped IP65/IP66 fixtures rather than defaulting to IP68 — you'll get better thermal management, longer LED life, and lower cost per lumen-year.