Lighting Power Density Calculator: What’s Your LPD?

💡 Lighting Power Density Calculator

Calculate LPD (W/ft² or W/m²) and compare against ASHRAE 90.1 code limits

⚡ Quick Presets
📏 Room & Lighting Inputs
📊 LPD Results
📊 ASHRAE 90.1 LPD Limits by Space Type
0.82
Office (W/ft²)
0.87
Classroom (W/ft²)
1.26
Retail (W/ft²)
0.66
Warehouse (W/ft²)
0.71
Corridor (W/ft²)
0.90
Lobby (W/ft²)
1.20
Gymnasium (W/ft²)
0.97
Dining (W/ft²)
📈 LPD by Fixture Type (Typical Range)
Fixture / Lamp Type Typical LPD (W/ft²) Typical LPD (W/m²) Efficacy (lm/W) Notes
LED Panel / Troffer0.5 – 0.855.4 – 9.1100 – 150Best efficiency
LED Troffer (2x4)0.6 – 0.906.5 – 9.790 – 140Office standard
LED Downlight / Can0.6 – 1.06.5 – 10.880 – 120Residential/retail
LED Track Lighting0.9 – 1.59.7 – 16.180 – 110Accent/retail
LED High Bay0.5 – 0.805.4 – 8.6120 – 160Industrial
Fluorescent T81.0 – 1.410.8 – 15.180 – 100Older office standard
Fluorescent T50.8 – 1.28.6 – 12.990 – 105High output variant
Metal Halide (HID)1.2 – 2.012.9 – 21.560 – 100Warehouse/sports
Incandescent / Halogen2.0 – 4.021.5 – 43.110 – 25Very inefficient
💡 LPD Reference – All Space Types (ASHRAE 90.1-2019)
Space Type LPD Limit (W/ft²) LPD Limit (W/m²) ASHRAE Version Compliance Notes
Office – Open Plan0.828.8390.1-2019Space-by-space method
Office – Enclosed0.747.9790.1-2019Space-by-space method
Conference Room0.9710.4490.1-2019Includes AV lighting
Classroom / Lecture0.879.3690.1-2019Includes board lighting
Retail – Sales Area1.2613.5690.1-2019Accent lighting included
Warehouse – Bulk0.667.1090.1-2019High bay zone
Corridor / Transition0.717.6490.1-2019Active zones only
Lobby / Atrium0.909.6990.1-2019Ground floor lobby
Gymnasium / Sports1.2012.9290.1-2019Multipurpose use
Restroom / Locker0.9810.5590.1-2019Includes vanity lighting
Dining / Restaurant0.9710.4490.1-2019Ambient + accent
Residential – Living0.606.46IECC 2021Per IECC residential
📍 LPD vs. Area Quick Reference
Room Area (ft²) Room Area (m²) @ 0.82 W/ft² (W) @ 1.0 W/ft² (W) @ 1.26 W/ft² (W) Max Fixtures (40W LED)
1009.3821001262
20018.61642002524
40037.23284005048
60055.749260075612
100092.98201,0001,26020
2000185.81,6402,0002,52041
5000464.54,1005,0006,300102
10000929.08,20010,00012,600205
💡 Tip 1 – Space-by-Space vs. Whole-Building Method: ASHRAE 90.1 allows two compliance paths. The space-by-space method applies individual LPD limits to each room type. The whole-building method uses a single overall limit (e.g., 0.82 W/ft² for offices). The space-by-space method gives more flexibility for mixed-use buildings.
💡 Tip 2 – Lighting Controls Reduce Effective LPD: ASHRAE 90.1 Section 9.4 allows LPD credit for automatic lighting controls. Occupancy sensors, daylight dimming, and demand-response controls can reduce your effective LPD by 10–30%, helping you meet stricter limits. Always include control credits in final compliance documentation.

Lighting Power Density, or LPD, helps to estimate how many electricity uses the lighting in a building. It points the used energy regarding the spatial size. In short, it includes everything that consumes the lights, ballasts, controls, converters and all other parts tied to the lighting.

Usually one states it by means of watts per square foot or per square metre.

What is Lighting Power Density?

To estimate the LPD, one shares the whole lighting energy use in watts by the whole net floor surface of the space. Like this one receives a value that shows the energy efficiency of the lighting here. Really simple math.

Planning a fresh building or doing a big renewal, the lighting setups must follow the local or state energy codes. Most commonly that wants to say, that a set amount of LPD is allowed. Owners of buildings usually focus only on meeting those coded rules, when they first hear about design of lighting.

Even so reaching only the minimum is basically saying, that you drive well only because you do not pass the speed limit. Good ligthing means much more than that.

Various kinds of buildings have different limits for LPD. For instance according to the method of building area, an office can have up to 0,82 watts per square foot. A store receives a lower cap at 0,60 watts per square foot.

About hotels the standard of ASHRAE suggests around 5,4 watts per square metre. Sports halls have there own rules, that need LPD under 0,73 watts per square foot according to ASHRAE 90.1-2019.

To finish the math, one finds the whole allowed energy by multiplying the whole surface of the building by the highest allowed density. Later one adds the lighting energy of all installed devices. The total lighting energy use for a building is made up of the sum of the lighting densities for every kind of area, multiplied by the net lit floor surfaces.

Roads also have separate standards for LPD. Every kind of road needs differently, what changes the math. That forms a balance between energy saving and actual needs of lighting.

Also the distance between poles and the height of fixtures plays a role. A bigger gap between poles needs more rugged devices to keep the light level, what can raise theenergy density.

One hard spot with LPD is, that it looks only at the watts of the tubes. It does not care about factors like lumens per watt or color rendering. So 64 watts of fluorescent light, installed at ten feet high, deliver totally different light on the floor than 60 watts of basic bulbs.

The main needs for lighting power density come from standards like ASHRAE 90.1-2016. Lamps use electricity and at the same time work as a heat source in the room.

Lighting Power Density Calculator: What’s Your LPD?

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