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Modern Track Lighting

Modern track lighting puts several adjustable heads on one powered track, so you can light a whole room, a run of worktop or a wall of art from a single circuit. Our range covers single-circuit and magnetic systems with spotlights, downlights, pendants and wall washers in matt black and white, most with integrated LED. Move or angle each head to suit the room.

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How Modern Track Lighting Works

Track lighting runs power along a mounted rail, and each light head draws from that rail rather than from its own fixed point. That means one ceiling connection can carry several heads, and you can add, move, remove or angle each one along the track to suit how the room is used. It is the reason track suits kitchens, open-plan spaces and rooms with artwork, where fixed points rarely land exactly where the light is needed. Our range covers full kits with track and heads together, plus separate heads, tracks and connectors so you can build a run to length.

Single-Circuit and Magnetic Track Systems

The range splits into two systems, and heads are matched to their own track type rather than being universal, so it is worth knowing which you are building before you order.

Single-circuit track

Single-circuit track is the classic surface system: a slim rail, usually in matt black or white, carrying GU10 or integrated-LED spotlights on one switched circuit. It is straightforward to plan, easy to extend with straight connectors, and a practical way to replace a single ceiling point with a row of adjustable spots over a worktop or seating area.

Magnetic track

Magnetic track uses a recessed or surface profile with a low-voltage magnetic channel, so heads clip in anywhere along the run and move without tools. It carries a wider mix of heads, spotlights, adjustable accent lights, wall washers and slim linear pendants, which makes it the more flexible choice for a considered scheme. Because the heads are held magnetically, changing the layout later is quick.

Choosing and Spacing the Heads

Two things decide how many heads a run can take: the length of the track and its rated load. Each track has a maximum wattage, and the combined wattage of the heads must sit under it, which is easy with low-wattage LED heads and worth checking with higher-output ones. For even lighting over a worktop or a wall of art, space heads roughly 30 to 50cm apart and keep them 20 to 40cm out from a wall you are washing with light. Angle each head towards the surface it is meant to light rather than straight down.

Where Modern Track Lighting Works

Track earns its place wherever lighting needs to be directed and flexible. In kitchens it puts adjustable light exactly over worktops and islands; in living and open-plan rooms it lights seating, shelving and circulation from one run; and in halls and studies it turns a wall of pictures or a bookcase into the focus. Far from dated, current magnetic and slim single-circuit systems read as clean and architectural, which is why they appear so often in modern kitchens and galleries.

Light Output, Bulbs and Ratings

Heads in this range are either integrated LED, where the diode is built into the head, or take GU10 lamps so you can swap bulbs yourself. Warm white is the most common output, and many heads are dimmable on a compatible system, though it is worth checking the listing. Everything here carries an IP20 rating, which makes it right for dry indoor rooms rather than bathrooms or outdoor use. Most fittings are matt black or white, the two finishes that sit most quietly against a ceiling.

Planning and Fitting a Run

If you are replacing a single ceiling point, a track kit is usually the simplest upgrade, and we would always recommend a qualified electrician for the mains connection. Measure the run you want to light, allow for connectors at any corners, and check the track and heads belong to the same system before ordering. For the wider track range, including separate spotlights, linear heads, connectors and kits, see our track lighting section and the linear track lights range.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is track lighting and how does it work?

Track lighting is a mounted rail that carries power along its length, with individual light heads drawing from the rail instead of from their own fixed ceiling points. One connection can run several heads, and each head can be moved, angled, added or removed along the track. That flexibility is why track suits kitchens, open-plan rooms and walls of artwork, where a fixed light rarely sits exactly where you need it.

What is the difference between single-circuit and magnetic track?

Single-circuit track is the classic surface system, a slim rail carrying GU10 or LED spotlights on one switched circuit, simple to plan and extend. Magnetic track uses a low-voltage channel that heads clip into anywhere along the run and move without tools, and it carries a wider mix of spotlights, wall washers and slim linear pendants. Heads are matched to their own track type, so check which system you are building before ordering.

How many heads can I fit on one track?

It depends on the length of the track and its rated load rather than a fixed number. Each track has a maximum wattage, and the combined wattage of the heads must stay under it, which is easy with low-wattage LED heads. For even light over a worktop or artwork, space heads roughly 30 to 50cm apart. Check the maximum load on the track listing and add up the wattage of your chosen heads before you order.

Is modern track lighting outdated?

No. Current track systems look very different from the bulky rails of the past. Slim single-circuit tracks and recessed magnetic profiles read as clean and architectural, which is why they appear so often in modern kitchens, open-plan spaces and galleries. The appeal is practical as much as visual: directed, adjustable light that you can change as a room changes, from one tidy run.

Do the heads use integrated LED or replaceable bulbs?

Both, depending on the head. Many are integrated LED, where the diode is built into the head and there is no bulb to change, typically in warm white. Others take standard GU10 lamps, so you can choose and replace bulbs yourself. Many heads are dimmable on a compatible dimmer. If dimming or a particular bulb type matters to you, check the individual listing before ordering.

How much is delivery, and what if it does not suit the room?

UK delivery is £14.99, and orders of £99 and over qualify for free UK delivery. If the track or heads are not right once they arrive, you can return them within 14 days of delivery; return postage is paid by you and refunds are made in line with our returns policy. Because track and heads are matched to a system, we recommend confirming the system and measuring your run before ordering.

Our Reviews

From first click to final installation, our customers share how Niori lights up their spaces. Read their words and envision what’s possible for yours.