Not enough natural light? Grow lights let you grow thriving houseplants and herbs anywhere. Learn about LED vs fluorescent, how to choose the right light, positioning, timers, and the best budget-friendly options.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Why Grow Lights?
Most homes don't have enough natural light for plants to thrive — especially in winter, north-facing rooms, or apartments with small windows. Grow lights solve this completely. They provide the specific light wavelengths plants need for photosynthesis, letting you grow anything from herbs to tropical plants in a windowless room.
Grow lights are essential if:
- Your home gets less than 4 hours of direct sunlight
- You want to grow herbs year-round in the kitchen
- You're starting seeds indoors before spring
- Your indoor plants are getting leggy (stretching toward light)
- You want a lush plant shelf or living wall without a window
Quick Facts
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Difficulty | Beginner |
| Cost | $15-100 for most setups |
| Energy Use | LED: 10-40W (pennies per day) |
| Best For | Indoor plants, seed starting, herbs, low-light rooms |
| Hours Needed | 12-16 hours/day for most plants |
| Key Metric | PAR/PPFD (not lumens or watts) |
Types of Grow Lights
LED Grow Lights (Best Choice)
- Pros: Energy efficient, low heat, long lifespan (50,000+ hours), full spectrum
- Cons: Higher upfront cost (but cheapest long-term)
- Cost: $15-80 for home use
- Best for: All indoor plants, seed starting, herbs
- The verdict: LED is the clear winner for home growers in 2026
Fluorescent (T5/CFL)
- Pros: Cheap upfront, good for seedlings and low-light plants
- Cons: Less efficient, shorter lifespan, limited spectrum
- Cost: $10-30
- Best for: Seed starting, leafy greens, supplemental light
- The verdict: Being phased out — LED is better in every way now
Full Spectrum vs Red/Blue
- Full spectrum: White light that mimics sunlight. Looks natural. Best for living spaces.
- Red/Blue (blurple): Purple-looking. Efficient for growth but harsh on eyes. Better for grow rooms.
- Recommendation: Choose full spectrum for home use — your plants AND your eyes will thank you.
Understanding Light Metrics
What Matters: PAR and PPFD
- PAR (Photosynthetically Active Radiation): The wavelengths plants use (400-700nm)
- PPFD (Photosynthetic Photon Flux Density): How much usable light hits your plant. Measured in µmol/m²/s
| Plant Type | PPFD Needed |
|---|---|
| Low-light plants (pothos, snake plant) | 50-150 µmol/m²/s |
| Medium-light (herbs, ferns) | 150-300 µmol/m²/s |
| High-light (tomatoes, peppers, succulents) | 300-600 µmol/m²/s |
| Seed starting | 200-400 µmol/m²/s |
What Doesn't Matter: Watts and Lumens
- Watts measure energy use, not light output
- Lumens measure brightness to human eyes, not plant-usable light
- Always look for PPFD or PAR ratings when buying grow lights
Step-by-Step Setup
Step 1: Assess Your Needs
- How many plants? One shelf or a whole wall?
- What plants? Low-light tropicals or sun-loving herbs?
- What space? Shelf, desk, hanging, or standalone?
Step 2: Choose Your Light Type
For a few plants on a shelf:
- LED light strip or clip-on grow light ($15-30)
- Position 6-12 inches above plants
For a plant shelf or bookcase:
- LED light bars mounted under each shelf ($30-60 for a set)
- Provides even coverage across the shelf
For seed starting:
- T5 fluorescent or LED panel ($20-50)
- Hang 2-4 inches above seedlings, raise as they grow
For a large collection:
- Full spectrum LED panel ($50-100)
- Covers a 2×2 to 4×4 foot area
Step 3: Position Correctly
Distance from plants:
| Light Type | Distance |
|---|---|
| High-power LED panel | 12-24 inches |
| LED light bar | 6-12 inches |
| Clip-on grow light | 6-12 inches |
| Fluorescent | 2-6 inches |
Rule of thumb: If your hand feels warm under the light, it's too close. Move it up.
Step 4: Set Your Timer
Plants need a dark period — don't run lights 24/7.
| Plant Type | Light Hours | Dark Hours |
|---|---|---|
| Seedlings | 14-16 hours | 8-10 hours |
| Herbs | 12-14 hours | 10-12 hours |
| Foliage plants | 10-12 hours | 12-14 hours |
| Flowering plants | 12-14 hours | 10-12 hours |
Buy a $5 outlet timer — set it and forget it. This is the easiest upgrade that makes the biggest difference.
Step 5: Monitor and Adjust
Signs your light is too weak:
- Leggy, stretched stems
- Pale or yellowing leaves
- Slow growth
- Leaves reaching toward the light
Signs your light is too strong:
- Bleached or white spots on leaves
- Leaf edges turning brown or crispy
- Leaves curling away from light
Budget Recommendations
Under $20: Single Plant
- Clip-on LED grow light with gooseneck arm
- Good for: 1-3 small plants, herbs on a desk
$20-50: Shelf or Windowsill
- LED light strip or under-shelf bars
- Good for: A bookshelf garden, seed starting tray
$50-100: Serious Setup
- Full spectrum LED panel with timer built in
- Good for: Large plant collection, dedicated growing shelf
Common Problems
Plants Still Leggy Under Grow Light
Cause: Light too far away or too weak Fix: Move light closer (6-12 inches), upgrade to higher PPFD output
Leaves Bleaching or Burning
Cause: Light too close or too intense Fix: Raise light 6+ inches, reduce hours, or use a dimmer
High Electric Bill
Cause: Using old fluorescent or inefficient lights Fix: Switch to LED — a 30W LED grow light costs about $1-2/month to run 14 hours daily
Frequently Asked Questions
Can any LED light work as a grow light?
Regular white LEDs provide some benefit but lack the optimized spectrum for plant growth. Dedicated grow lights are tuned to peak photosynthesis wavelengths (red ~660nm, blue ~450nm). They're much more effective per watt.
How many hours of grow light equals sunlight?
Roughly 14 hours of grow light = 6 hours of direct sunlight for most home setups. Grow lights are less intense than direct sun, so they need more hours to compensate.
Do grow lights use a lot of electricity?
No. A typical LED grow light uses 20-40 watts. At average electricity rates, that's $1-3 per month running 14 hours daily. Less than a single regular light bulb.
Can I use grow lights for all my houseplants?
Yes! Every houseplant benefits from supplemental light, especially in winter. Low-light plants (pothos, snake plant) need less, but they still grow faster and fuller with grow lights.
Do plants need darkness too?
Yes. Most plants need 8-12 hours of darkness for proper metabolism and growth cycles. Never run grow lights 24/7 — use a timer for consistent on/off schedules.
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