Office Lighting Standards

A practical overview of illuminance (lux), color temperature, and color rendering targets for modern workspaces — for planning and conversation, not code compliance.

Why standards matter for workspace lighting

Office lighting standards exist to balance visual comfort, task performance, and energy use. Organizations such as IES (Illuminating Engineering Society), CIBSE, and national building codes publish illuminance recommendations by task type. Workspace Lux summarizes the numbers most relevant to everyday office planning so you can discuss requirements with facilities teams, designers, or contractors without reading full technical manuals.

Standards typically specify maintained illuminance on the work plane — usually the desk surface at about 30 inches (75 cm) above the floor — not raw fixture lumens. That is why calculators on this site convert between lux, lumens, and watts rather than relying on wattage alone.

Recommended lux levels by space type

The table below lists common target ranges used in office and workspace design. Local codes, client standards, or LEED/WELL requirements may differ. Always verify for your jurisdiction and project type.

Space type Typical lux Notes
General office / open plan 300–500 Routine computer and paperwork
Meeting room 300–500 Presentations and discussion
Reception / lobby 200–300 Welcoming, lower task demand
Design / inspection 750–1000 Detail, color, precision work
Home office desk 300–500 Focus and video calls
Warehouse / storage 100–200 Not primary focus of this site

300 lux vs 500 lux for office work

300 lux suits circulation areas, some meeting rooms, and offices where tasks are primarily screen-based with good monitor brightness. It feels softer and uses less energy. 500 lux is the de facto standard for general office work including reading printed documents, markup, and prolonged focus tasks. Many corporate fit-outs target 500 lux maintained on the desk. Design and inspection work often needs 750–1000 lux.

Read our article 300 Lux vs 500 Lux for Office Work for a deeper comparison.

Color temperature guidelines

Neutral white around 4000K is the most common choice for corporate offices. Home offices and reception areas may prefer 3000K–3500K for warmth. Design studios and video setups often use 4000K–5000K for alertness and color discrimination. Avoid mixing very warm and very cool sources in the same field of view.

Kelvin Description Typical use
2700K Warm, relaxing Residential, hospitality
3000K Warm white Home office evenings, reception
4000K Neutral white Corporate office standard
5000K Cool white / daylight-like Design, labs, video
6500K Very cool High alertness; can feel harsh

CRI (Color Rendering Index)

CRI measures how accurately a light source renders colors compared to natural light. For general office work, CRI 80+ is widely acceptable. Color-critical tasks — graphic design, product review, print matching — benefit from CRI 90+. When specifying LED products, check both CRI and R9 (red rendering), especially for skin tones and branding materials in client-facing spaces.

Uniformity and glare

Standards also address uniformity (how evenly light is distributed) and glare control (UGR — unified glare rating). A room can meet average lux on paper but still feel uncomfortable if one area is much brighter than another or if fixtures create direct glare on screens. Professional lighting design uses photometric software to model these factors; simplified calculators cannot.

How to use these standards in practice

  1. Identify the primary tasks in each zone (desk work, meeting, reception).
  2. Select a target lux range from the table above.
  3. Use the Office Lighting Calculator to estimate total lumens and LED wattage.
  4. Choose color temperature and CRI appropriate to the space.
  5. Validate with a qualified designer or engineer for code-compliant commercial projects.

Workspace Lux tools provide simplified estimates aligned with common workplace guidance. They do not replace photometric studies, code review, or manufacturer-specific layout tools.