Homeowners want to know whether they need IC-rated fixtures if there's insulation above the ceiling, how to space recessed lights to avoid hot spots and shadows, and what dimmers work with LED fixtures. A website that explains the fixture and placement decisions earns the lighting call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Recessed Lighting Installation in KC
Web Design for Recessed Lighting Installation Companies in Kansas City
Recessed lighting installation customers are KC homeowners replacing builder-grade flush mount fixtures with recessed lights for a cleaner ceiling look, homeowners finishing a basement and want to light it properly, or homeowners upgrading from fluorescent to LED and want to rethink the whole layout. The central education is IC rating and insulation contact, fixture spacing for even illumination, and LED dimmer compatibility — three decisions that determine whether the installed fixtures look good and last. IC rating: IC (insulation contact) rated fixtures are required by NEC section 410.116 anywhere insulation exists in the ceiling cavity above the fixture — non-IC fixtures must maintain a 3-inch clearance from insulation to prevent a fire hazard from heat buildup; most KC home ceilings below an insulated attic or floor above require IC-rated fixtures; new construction IC housings (pancake or standard depth) are used with new framing or during remodel when the ceiling is open; remodel (retrofit) housings clip into the existing drywall hole from below without attic access — look for the IC-AT (IC and airtight) label which also meets NEC 410.116 air barrier requirements at the ceiling plane. Fixture spacing and layout: a common rule is to space recessed lights at a distance equal to half the ceiling height — an 8-foot ceiling calls for lights spaced 4 feet apart; lights should be placed 2 feet from walls to avoid scalloping (semicircular shadow arcs on the wall from a fixture too close to the wall); beam angle: an LED recessed fixture with a 40-degree beam angle on a standard 6-inch can produces a cone approximately 5 feet in diameter at floor level from 8 feet up — overlapping cones by 50% produces even illumination without dark spots; for task areas (kitchen counter, bathroom vanity top), fixtures should be positioned directly above the work surface, not in the center of the room. Dimmer compatibility: LED fixtures require an LED-compatible dimmer — standard incandescent dimmers cause LED flicker, buzzing, or a limited dim range; the fixture manufacturer typically publishes a list of compatible dimmers (Lutron Caseta, Leviton Decora, Cooper Wiring); the number of fixtures on a single dimmer is limited by total wattage — a 150-watt rated Lutron Caseta can handle approximately twenty 8-watt LED fixtures; mixing LED and incandescent on the same dimmer circuit causes inconsistent dimming behavior. Circuit load and box fill: recessed LED fixtures are typically 8–15 watts each — twenty 15-watt fixtures is 300 watts, within the 1,440-watt capacity of a 12-amp circuit (80% of 15-amp breaker); a new circuit run from the panel is required when existing circuits are at capacity; junction box fill rules (NEC 314.16) limit how many wires can terminate in a box — daisy-chaining fixtures along a run is standard, but more than three fixtures on a single daisy chain run often requires a pull point. A recessed lighting website that explains IC rating requirements, how to space lights so the ceiling looks even, and why LED dimmers matter earns the homeowner who wants professional-quality lighting, not just more holes in the ceiling.
What homeowners research before recessed lighting installation
- IC rating — when IC is required, IC-AT airtight rating, new construction vs. remodel (retrofit) housing types
- Fixture spacing — half ceiling height rule, 2-foot wall offset, beam angle and cone diameter at floor level
- Dimmer compatibility — LED dimmer requirement, compatible dimmer models, fixture count per dimmer by wattage
- Circuit load — wattage per LED fixture, 80% breaker rule, when a new circuit is needed
- Box fill — NEC 314.16 limits, daisy chain run length, when a pull point is required
What your recessed lighting installation website would include
- IC rating section — NEC requirement, IC vs. IC-AT, new construction vs. retrofit housing, insulation clearance
- Spacing guide — half ceiling height rule, wall offset, beam angle and cone overlap for even illumination
- Dimmer section — LED dimmer compatibility, manufacturer-approved dimmer lists, fixture count per circuit
- Circuit load section — LED wattage, 80% breaker rule, when a new circuit run is required
- Layout planning section — task lighting placement vs. ambient, kitchen and bathroom fixture positioning
- Quote form with room dimensions, ceiling height, insulation above ceiling yes/no, existing circuits
What clients say
“The IC rating section was the thing I needed most. Before, customers would buy non-IC fixtures at the home improvement store and I'd show up and have to explain why we couldn't install them. They'd get frustrated. After the section went up explaining why IC-AT was required in their attic-below ceiling, customers started asking at the store before buying. The dimmer section also changed how many jobs included controls: customers who were going to just use a regular switch started asking about Lutron Caseta specifically after reading the compatibility section. I went from installing dimmers on maybe 20% of jobs to 70%.”
— K. Walters, residential electrical and lighting installation, Leawood, KS
Simple pricing
A recessed lighting site with IC rating section, spacing guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with dimmer compatibility, circuit load, and layout planning content is $425–$750. One multi-room lighting job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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