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Hallway Lighting

We hand-pick over 7,405 hallway lighting pieces across more than 33 brands, covering hallway ceiling lights, wall lights, pendants and chandeliers for narrow corridors, standard hallways, entryways, stairwells and landings. Our own-brand Niori range sits alongside selected pieces from Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Impex and Knightsbridge. Materials run from metal and glass to crystal, alabaster and natural stone. We ship to the UK, US and worldwide.

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Our hallway lighting range: what we hand-pick and why

We hand-pick 7,405 hallway lighting pieces across more than 33 brands. Our own-brand Niori range covers 705 pieces, sitting alongside selected ranges from Mantra (1,255), Ideal Lux (865), Diyas (746), Impex (565), Knightsbridge (514) and others. The catalogue runs across 23 product types, with hallway wall lights (1,942), hallway ceiling lights (1,443), chandeliers (1,174) and pendant lights (1,088) forming the bulk of the range.

The shape of a hallway determines which fixture type works. Narrow corridors with low ceilings sit better under flush mount and semi-flush ceiling lights. Wider hallways and entryways carry pendants and small chandeliers without crowding the space. Stairwells and double-height entrance halls take longer-drop pendants and tiered chandeliers.

Hallway lights for narrow corridors and standard hallways

Hallway lights is the broader UK retail term that covers every fixture type fitted into a hallway: ceiling, wall, pendant and chandelier. Within our range, the choice between them comes down to ceiling height, hallway width and the look you want to land.

For narrow hallways with ceilings under 2.4m, flush mount and semi-flush ceiling lights are the standard fit. They sit close to the ceiling line, give broad ambient light along the corridor and stay out of head-height clearance. Where wall space allows, pairs of wall lights at shoulder height add directional light without taking ceiling clearance.

For standard hallways and wider entrance halls, pendant lights and small chandeliers become viable. A single pendant works as a central feature; multiple pendants in a line work along longer hallways.

Hallway ceiling lights and flush mount fittings

Hallway ceiling lights are the most-stocked fixture type in our hallway range, with 1,443 pieces from Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Knightsbridge and our own-brand Niori work. The category splits into flush mounts (the body sits flat against the ceiling), semi-flush (a short drop of 100-250mm) and longer-drop pendants where ceiling height allows.

Flush mount hallway ceiling lights are the default choice for ceilings under 2.4m and for any hallway where head clearance matters. US customers will recognise this as the standard flush mount light or flush mount ceiling fixture; the UK and US use the same product, different vocabulary. Semi-flush fittings work where ceiling height runs 2.4-2.7m and a small drop reads better than a fully flat fitting. Across both, we stock finishes in brushed brass, polished chrome, matt black and antique brass to match existing door furniture and hallway hardware.

For alabaster and natural-stone hallway ceiling lights specifically, see our dedicated alabaster ceiling lights range; for our own-brand contemporary work in the same fixture type, see designer ceiling lights.

Hall lights vs hallway lights: the UK terminology

UK customers search for the same products under two terms: hall lights (the older, shorter retail term) and hallway lights (the longer descriptive term that has overtaken it in modern search). Both refer to the same product universe. "Hall lights" carries a slight lean toward traditional and period properties; "hallway lights" reads more contemporary, but the underlying category is identical.

Our range serves both terms from the same catalogue. A traditional crystal hall light fitted to a Victorian entrance hall is the same product a customer searching for a hallway chandelier would find. A modern flush mount filed under hallway ceiling lights is the same fitting an older listing would call a hall ceiling light. Where a product description uses one term, the alternative applies equally - we use "hallway" as the primary in our own copy because it's the higher-volume UK term, but the products themselves cross both.

Hallway wall lights for narrow entryways and stairwells

Hallway wall lights solve the problem of long, narrow corridors where a single overhead fixture leaves dark patches between fittings. Mounted at shoulder height (typically 1.5-1.7m from the floor) and spaced 1.5-2m apart, wall lights fill the gaps with directional light without crowding the ceiling.

For narrow entryways, slim wall lights with a low projection (under 100mm from the wall) keep the corridor walkable. For stairwells, taller wall lights with a stronger downward throw work along the staircase wall, with one fitting per landing where the staircase turns. Our hallway wall lights range covers contemporary cylinder uplights, half-moon downlights, traditional lantern-style fittings and alabaster wall sconces in natural stone.

For the natural-stone wall light work specifically, see our alabaster wall lights range (214 of which sit in this hallway catalogue, 99.1% catalogue overlap). For our own-brand designer wall lights across modern and transitional registers, see designer wall lights (292 of which appear here).

Modern hallway lighting and contemporary fittings

Modern hallway lighting reads as a register, not a fixture type. The look pulls toward clean architectural shapes, restrained metalwork, and either matt or brushed finishes rather than polished chrome. Within our range, modern hallway lighting sits across ceiling lights (linear LED fittings, flat disc flush mounts, ribbed glass semi-flush), wall lights (cylinder uplights, slim half-moon sconces, alabaster panels) and pendants (concrete shades, smoked glass globes, brushed brass cylinders).

Common modern finishes across the range: matt black for industrial and Scandinavian interiors; brushed brass for warm contemporary schemes; brushed steel and brushed nickel for cooler palettes; and natural alabaster where the material itself does the work. Integrated LED with warm white output is standard on most modern hallway fittings; E14 and E27 lamp-holders still appear on the more traditional pieces in the range.

Alabaster and natural-stone hallway lighting

Of the 7,405 pieces in our hallway lighting range, 448 are worked in natural alabaster stone, with a further 43 in other natural stone and 36 in marble. Alabaster is slightly translucent, so light passes through the panel rather than bouncing off it, picking up the natural veining inside the stone. The result reads as a warm, soft glow with visible mineral character - every piece looks subtly different.

In a hallway, alabaster works best where the fitting sits close to eye level. Wall lights and wall sconces in alabaster show the veining clearly; ceiling lights show it less, because the eye reads them from below at a shallow angle. Our alabaster hallway range concentrates in the wall light and ceiling light sub-types: see alabaster wall lights for the 214-piece wall light range and alabaster ceiling lights for the 32-piece ceiling light range. Both are 100% real natural stone - not glass, not resin, not moulded synthetic.

Our Niori own-brand designer hallway lighting

Of the 7,405 pieces in this range, 705 are designed and produced under our own Niori brand - roughly 9.5% of the catalogue. The other 90.5% comes from the third-party brands we hand-pick: Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Impex, Knightsbridge, Maytoni, Schuller, Elstead Lighting, Deco and others. Our own-brand range is one part of the catalogue, not the dominant one - we built it to fill specific design briefs where the third-party market doesn't carry the look we wanted to offer.

Within the Niori own-brand work, hallway-relevant pieces concentrate in wall lights and ceiling lights, with the Selvara, Vellum and Caterris families running across both. To browse the own-brand designer cut specifically, see designer wall lights and designer ceiling lights.

Hallway light fixtures and entryway lighting for US homes

US customers searching for the same products will recognise them under different terms. UK "hallway lighting" becomes US "hallway light fixtures" or, depending on the position in the home, "entryway lighting." UK "hallway wall lights" become US "wall sconces" or "hallway sconces." UK "hallway ceiling lights" become US "flush mount lights" or "flush mount ceiling lights." The products are the same; the vocabulary differs.

Our catalogue serves both markets from the same listings. A semi-flush hallway ceiling light in our UK range is the same flush mount light fixture a US customer would search for. An alabaster hallway wall light reads as an alabaster wall sconce to a US buyer. We ship the full hallway lighting range to the US directly, with delivery times and shipping costs calculated at checkout.

How to care for your hallway lighting

Hallway lighting tends to stay fitted for longer than lighting in any other room - hallways see less redecoration than living spaces, so the fittings need to last. Care depends on the material.

For metal fittings (brushed brass, polished chrome, matt black, antique brass), dust regularly with a soft, dry microfibre cloth.

For glass and crystal shades, remove the shade where the design allows and wash by hand in warm water with a small amount of dish soap, then rinse and dry fully before refitting.

For alabaster and natural stone, dust gently with a dry microfibre cloth. Avoid soap, alcohol-based cleaners and glass sprays; these can erode the stone's natural finish. For marks, use a soft cloth dampened with plain water, or a pH-neutral stone cleaner for deeper residue.

For bulb replacement, switch off at the wall and let the existing lamp cool fully before removing.

Browse related ranges

To browse our hallway lighting range by fixture type or material, follow the linked ranges: alabaster wall lights, designer wall lights, alabaster ceiling lights and designer ceiling lights cover the wall and ceiling fixture types that dominate the hallway catalogue. For larger rooms downstream of the hallway, see our dining room chandeliers range and our modern wall lights range for the broader contemporary register.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of hallway lighting do you stock?

Our hallway lighting range covers 7,405 pieces across 23 product types, hand-picked from more than 33 brands. The largest sub-categories are wall lights (1,942), ceiling lights (1,443), chandeliers (1,174) and pendant lights (1,088). Smaller sub-ranges cover downlights, spotlights, track lighting, linear lighting, hallway mirrors and bathroom-rated fittings for hallway shower rooms. Our own-brand Niori range contributes 705 pieces; the remainder comes from selected brands including Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Impex and Knightsbridge.

How do I light a narrow hallway?

For narrow hallways with ceilings under 2.4m, flush mount and semi-flush ceiling lights sit close to the ceiling line, give broad ambient light and stay clear of head height. Spacing two or three flush fittings evenly along a longer corridor gives more even coverage than a single central fixture. Where wall space allows, pairs of slim wall lights at shoulder height (1.5-1.7m from the floor, spaced 1.5-2m apart) add directional light without taking ceiling clearance. For very narrow runs, recessed downlights and slim linear fittings handle the same job with no projection from the ceiling.

What's the difference between hallway lights and hall lights?

There isn't one - both terms refer to the same product universe. "Hall lights" is the older, shorter UK retail term and carries a slight lean toward traditional and period properties. "Hallway lights" is the longer descriptive term that has overtaken it in modern UK search and reads more contemporary. Our range serves both terms from the same catalogue. A traditional crystal hall light fitted to a Victorian entrance hall is the same product type a customer searching for a hallway chandelier would find; we use "hallway" as the primary in our own copy because it's the higher-volume UK search term.

How many hallway lights do I need for the length of my hallway?

As a rough working guide, one flush mount or semi-flush ceiling light per 2-2.5m of hallway length gives even ambient coverage in a corridor with ceilings under 2.4m. A 5m hallway typically takes two ceiling fittings; a 7-8m hallway typically takes three. For wall lights running along the length of the hallway, space pairs at 1.5-2m intervals at shoulder height. Where the hallway includes a turn, fit a dedicated light at the turn rather than relying on light from either side. Stairwells take a separate fitting per landing.

Why are hallway lights called hallway light fixtures in the US?

US English uses "light fixture" as the general term for any mounted lighting unit, where UK English uses "light fitting" or just "light." So UK "hallway lights" become US "hallway light fixtures." The US also uses "entryway lighting" for the area immediately inside the front door, where UK English groups the entry area and corridor together under "hallway." Wall lights become "wall sconces" in the US; ceiling lights become "flush mount lights" or "flush mount ceiling lights." The products are the same; the vocabulary differs. We ship the full hallway lighting range to the US directly.

Which hallway lights in your range are from our Niori own-brand range?

Of the 7,405 pieces in our hallway lighting range, 705 are designed and produced under our own Niori brand - roughly 9.5% of the catalogue. The other 90.5% comes from third-party brands we hand-pick, with Mantra (1,255), Ideal Lux (865), Diyas (746), Impex (565) and Knightsbridge (514) supplying the largest volumes. Niori own-brand work concentrates in the wall light and ceiling light sub-types, with the Selvara, Vellum and Caterris families running across both. To browse the own-brand designer cut specifically, see our designer wall lights and designer ceiling lights ranges.

How do I clean and care for hallway light fittings?

Care depends on the material. For metal finishes (brushed brass, polished chrome, matt black, antique brass), dust with a soft dry microfibre cloth and use a slightly damp cloth for fingerprints; avoid abrasive cleaners and metal polishes, which can lift coated finishes. For glass and crystal shades, remove where the design allows and wash by hand in warm water with a small amount of dish soap, rinse and dry fully before refitting. For alabaster and natural stone, dust gently with a dry microfibre cloth and avoid soap, alcohol-based cleaners and glass sprays; for deeper marks use a pH-neutral stone cleaner. Switch off at the wall and let lamps cool fully before any cleaning or bulb replacement. Care instructions specific to each piece ship with the product.

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