Lumens measure the total light a source puts out. To find the lumens needed for a space, multiply the target light level (in lux) by the area in square meters.
What the terms mean
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Φ | Luminous flux, in lumens (lm) |
| E | Illuminance target, in lux |
| A | Area, in square meters |
Worked example
A 20 m² room at a 300 lux target needs 300 × 20 = 6,000 lumens of delivered light.
See the Lux Formula and Efficacy Formula.
Working with lumens
Lumens measure the total visible light a source emits in all directions — the headline “brightness” number on a bulb. They connect to the other units through area and direction: spread over a surface, lux = lumens ÷ area (m²); for run cost, efficacy = lumens ÷ watts. To find the lumens a space needs, multiply target illuminance by area — e.g., 300 lux over 20 m² needs about 6,000 lumens reaching the work plane.
When comparing bulbs, lumens (not watts) tells you how bright they actually are, since LEDs deliver far more lumens per watt than older lamps. For a real fixture, note the difference between source lumens (the bare LED) and delivered lumens (after the optic absorbs some light) — the delivered figure is what reaches the room.
