What Are Lumens and Why They're the Primary Spec for Warehouse Lighting
📖 Lumens Defined
Lumens (lm) measure luminous flux — the total amount of visible light emitted by a light source per unit of time. Unlike lux, which describes light hitting a surface, lumens describe the total output of the fixture itself. This makes lumens the primary specification parameter for warehouse lighting because the fixture must project light across large distances from high mounting points.
In warehouse lighting design, you specify lumens per fixture first, then verify that the resulting lux on the floor meets the task requirement. The relationship is governed by mounting height, beam angle, and the inverse square law.
Total Lumens = Target Lux × Area (m²) ÷ (CU × LLF) — where CU is coefficient of utilization and LLF is light loss factor. This is the starting point for warehouse lighting design.
Getting lumens right in a warehouse is a safety and productivity issue. Under-lit picking zones cause picking errors and forklift accidents. Over-specifying wastes energy in facilities that often run lights 16-24 hours per day. And the single most misunderstood factor — mounting height — means that doubling the ceiling height requires 4× the lumens to maintain the same floor brightness. This guide gives you the exact numbers.
📋 Reference Standards: EN 12464-1:2021 (Indoor Workplaces), IESNA RP-7 (Industrial Lighting), CIBSE SLL Code for Lighting
💡 Key Insight: Mounting Height Determines Everything. Per the inverse square law, light intensity falls with the square of distance. Doubling mounting height from 4 m to 8 m means you need 4× the lumens to maintain the same lux on the floor. A 10,000 lm fixture at 4 m delivers ~200 lx; at 8 m it delivers only ~50 lx. This is why warehouse lighting must be specified by mounting height zone — not by floor area alone.
Key Data: Lumen Requirements by Warehouse Zone
The table below lists recommended lumens per fixture for each warehouse zone, correlated with target lux, typical mounting height, and beam angle. Use these as design targets — always verify with lighting simulation software.
| Warehouse Zone |
Fixture Lumens (lm) |
Target Lux (on floor) |
Typical Mounting Height |
Recommended Beam Angle |
Fixture Spacing (approx.) |
| 📦 Storage (Low Bay) |
10,000–15,000 lm |
150–200 lx |
4–6 m |
90–120° |
5–6 m centers |
| 📋 Picking / Order Fulfillment |
15,000–20,000 lm |
200–300 lx |
5–7 m |
90–100° |
4–5 m centers |
| 🔧 Assembly / Light Manufacturing |
20,000–30,000 lm |
300–500 lx |
5–8 m |
60–90° |
3.5–5 m centers |
| 🏗️ High Bay Warehouse (>8 m) |
30,000–50,000 lm |
150–300 lx |
8–15+ m |
60–90° (narrow) |
5–8 m centers |
| 🚛 Loading Dock / Receiving |
12,000–18,000 lm |
150–300 lx |
5–8 m |
90–120° |
5–6 m centers |
| 🚗 Cold Storage / Freezer |
10,000–18,000 lm |
150–200 lx |
4–8 m |
90–120° |
4–6 m centers |
| 🔬 Quality Inspection Area |
25,000–40,000 lm |
500–750 lx |
5–8 m |
60–90° |
3–4 m centers |
| 🅿️ Covered Parking / Garage |
3,000–6,000 lm |
75–150 lx |
2.5–4 m |
120° wide |
4–6 m centers |
| 🚶 Aisle / Rack Lighting |
8,000–12,000 lm |
150–200 lx |
2.5–5 m (bottom of rack) |
60–90° linear |
Continuous strip |
Lumens-to-Lux Conversion Formula for Warehouse Design
🔢 The Design Formula
Lux = (Total Lumens × CU × LLF) ÷ Floor Area (m²)
Where:
- Total Lumens = Number of fixtures × Lumens per fixture
- CU (Coefficient of Utilization) = Fraction of lumens that reach the work plane — typically 0.6–0.8 for warehouses with white/light-colored walls and ceilings; drops to 0.4–0.6 for dark or cluttered spaces
- LLF (Light Loss Factor) = Accounts for lumen depreciation and dirt — typically 0.7–0.75 for warehouses (more dust than offices). Use 0.8 for clean environments, 0.65 for dirty/dusty
- Floor Area = Total area in m² being illuminated
Quick estimation for warehouses: Multiply target lux by floor area, then divide by (CU × LLF) — for a typical warehouse with CU=0.7 and LLF=0.7, divide by ~0.5. In practice: Total Lumens ≈ Target Lux × Area (m²) × 2
Comparison: Undersized vs Correct vs Oversized Lumens
Warehouse lighting runs 16–24 hours per day — the cost of getting lumens wrong compounds rapidly. Here's what happens at each level for a typical 6 m high picking zone:
<8,000 lm/fixture
⚠️ Undersized
- Floor lux drops below 100 lx
- Picking errors increase 15-20%
- Forklift safety risk
- Worker fatigue within 4 hours
- Non-compliant with EN 12464-1
- Shadow zones between racks
- Higher accident rate
15,000–20,000 lm/fixture
✅ Correct (Standard)
- 200–300 lx on picking floor
- Meets EN 12464-1 for picking
- Clear label readability
- Low error rate
- Safe forklift operation
- Good vertical illuminance on racks
- Energy-optimized for long hours
>35,000 lm/fixture
⚡ Oversized
- Glare on shiny floors
- Excessive contrast ratios
- Energy waste (50-100% overuse)
- Higher cooling load
- Discomfort for operators
- Unnecessary lumen depreciation cost
- Over-lit "stadium" feel
Key takeaway: For most warehouses under 8 m ceiling height, 15,000-20,000 lumens per fixture at 5-6 m spacing delivers the optimal balance of illuminance, uniformity, and energy efficiency. Above 8 m, jump to 30,000-50,000 lm fixtures with narrower optics.
Use Cases: 4 Warehouse Types — Recommended Lumens + Fixture Suggestions
12,000 lm
🏪 Small Warehouse / Storage
Ceiling 4-6 m. General storage with occasional picking. 150-200 lx on floor.
💡 LED Low Bay UFO, 100 W, 12,000 lm, 4000K, IP65
18,000 lm
📦 Distribution Center
Ceiling 6-8 m. High-volume picking and sortation. 200-300 lx with good uniformity.
💡 LED Linear High Bay, 150 W, 18,000 lm, 5000K, DLC Premium
40,000 lm
🏗️ High Bay Logistics Hub
Ceiling 10-15 m. Automated storage/retrieval systems. Narrow optics for deep throw.
💡 LED High Bay UFO, 300 W, 40,000 lm, 60° beam, 5000K
25,000 lm
🔧 Light Assembly Workshop
Ceiling 6-8 m. 300-500 lx on workbenches. CRI 80+ for component color identification.
💡 LED Linear High Bay, 200 W, 25,000 lm, CRI 80+, 4000K
Common Mistakes When Specifying Warehouse Lumens
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Ignoring mounting height in lumen calculations. The most costly mistake in warehouse lighting: selecting fixtures based on lumens-per-square-meter without accounting for height. A 10,000 lm fixture at 4 m provides ~200 lx, but at 8 m it provides only ~50 lx. Per the inverse square law (E = I/d²), doubling height requires 4× lumens. Always simulate at actual mounting height using DIALux or Relux before ordering. Rule of thumb: every meter of height beyond 4 m requires ~20-25% more lumens to compensate.
-
Specifying lumens without beam angle consideration. A 20,000 lm fixture with a 120° beam at 6 m height spreads light over a wide area with lower intensity. The same 20,000 lm with a 60° beam concentrates light in a tight pattern — potentially causing hot spots on the floor and dark aisles. At high bay heights (>8 m), wide beams waste light on walls and rack tops; narrow beams (60-90°) project light to the floor more efficiently. Always match beam angle to mounting height and aisle width.
-
Not accounting for rack shadowing. In racked warehouses, fixtures mounted above aisles cast shadows between racks. Even if the total lumens calculation is correct, light blocked by racking creates dark zones in adjacent aisles. Solution: mount fixtures directly over each aisle (not over racks), use linear fixtures aligned with the aisle direction, and increase lumens by 15-20% to compensate for rack absorption. The lumens-per-fixture spec must account for this loss.
-
Forgetting the Light Loss Factor (LLF) for industrial environments. Warehouses are dustier than offices — lumen depreciation from dust accumulation can reach 25-35% within 12 months if fixtures aren't cleaned. Using an office LLF of 0.8 instead of a warehouse LLF of 0.7 means the installed system will be 12-15% under-lit after one year. Always apply a conservative LLF (0.65-0.75) based on the cleanliness classification of the warehouse. Specify fixtures with IP65 or higher for dusty environments.
Final Recommendation: Quick Decision Table
Use this table to quickly match your warehouse type to the correct lumen output and fixture specification. All values comply with EN 12464-1:2021 and IESNA RP-7.
| Warehouse Type |
Ceiling Height |
Recommended Lumens/Fixture |
CCT |
Beam Angle |
Suggested Fixture |
| Small Warehouse / Storage |
4–6 m |
10,000–15,000 lm |
4000K |
90–120° |
LED Low Bay UFO, 100-120 W |
| Distribution / Picking Center |
6–8 m |
15,000–20,000 lm |
4000K–5000K |
90–100° |
LED Linear High Bay, 150-180 W |
| High Bay Logistics Hub |
8–12 m |
30,000–40,000 lm |
5000K |
60–90° |
LED High Bay UFO, 240-300 W |
| Very High Bay (>12 m) |
12–18 m |
40,000–50,000 lm |
5000K |
60° (narrow) |
LED High Bay UFO, 300-400 W, narrow optic |
| Light Assembly / Workshop |
5–8 m |
20,000–30,000 lm |
4000K |
60–90° |
LED Linear High Bay, 160-240 W, CRI 80+ |
| Cold Storage / Freezer |
4–8 m |
10,000–18,000 lm |
5000K |
90–120° |
LED Vapor Tight / NSF, IP65+, low-temp rated |
| Loading Dock / Receiving |
5–8 m |
12,000–18,000 lm |
4000K–5000K |
90–120° |
LED Low/High Bay, 100-150 W, IP65 |
📋 Procurement Summary
For standard warehouse projects, specify: Match the fixture class to your ceiling height. For warehouses under 6 m: LED low bay, 12,000-15,000 lm, 90-120° beam, 4000K. For warehouses 6-8 m: LED linear high bay, 18,000 lm, 90-100° beam. For warehouses above 8 m: LED high bay UFO, 30,000-50,000 lm, 60-90° beam, 5000K. Always apply a maintenance factor of 0.7-0.75 for warehouses, and always run a DIALux or Relux simulation at the actual mounting height before ordering. The inverse square law means small height errors produce large lumen shortfalls. Budget for occupancy/daylight sensors in areas with skylights — the energy savings on 16-24 hour operation pay back within 1-2 years.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many lumens do I need for a warehouse?
It depends on the warehouse zone and mounting height. For storage areas with low bay fixtures (<6 m ceiling), 10,000-15,000 lumens per fixture is sufficient. Picking zones require 15,000-20,000 lumens. Assembly areas need 20,000-30,000 lumens. For high bay warehouses with ceilings above 8 meters, you need 30,000-50,000 lumens per fixture. Always calculate total lumens based on the target lux (150-200 lx for storage, 200-300 lx for picking, 300-500 lx for assembly) multiplied by floor area, then divide by fixture count.
How does mounting height affect lumen requirement?
Mounting height is the single most critical factor in warehouse lumen selection. Per the inverse square law (E = I / d²), doubling the mounting height requires approximately 4× the lumens to maintain the same lux on the floor. For example: a fixture producing 10,000 lumens at 4 m height delivers ~200 lux. At 8 m height, that same 10,000 lumen fixture delivers only ~50 lux. To restore 200 lux at 8 m, you need ~40,000 lumens per fixture. This is why high bay fixtures (30,000-50,000 lm) are mandatory for tall warehouses.
What is the difference between lumens and lux in warehouse lighting?
Lumens (lm) measure the total light output from a fixture — how much light the luminaire emits. Lux (lx) measures illuminance — how much light actually reaches the floor or task surface per square meter (1 lx = 1 lm/m²). In warehouse design, you start with the required lux based on the task (e.g., 200 lx for picking), then calculate total lumens needed: Total Lumens = Target Lux × Floor Area (m²) ÷ Light Loss Factor (typically 0.7 for warehouses). Then divide by the number of fixtures to determine lumens per fixture.
Can I use the same fixtures for low bay and high bay warehouses?
No. Low bay fixtures (10,000-20,000 lumens) are designed for ceilings under 6-8 meters and typically use wider beam angles (90-120°) to spread light evenly at lower heights. High bay fixtures (30,000-50,000 lumens) use narrower optics (60-90° beam angles) to project light effectively from heights of 8-15+ meters. Using a low bay fixture at high bay height results in severely under-lit floors. Conversely, high bay fixtures at low heights create intense hot spots and glare. Match the fixture class to the mounting height.
How do I convert lumens to lux for a warehouse?
The simplified formula is: Lux = (Total Lumens × CU × LLF) ÷ Floor Area (m²), where CU is the coefficient of utilization (typically 0.6-0.8 for warehouses with light-colored surfaces) and LLF is the light loss factor (typically 0.7-0.75 for dusty warehouse environments). For quick estimation: Lux ≈ Total Lumens ÷ (Floor Area × 2) for a typical warehouse. Professional lighting design software (DIALux, Relux) provides accurate calculations accounting for mounting height, beam angle, reflectance, and obstructions.
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