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Living Room Wall Lights

We hand-pick living room wall lights from more than 18 brands, with 1,877 fittings spanning above-sofa pairs, console accents, gallery picture lights and reading-side sconces. Our range includes Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Maytoni and Elstead Lighting, alongside our own alabaster and stone pieces, so you can layer ambient, accent and task light across the room.

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The living room wall lights we hand-pick across more than 18 brands

We work with Mantra, Ideal Lux, Diyas, Maytoni and Elstead Lighting as our core suppliers for living room wall lights, with our own alabaster and stone pieces adding a softer, hand-finished layer. Across 1,877 fittings in this cohort, we cover above-sofa pairs, console-flanking sconces, gallery-wall picture lights and accent reading lights for armchairs and snug corners.

The aim is always the same: give a living room three or four layers of light rather than relying on a single ceiling pendant. Wall lights, known as wall sconces in the US, are the layer most rooms are missing, and they do more for the atmosphere of an evening sitting room than any other fitting.

Above-sofa wall lights for symmetrical ambient layering

A pair of wall lights either side of the sofa is the most reliable way to soften a long wall and frame the seating area. We tend to recommend a matched pair roughly 150-170cm above the floor, or about 25-30cm above the top of the sofa back, so the light sits above eye level when seated but still reads as part of the sofa composition.

For above-sofa positions we lean toward fittings with diffused glass, alabaster or fabric shades, since the light spreads sideways and washes the wall rather than glaring at people sitting beneath. Mantra and Ideal Lux both do strong work here in brass and chrome, and our own alabaster pieces are crafted to give a warm, candle-like glow that flatters paint and plaster.

Console and sideboard wall lights for entryways and formal corners

Wall lights above a console table or sideboard give a formal, considered feel that downlighters never quite achieve. We usually pair a single sconce centred over a narrow console, or two sconces flanking a mirror or artwork, with the centre of the fitting around 150-160cm from the floor.

Diyas and Maytoni have particularly good crystal and polished-nickel options for this role, and they sit well in transitional and traditional living rooms. If the console holds a lamp already, choose a wall sconce with a lower lumen output so the two sources balance rather than compete.

Gallery walls and picture-light combinations

For a gallery wall of three to five frames, picture lights and slimline wall sconces work together rather than competing. A picture light directly above the central, largest piece anchors the arrangement, and we then position smaller sconces 60-70cm out from the outer frames to soften the cut-off where the gallery meets the surrounding wall. Without that softening, a spotlit gallery can read like a museum vitrine in an otherwise relaxed room.

Finish pairings matter here more than in most rooms. Brass picture lights on cream or warm-white walls read settled and traditional, black picture lights on bright white walls give a graphic, contemporary line, and brushed nickel sits well against pale greys and blues. Keep the colour temperature consistent across the wall, 2700K is our default for living rooms, so the artwork reads as one composition rather than a patchwork of warm and cool pools. For smaller rooms under 4 metres wide, a single picture light plus one pair of sconces is usually enough. Larger rooms can carry a full gallery plus two flanking pairs.

Accent and reading wall lights beside an armchair

A swing-arm or adjustable wall light next to an armchair replaces the floor lamp many rooms default to, and it frees up the floor for a side table or rug edge. The choice between swing-arm and fixed-arm matters: swing-arm lets you pull the shade over the page for focused reading, while fixed-arm gives a steadier ambient pool but asks more of the bulb and shade combination.

Mount the arm pivot around 120-135cm from the floor so the shade sits roughly at shoulder height when you are seated, with the bulb shielded from direct view. Elstead Lighting and Ideal Lux both do well-engineered swing-arm wall lights in brass and bronze, and many take a dimmable LED bulb, which we strongly recommend for reading corners. A 2700K bulb between 400 and 600 lumens, dimmed to taste, gives a comfortable reading pool without flattening the rest of the room. In a snug, a swing-arm sconce plus a low floor lamp on the opposite side of the chair gives the most flexible setup, since you can run either or both depending on whether you are reading or just sitting.

Layering wall lights with ceiling pendants and floor lamps

The strongest living rooms run three layers: ambient light from a ceiling fitting on a dimmer, accent light from wall sconces at mid-height, and task light from table or floor lamps near where people sit. Wall lights are the layer that ties the other two together, lifting light off the floor and away from the ceiling so the room feels evenly held rather than top-lit or bottom-lit.

Two scenarios cover most living rooms. The first runs a dimmable ceiling pendant plus a pair of sofa-flanking sconces plus a reading floor lamp beside the armchair, with the pendant doing the heavy lifting for daytime and the sconces and lamp carrying the evening. The second drops the ceiling fitting entirely and uses four to six wall lights as the primary ambient source, which suits older properties with awkward ceiling boxes or rooms where the pendant position never quite worked. In both cases we suggest putting wall lights on their own dimmable circuit, and keeping all bulbs between 2700K and 3000K so the layers blend rather than clash.

Living room wall sconces, US terminology and design conventions

For US visitors, what we list as living room wall lights are what you would call living room wall sconces. The terminology splits sharply: in the UK around 95% of searches use "wall lights", while in the US around 84% use "wall sconces" or simply "sconces". The fittings themselves are the same, though US conventions tend to favour slightly higher mounting heights (around 160-170cm) and a stronger preference for hardwired installation.

All of our wall sconces ship with the relevant CE or UKCA marking and use standard E14, E27 or G9 lamp bases that accept widely available bulbs on either side of the Atlantic. For US installation, check voltage compatibility on the product page before ordering.

Modern living room wall lights in brass, chrome, black and gold

Finish drives most living room decisions, so we keep depth across the four main families. Brass and antique brass (814 fittings tagged) suit warm-toned rooms with oak floors, linen and earth palettes. Chrome and polished nickel (720 and 111 fittings) sit well in cooler, greyer schemes and pair with glass and crystal. Black (1,171 fittings) gives a graphic, contemporary edge, and gold (736 fittings) reads more decorative and traditional.

For modern living rooms we often recommend matt black with opal glass, or brushed brass with ribbed or fluted glass, both of which read clean from a distance and reward closer looking. Maytoni and Mantra are particularly strong on these contemporary finishes.

Alabaster and crystal wall lights for softer character

Alabaster (585 fittings tagged) and crystal (539 fittings) sit at opposite ends of the same idea: both filter and break the light rather than push it straight out. Alabaster gives a warm, opaque glow that suits calmer, more textural rooms, and our own alabaster pieces are crafted from solid stone with brass or bronze hardware.

Crystal, by contrast, throws small bright reflections and reads more formal. Diyas have a particularly broad crystal range for living rooms, from neat flush sconces to larger faceted designs that act almost as small chandeliers on the wall.

How do you choose the right height for living room wall lights?

For above-sofa pairs, aim for 150-170cm from the floor to the centre of the fitting, with a minimum 25cm clearance above the sofa back so the shade does not crowd the cushions. For console and sideboard positions, 155-165cm centred above the surface keeps the fitting in proportion with the furniture below. For armchair reading lights, 120-135cm to the pivot so the shade sits at shoulder height when seated. Gallery picture lights are the exception: they mount directly on or just above the frame itself, so the height is set by the artwork rather than the room.

Ceiling height shifts these numbers. In rooms with low 2.4m ceilings, drop the above-sofa height to 145-155cm so the fitting does not feel pinned to the cornice. In rooms with vaulted or 3m-plus ceilings, push to 170-180cm and consider a taller fitting so the proportion holds. Always check the sconce against the wall before drilling, since proportion to the artwork or furniture matters more than any single number.

Hardwired versus plug-in living room wall lights

Most of our range is hardwired, which gives the cleanest finish and lets you run the lights from a wall switch or dimmer. The upside is significant: no visible cable, integrated aesthetics, and full compatibility with trailing-edge dimmers and smart switching. The downside is that hardwiring usually means chasing cable into plaster and bringing in an electrician, which is fine during a renovation but harder to justify in a finished room.

Plug-in wall lights are a smaller part of the catalogue and suit renters or rooms where running new cable is not practical. They use a discreet flex down the wall to a nearby socket, often clipped along the skirting or run behind a curtain. Plug-in fittings need an inline dimmer rather than a wall dimmer, which is a small compromise. Battery-powered cordless wall lights are a newer third option, useful for awkward positions or temporary setups, though battery life and lumen output are still well below mains-powered fittings. If you are renovating or replastering, hardwire wherever you can and put the wall lights on a dedicated dimmable circuit. The difference in evening atmosphere is what separates a living room that looks decent from one that looks finished.

Frequently Asked Questions

How high should living room wall lights be mounted?

For above-sofa pairs, aim for 150-170cm from the floor to the centre of the fitting, which puts the light about 25-30cm above the sofa back. For console and sideboard positions go with 150-160cm centred above the surface, and for reading lights beside an armchair, around 120-130cm to the pivot so the shade sits at shoulder height when seated.

Are wall lights and wall sconces the same thing?

Yes. "Wall lights" is the dominant UK term and "wall sconces" is the dominant US term, but they describe the same category of wall-mounted fittings. Our living room range covers both, and all product specifications, bulb bases and mounting hardware are the same regardless of which term you search for.

Can living room wall lights be dimmed?

Most of our living room wall lights are dimmable when paired with a compatible dimmer switch and a dimmable LED bulb. We strongly recommend running wall lights on their own dimmable circuit so you can drop the level in the evening and use them as the main light source alongside table and floor lamps.

Should I install hardwired or plug-in wall lights?

Hardwired wall lights give the cleanest finish and run from a wall switch or dimmer, which is what we recommend if you are renovating or replastering. Plug-in wall lights suit rentals or rooms where running cable is not practical, and they use a discreet cable to a nearby socket. The fittings themselves look similar from the front.

How do you position wall lights either side of a sofa?

Centre the pair on the sofa, with the outer edges of the fittings roughly in line with the outer arms or slightly inside them. Keep them 150-170cm from the floor and matched in height. If you have artwork above the sofa, position the wall lights to frame the picture rather than compete with it.

What colour temperature is best for living room wall sconces?

We default to 2700K (warm white) for living rooms, which gives a comfortable, lamp-like tone that suits evening use. Some contemporary rooms with cooler finishes can take 3000K, but anything above that tends to read as commercial. Keep the colour temperature consistent across all wall and table lamps in the room.

How do wall lights work with a ceiling pendant in a living room?

Treat them as separate layers. The ceiling pendant or downlights provide general light for daytime and practical tasks, while the wall lights handle the evening atmosphere together with table and floor lamps. Wherever possible, put the wall lights on their own switch and dimmer so you can use them independently.

Which finishes work best for modern living rooms?

Matt black with opal glass and brushed or antique brass with ribbed glass are our two most reliable picks for modern living rooms. Chrome and polished nickel suit cooler grey-toned schemes, and alabaster works well in warm, textural rooms. Maytoni and Mantra are particularly strong across these contemporary finishes.

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