UGR Calculator

Calculate Unified Glare Rating (UGR) for any room and luminaire combination. Check compliance against EN 12464-1 limits for offices, classrooms, healthcare, and industrial spaces — with anti-glare measure recommendations to bring UGR within spec.

Room dimensions and reflectances
Eye level assumed at 1.2m (seated office worker)
Luminaire specification
Avg luminance at 65° from vertical — from datasheet
Used to calculate background luminance Lb
Application

Please enter room dimensions, luminaire luminance, and illuminance.

Calculated UGR
0
Compliant
UGR scale — your result on the comfort-to-glare spectrum
10 (imperceptible)161922252830+ (intolerable)
Your UGR
Limit for space type
0
Room index (K)
0
Background Lb (cd/m²)
0
Lum. solid angle (msr)
0
UGR limit
Calculation breakdown
EN 12464-1 UGR limits by application
Space typeEm (lux)UGR maxStatus
Anti-glare measures — how to reduce UGR
Room / space
Calculated UGR
UGR limit (EN 12464)
Background luminance Lb
Luminaire luminance at 65°
Room index K
Compliance margin
Shop UGR19 LED panels on Amazon

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How to read a UGR number

UGR runs roughly from 10 to 30+. Lower is calmer; higher means the fixtures increasingly pull your eye and cause discomfort. Your result above is plotted on this same scale.

UGRPerceived glareTypical verdict
Under 10ImperceptibleGlare not noticed at all
10–16ComfortableGood for sensitive visual tasks
16–19AcceptableThe office / classroom target
19–22NoticeableStarts to feel glary over time
22 and upUncomfortable“Why does this room interrogate me?”

Recommended UGR by space (EN 12464-1)

SpaceAim for
Office / workstationUGR ≤ 19
Classroom / educationUGR ≤ 19
Healthcare — exam & precisionUGR ≤ 16
Technical drawing / labsUGR ≤ 16
Reception / general interiorUGR ≤ 22
Industrial / warehouseUGR ≤ 25
RetailVariable — control display & spill glare directly

Why LED fixtures often feel harsher

A fixture can be perfectly compliant on lumens yet still feel painful, because glare is about luminance (brightness per unit area), not total light. LEDs concentrate output into tiny, intense surfaces:

Tiny emitting surface

The same lumens leave a far smaller area than an old fluorescent tube — so luminance (cd/m²) skyrockets.

Very high peak luminance

A bare diode can exceed 1,000,000 cd/m² — orders of magnitude past what feels comfortable.

Exposed diodes

Without a diffuser you look straight at point sources, each a sharp hotspot.

Weak optics

Cheap fixtures skip shielding or prismatic control, leaving the source visible at glare angles.

Same lumens, very different comfort

How the source is shielded and spread matters more than its wattage. Left to right, roughly worst to best for direct glare:

Bare high-bay / exposed LED
High glare
A tiny, intense source sits in direct view — worst case.
Deep-regressed downlight
Low glare
Recessed and shielded, so the bright source is hidden at normal angles.
Louvered / parabolic
Low–moderate
Blades cut off the direct view of the lamp beyond the shielding angle.
Opal / diffused panel
Low glare
A large, even surface spreads the same lumens over more area — lower luminance.
Indirect / uplight pendant
Very low
Light bounces off the ceiling; you never see the source directly.

The UGR formula, in plain terms

UGR = 8 log10 0.25Lb × Σ L² ω

It looks fierce, but it only says four things matter:

TermWhat it means
L (luminance)Source brightness — squared, so it dominates. Lower-luminance fixtures help the most.
ω (solid angle)Apparent size. A diffuser trades a bigger area for much lower L — a net win.
p (position index)How close the source is to your line of sight. Sources overhead and to the side glare less.
Lb (background)Brighter surroundings shrink the contrast. Light walls and ceilings genuinely reduce glare.

Simplified estimate for guidance — a full UGR uses the manufacturer’s luminance data per viewing angle. Use a fixture’s UGR table for specification.

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The calculators and tools on Formula Factory are provided for general guidance and informational purposes only. Results are estimates based on standard formulas and the values you enter — they do not constitute professional engineering, electrical, or architectural advice. Always verify calculations with a qualified professional before making decisions for any safety-critical, code-compliance, or commercial application. Formula Factory makes no representations or warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of any result, and accepts no liability for errors, omissions, or any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.