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Outdoor Downlights

Outdoor downlights sit flush in soffits, eaves and porch ceilings to throw a clean wash of light down a wall or onto a step. Our range covers surface-mounted and recessed designs in white, black and chrome finishes, with fixed and tilt heads, IP-rated bodies and fire-rated options for spaces where regulations apply.

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Where outdoor downlights belong: soffits, eaves and porches

An outdoor downlight is built to point one way, straight down, which makes it the natural choice for a covered ceiling rather than an open wall. Fitted into a porch ceiling, a soffit under the eaves or the underside of a canopy, it grazes light down across a front door, a doormat or a flight of steps without spilling glare back into the garden. Because the throw is contained, you can space a run of small fittings along a soffit to mark out a path or a threshold cleanly.

The placement also decides how exposed the fitting will be. A downlight tucked well back under a deep soffit sees far less driving rain than one on the open edge of a canopy, and that difference feeds straight into the IP rating you should pick.

Surface-mounted versus recessed

Our range splits into two mounting styles, and the right one usually comes down to what sits behind the ceiling. Surface-mounted downlights bolt onto the face of a soffit or porch ceiling and need only a cable feed, so they suit solid concrete, brick or boarded ceilings where you cannot cut a deep hole. Recessed downlights drop into a cut-out and sit flush, leaving just the bezel on show, which gives the tidiest finish where there is a void above to take the body of the fitting.

Recessed designs dominate the range and come in round and square trims, including trimless versions that plaster in for an almost frameless look. Surface options tend to be a little chunkier and are the safer bet for retrofits where access above the ceiling is limited. Before you commit to a recessed fitting, check the depth of the void above the soffit, since the body and any driver need room to sit clear of joists and insulation.

Fixed heads versus tilt

A fixed downlight aims straight down and stays there, which is all you need for general light over a doorway or along a covered walkway. A tilt downlight lets you angle the head a few degrees off vertical, so you can push light back towards a wall, pick out house numbers or wash a feature without moving the fitting itself. If the ceiling and the surface you want to light are not directly above each other, tilt earns its place. For a straightforward downward wash, fixed keeps things simpler and the seal more robust.

IP ratings and weather exposure

IP ratings tell you how well a fitting resists dust and water, and outdoor downlights in our range carry IP44, IP54 and IP65 protection. IP44 suits sheltered spots that only see splashes, such as a deep porch ceiling. IP54 steps up dust and water resistance for more open soffits and eaves. IP65 is the most protected of the three, rated against low-pressure water jets from any direction, so it is the one to choose for exposed canopy edges or anywhere wind-driven rain can reach. When in doubt on an exposed run, size up the rating rather than down.

Fire-rated fittings and LED options

Where a recessed downlight cuts through a ceiling that needs to hold back fire, a fire-rated version restores that barrier; many of ours pair a fire-rated body with a fixed or tilt head, with dimmable and switchable CCT versions among them. Most fittings in the range use integrated LED, with a few GU10 designs if you prefer a replaceable lamp. Colour temperature runs from warm white at 2700K and 3000K through to cooler 4000K and beyond, and a good number offer switchable CCT so you can set the tone on the fitting itself. Dimmable options are common, and a smaller selection adds smart RGB and CCT control. Bodies are metal, mostly aluminium, in white, black, chrome, brushed chrome, graphite, grey, antique brass and matte gold to match your trim.

Planning the run and choosing an output

Most of our outdoor downlights are small, single-light fittings, which is what makes them easy to space evenly along a soffit. As a rule of thumb, place them in line and at regular gaps so the pools of light overlap gently rather than leaving dark patches between doorways and steps. A tight run of lower-wattage fittings often reads better than a few bright ones spaced far apart, and it keeps the look calm from the garden looking back at the house.

Output across the range runs from compact fittings under 10W up to brighter units in the 10W to 25W band and higher, so you can match the light to the job. Lower wattages suit a sheltered porch ceiling or a decorative wash, while higher outputs work for a longer covered walkway or a deeper canopy that needs to feel properly lit. Warm white at 2700K and 3000K keeps an entrance welcoming, and cooler 4000K reads crisper where you want a more functional feel near a side door or utility area. If you are mixing fittings along one elevation, keep the colour temperature consistent so the run looks deliberate.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an outdoor downlight and an outdoor spotlight?

A downlight is built to point one way, straight down, and is designed to fit flush into a soffit, eave or porch ceiling for a contained wash of light. A spotlight usually mounts on a wall or surface and can be aimed across a space to pick out a feature. For covered ceilings where you want neat downward light, a downlight is the natural fit; for directional accenting, look to outdoor spotlights instead.

Which IP rating do I need for an outdoor downlight?

It depends on how exposed the fitting will be. Our outdoor downlights come in IP44, IP54 and IP65. IP44 suits sheltered spots like a deep porch ceiling that only sees the odd splash. IP54 adds dust and water resistance for more open soffits and eaves. IP65 is rated against water jets from any direction, so choose it for exposed canopy edges or anywhere wind-driven rain reaches. On an open run, it is safer to size the rating up.

Should I choose a fixed or tilt outdoor downlight?

Choose fixed if you simply want light pointed straight down, over a doorway or along a covered walkway, as it keeps the fitting simple and the seal robust. Choose tilt if you need to angle the head off vertical, for example to push light back towards a wall, highlight house numbers or wash a feature when the ceiling and the target surface are not directly above each other. Both styles appear across our range in surface and recessed forms.

What does fire-rated mean on an outdoor downlight?

When a recessed downlight cuts a hole in a ceiling that is meant to slow the spread of fire, a fire-rated fitting restores that protective barrier around the cut-out. Several recessed downlights in our range are fire-rated, in both fixed and tilt versions, with dimmable and switchable CCT options among them. If your soffit or porch ceiling forms part of a fire-resisting structure, a fire-rated version is the appropriate choice; for a non-rated ceiling it is optional.

Are these outdoor downlights LED, and can I change the colour temperature?

Most fittings in the range use integrated LED, with a smaller number of GU10 designs if you prefer a lamp you can replace yourself. Colour temperature spans warm white at 2700K and 3000K through to cooler 4000K and above, and many fittings offer switchable CCT so you can set the tone at the fitting. Dimmable options are widely available, and a small selection adds smart RGB and CCT control.

What finishes are available for outdoor downlights?

Bodies are metal, most often aluminium, which holds up well in outdoor conditions. Finishes across the range include white, black, chrome, brushed chrome, polished chrome, graphite, grey, antique brass and matte gold, so you can match the fitting to your soffit colour, door furniture or other outdoor lighting. White and black are the most common, with the warmer brass and gold tones offering a softer look against natural materials.

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