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Downlights

Recessed and surface-mounted downlights give you even, low-profile light across a whole room. Our range covers fire-rated, dimmable and tilt designs, with fixed heads, integrated LED and GU10 fittings. Some models offer CCT switching between warm white and cool white, so you can match the light to a kitchen, hallway, bathroom or living room.

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Fire-rated downlights and where they matter

If you are fitting downlights into a ceiling that sits below an upstairs room or a loft, fire-rated versions are the ones to reach for. They are built to slow the spread of fire through the holes cut for each fitting, restoring some of the protection lost when the ceiling is breached. Fire-rated designs feature in our range, and you will see them called out clearly in the product titles. For a ground-floor ceiling with nothing habitable above, the requirement is usually relaxed, though many people still choose fire-rated throughout for consistency and peace of mind.

We stock both recessed downlights that sit flush in the ceiling and surface-mounted designs that fix to the surface where cutting a hole is not practical, such as a concrete or already-finished ceiling. Trimless recessed options are also available if you want the fitting to disappear into the plaster with no visible bezel.

CCT switching: one fitting, several colour temperatures

Colour temperature decides whether a room feels warm and relaxed or crisp and alert. Warm white sits around 2700K to 3000K and suits bedrooms, living rooms and hallways. Cool white, closer to 4000K and above, reads cleaner and works well in kitchens, bathrooms and a study or home office. Some of our downlights use CCT switching, which lets you pick the colour temperature on the fitting itself, including a switchable design that covers 3000K, 4000K and 6500K, so you can settle on the right tone after the downlight is installed rather than committing at the point of order. Where you prefer a fixed output, we also stock single colour temperatures, and some models carry a CRI90 rating for more faithful colour rendering on skin tones, food and artwork.

Dimming and bulb type

Plenty of our downlights are dimmable, which is the easiest way to take a bright kitchen ceiling down to a softer evening level. Dimmable performance depends on pairing the fitting with a compatible dimmer, so it is worth checking the two work together before you wire anything in. On bulb type, the range splits between integrated LED downlights, where the light source is built in, and GU10 versions that take a replaceable lamp. Integrated LED keeps the profile slim and the look tidy; GU10 lets you swap the bulb later and change the colour temperature or brightness without replacing the whole fitting. Wattages in the range run from under 10W up to 50W, with lower outputs suited to closely spaced ceilings and higher outputs for rooms that need more punch from fewer fittings. As a rough guide, spacing fittings evenly and keeping them off the very edge of the room gives a more balanced spread than clustering them in the centre.

Fixed, tilt and choosing room by room

Fixed downlights point straight down and are the default for general, even ambient light across a kitchen, hallway or living room. Tilt (also called adjustable) downlights angle the beam, which is useful for washing a wall, picking out a painting or lighting a worktop set back from the ceiling. Think about the job each fitting is doing: rows of fixed downlights for overall light, a few tilt heads where you want to direct attention. In a kitchen, fixed downlights spread across the ceiling cover general light while a line of tilt heads can be angled onto the worktops. In a bedroom or study, warmer fixed downlights suit relaxing and reading, with the option of a tilt head over a desk. For bathrooms, check the fitting suits the zone you are working in. Our indoor downlights are typically IP20 rated, so for porches, eaves and soffits you will want a weatherproof option from our outdoor downlights range instead.

Finishes, shapes and packs

The range comes in round and square profiles and a wide spread of finishes, including white, black and matt black, brass, polished and brushed chrome, gold, copper, nickel and brushed nickel, plus grey finishes and a white plaster design. White and black tend to recede into the ceiling, while metallic finishes read more as a feature. Most designs are compact, single-light fittings with a modern look, and minimalist and industrial styling both feature in the mix. For larger ceilings, multi-packs make it simpler to buy a consistent set in one go, and an emergency battery backup pack is available where you need fittings to stay lit during a power cut. Mixing finishes is fine, but keeping one shape and finish across a room usually looks calmest.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need fire-rated downlights?

If the downlights go into a ceiling with a habitable room or loft above, fire-rated versions are the sensible choice. Cutting holes for fittings weakens a ceiling's fire resistance, and fire-rated downlights are designed to restore much of that protection. For a ground-floor ceiling with nothing lived in above, the requirement is usually relaxed, though many people fit fire-rated throughout for consistency. Fire-rated downlights feature in our range and are labelled clearly in the product titles.

What does CCT switchable mean?

CCT switchable means the downlight lets you select its colour temperature on the fitting rather than fixing it at the factory. Some of our downlights switch between settings such as 3000K warm white, 4000K and 6500K cool white. That lets you set a warmer tone for a bedroom or living room and a cooler one for a kitchen or bathroom, and change your mind after the fitting is installed. Where you prefer a single fixed output, we also stock set colour temperatures.

What is the difference between integrated LED and GU10 downlights?

Integrated LED downlights have the light source built into the fitting, which keeps the profile slim and the appearance tidy, but the whole unit is replaced at end of life. GU10 downlights take a separate, replaceable lamp, so you can swap the bulb later to change brightness or colour temperature without changing the fitting. Both are well represented in our range. The choice usually comes down to whether you value a neater look or the flexibility to change lamps over time.

Are these downlights dimmable?

Many are. Dimmable downlights are marked as such in the range, and dimming is the easiest way to bring a bright ceiling down to a softer evening level. The key point is compatibility: a dimmable fitting needs a matching dimmer switch to work smoothly and avoid flicker, so check the two are suited to each other before wiring. Where a model is not listed as dimmable, it is intended to run at a single fixed brightness.

Can I use these downlights in a bathroom?

Some are suitable, but check the IP rating against the bathroom zone you are fitting into, as areas near a bath or shower need more protection from moisture. Most of our indoor downlights are IP20 rated, which suits general rooms such as kitchens, hallways and living rooms rather than wet areas. For outdoor positions like porches, eaves and soffits, choose a weatherproof fitting from our outdoor downlights range instead, as IP20 designs are not built for those conditions.

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