Outdoor Lighting Installation in Raleigh, NC
Free quotes from licensed Raleigh outdoor lighting installers within 24 hours. Vetted local contractors who know the Raleigh climate, architecture, and established neighborhoods like Five Points, Mordecai, Oakwood Historic District.
Four kinds of outdoor lighting installed across Raleigh.
Each type fits a different property scale. Network installers across Raleigh specialize across all four.
Path Lighting
Low-voltage bollards and recessed pavers along walkways and driveways.
Tree Uplighting
Warm uplights washing mature trees and architectural features.
Facade Wash
Soft even wash on stone, brick, or wood facades. No hotspots.
Step & Stair Lights
Recessed risers and tread accents for outdoor stairs and decks.
What outdoor lighting projects typically run in Raleigh, NC.
Raleigh sits within the Carolina metro pricing tier. Ranges reflect typical residential installs; estate-scale work in Five Points or Mordecai runs significantly higher.
Six commitments on every Raleigh outdoor lighting project.
What gets included in the base scope. Not as upcharges. The network’s quality bar.
RHDC coordination for Oakwood, Mordecai, Boylan Heights historic district properties
Humidity-rated stainless mounting hardware throughout (galvanic corrosion primary failure mode)
Brass fixture specification by manufacturer and model. Never generic
Tree Protection Ordinance compliance for any work near protected specimen trees
Color temperature appropriate to architectural era (2700K for Victorian/Tudor/Craftsman)
CRI 95+ for any heritage interior preservation work
Three realistic Raleigh scenarios. Itemized.
Real-world line items from Raleigh network installations. Your project will price differently. Request a free quote for an exact scope.
Five Points, Raleigh
Five Points Tudor Revival outdoor lighting
1925 Tudor Revival estate outdoor lighting install. Designer-led, brass throughout, humidity-rated mounting.
- Designer plan$2,400
- Brass fixtures$5,800
- Humidity-rated mounting$1,400
- Install labor$3,200
Oakwood, Raleigh
Oakwood Historic District outdoor lighting
Victorian heritage outdoor lighting restoration. RHDC-coordinated, period-appropriate sourcing.
- RHDC coordination$1,200
- Period fixtures$3,400
- Plaster-careful install$2,800
North Hills, Raleigh
North Hills outdoor lighting
Newer construction outdoor lighting install. Contemporary brass, smart integration.
- Site visit$500
- Fixtures$2,400
- Install labor$1,800
Three steps. No phone trees. No friction.
From inquiry to installation. Engineered to be the fastest way to find a quality lighting installer in your area.
01
Tell us about your project
Zip code, the service you need, your contact info. 60 seconds. No account creation. No phone tree.
02
We route to local installers
Licensed lighting pros in your area receive your project and reach out. Typically within 24 hours.
03
Compare. Choose. Or don’t.
Free, no-obligation quotes. Hire who you want, when you want. There’s no fee for using the service.
Local installers across Raleigh’s established residential areas.
Each Raleigh neighborhood reads differently after dark. Our network installers know the architectural styles, mature landscaping, and material requirements specific to each.
Five Points
Established 1920s-30s residential with mature canopy and Tudor estates
Mordecai
Historic district with antebellum and Victorian homes
Oakwood Historic District
Victorian heritage district adjacent to downtown Raleigh
North Hills
Upscale shopping and residential corridor
ITB (Inside the Beltline)
Established premium residential ring around downtown
Cameron Park
1920s historic district with Craftsman and Colonial Revival homes
Recent reviews from Raleigh homeowners.
Recent feedback from Raleigh homeowners after their projects closed.
“Tudor Revival estate work. Designer-led, brass throughout, humidity-rated mounting throughout. The outdoor work feels like the original 1925 architect would have approved.”
Mary B.
Five Points, Raleigh
“Victorian heritage restoration. RHDC coordination handled completely. Period-appropriate fixtures throughout. Clean install.”
William J.
Oakwood Historic District
“Craftsman bungalow work. Antique brass and Arts & Crafts-period fixtures sourced through Carolina restoration. Heritage-grade execution.”
Catherine R.
Cameron Park, Raleigh
“ITB estate outdoor install. Smart-integrated, finished cleanly. They understood Raleigh’s humidity considerations from the first walk-through.”
James H.
ITB Inside the Beltline
Raleigh — the ‘City of Oaks’ with mature canopy at twilight.
The Raleigh take
A 470,000-resident North Carolina capital where mature pine and hardwood canopy define the residential character.
Outdoor lighting in Raleigh serves a market defined by mature pine and hardwood canopy and traditional Southern residential character. Five Points, Mordecai, Oakwood Historic District, and ITB (Inside the Beltline) neighborhoods anchor the affluent residential market. 1920s–30s Tudor Revival and Craftsman bungalow estates set behind 75+ year-old oaks, pines, dogwoods, and magnolias. The Raleigh Historic Development Commission (RHDC) oversees designated historic districts including Oakwood, Mordecai, and Boylan Heights, and any exterior change visible from a public way requires coordination.
Two Raleigh-specific factors dominate fixture selection: sub-tropical humidity (50 inches of rain annually with year-round high humidity) and severe storms (frequent spring/summer thunderstorms with lightning, occasional ice storms in winter, plus periphery effects from Atlantic hurricanes). Galvanic corrosion is the primary fixture failure mode here. Brass and copper with stainless mounting hardware are non-negotiable. RHDC coordination required for any historic district exterior work; typical approval 4–6 weeks.
A solid Raleigh install: brass throughout (oil-rubbed for Tudor Revival, polished for Colonial Revival, antique copper for Craftsman bungalows), humidity-rated stainless mounting hardware, RHDC coordination for Oakwood/Mordecai/Boylan Heights properties, photocell controls calibrated for Southern long-summer-daylight cycles. Estate-scale install: 25–45 fixtures, $9,000–$22,000.
Free quotes for outdoor lighting in Raleigh, NC.
Get free quotes in 24 hours.
No obligation. No fee. Licensed installers only.
Or reach out directly.
No fee · No spam · No obligation. Installers pay us only when they earn your business.
Outdoor Lighting in Raleigh — common questions.
How much does outdoor lighting cost in Raleigh, NC?
Most residential outdoor lighting projects in Raleigh run between $1,600 and $7,350. Estate-scale work in Five Points or Mordecai runs significantly higher. Raleigh sits within the Carolina metro pricing tier. Material grade (brass vs aluminum), property size, and smart-control integration are the biggest cost drivers.
Do I need a permit for outdoor lighting in Raleigh, North Carolina?
Low-voltage outdoor installations under 50 watts per circuit are typically permit-exempt in Raleigh. New high-voltage circuits or panel changes require a permit pulled by your licensed installer through the City of Raleigh Building Division.
How long does outdoor lighting installation take in Raleigh?
Standard residential outdoor lighting installs in Raleigh typically complete in 1–2 days. Whole-property or estate-scale work in Five Points, Mordecai, or larger Oakwood Historic District properties usually runs 3–7 days. Most installers schedule within 1–2 weeks of quote acceptance.
What should I look for in a Raleigh lighting contractor?
Three things matter most for Raleigh: current State of Illinois license + general liability insurance ($1M+), itemized written quotes (fixtures, transformer, wire, labor each on its own line. Never lump-sum), and brass fixtures specified by manufacturer and model number. Not just “brass fixture.” Raleigh’s freeze-thaw climate (averages 1 inch of snowfall annually) means fixture material is the single highest-impact decision. The right installer specifies it without being asked.
What is the best time of year for outdoor lighting in Raleigh?
April through October is the peak outdoor lighting install season in Raleigh. The ground is unfrozen for trenching, gardens are visible, weather is workable. Most installers book May–September heavily. Book April for May completion.









