Weatherproof outdoor sockets and lighting installed by CJA Electrical

Outdoor lighting in Higham — installed properly. We fit security floodlights, garden lighting schemes (low-voltage and mains), wall packs, bollards, spike lights, and the weatherproof switching to make it all controllable. The work runs out of our Rochester base and Higham sits within a 15-minute reach, so site visits and follow-up are quick.

What Outdoor Lighting actually is

The job most Higham clients describe as “outdoor lighting” is usually a mix of practical and decorative — security lighting where the property’s vulnerable, ambient lighting where the garden gets used, and switched lighting on outbuildings. The technology is mostly LED these days; the install side is about cable routing, IP ratings, and weatherproof terminations. Low-voltage (12 V) garden lighting and mains (230 V) circuits each have their place. Low-voltage is touch-safe and easy to extend; mains gives more output and longer runs. We spec the right one per location based on what the lighting needs to do.

When you need Outdoor Lighting in Higham

The most common driver of outdoor lighting work in Higham is security — a near-miss break-in, a parcel theft from a dark porch, an aggressive insurance renewal asking about external lighting. A single PIR floodlight covering the front of the house, plus another over the side gate or back fence line, deals with most domestic security lighting concerns. The second driver is garden upgrade work — a new patio, a rebuilt pergola, replanted beds — where lighting is the finish that brings the space to life after dark. Low-voltage runs through planting, recessed deck lights, and a couple of wall- mounted accent fittings transform how a garden gets used.

Modern RCBO consumer unit after a satisfactory EICR
Modern RCBO consumer unit after a satisfactory EICR

Standards and what compliance looks like

Standards-wise, outdoor lighting is the same BS 7671 framework as the rest of a domestic install, but with stricter requirements on three things: RCD protection (30 mA mandatory on outdoor circuits), IP rating (matched to fitting location), and cable mechanical protection (SWA on buried runs). For Higham domestic outdoor lighting we routinely use SWA cable at 450 mm depth on buried runs, IP65 fittings on direct- exposed locations, IP44 on sheltered, and weatherproof glands on every junction. None of it’s discretionary — it’s what BS 7671 expects, and it’s what makes an install last.

Fittings and where they go

Most Higham outdoor lighting jobs use a small mix of fitting types: a PIR-controlled floodlight or two for security, a handful of bollards or spike lights for path-level illumination, a couple of wall-mounted bulkheads or wall packs over doors and outbuildings, and (where the garden’s been landscaped) low-voltage uplighters and accent lights through planting. LED is the default — longer life, lower running cost, lower heat output, easier dimming. Tungsten-halogen floodlights are still around but increasingly uncommon on new installs. Smart fittings (Wi-Fi/Zigbee controlled) are an option where the customer wants central control via app — we wire those into the same outdoor circuit as conventional fittings, no different from the install side.

Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit
Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit

Why Higham property owners book CJA Electrical

The reasons Higham clients book us for outdoor lighting are pretty consistent: someone they know has used us before for an EICR or a consumer unit change, the install side is done by the person who turns up (no subcontracting), the work is signed off against BS 7671 with a test certificate, and the pricing is transparent up front rather than open-ended. Pretty much every Higham outdoor lighting job ends up with a short snagging visit a week or two after — re-aiming a floodlight that’s catching a bedroom window, adjusting a PIR sensitivity, swapping a bulb for a warmer colour temperature. That’s included.

How the work runs

The sequence is brief: site visit (30 minutes), quote (within a working day), install (one to two visits depending on scope), commissioning and walkthrough on the day, test certificate delivered after. Cable routes are agreed at site visit — we’ll confirm whether runs go via flowerbeds (easier to dig), under lawn (more work, needs careful reinstatement), or surface-clipped along walls (quickest, sometimes the right answer for short runs). We bring all the kit on the install day so the work happens in one block.

What affects the price

Outdoor lighting pricing has three components: the fittings, the cable and accessories, and the install labour. For most Higham domestic schemes we provide a fixed price that bundles all three, sent through within a working day of the site visit. Customers who want to supply their own fittings can — we’ll quote install-only against the fittings list. What drives the price up: long cable runs (especially under lawn or hardscape), multiple separate circuits, complex switching arrangements (PIR + photocell + manual override on the same fitting), and any consumer unit work needed to free up an outdoor way.

FAQs

How bright should security floodlights be?

A 30 W LED floodlight (around 2,400 lumens) is enough for most domestic driveways and rear access in Higham. Brighter than that and you start dazzling visitors and annoying neighbours — there’s no security gain from over-illumination. For wider coverage, two 30 W floodlights spaced apart give better light spread than a single 60 W on the same fitting position.

Will outdoor lighting affect my electricity bill noticeably?

LED outdoor lighting uses very little — a 30 W floodlight on for two hours an evening uses about 22 kWh a year, around £6 at current tariffs. Low-voltage garden lighting is even lower. Dusk-till-dawn fittings use more (running 8-10 hours a night) but still negligible at LED wattages.

Do you handle outbuilding electrics — sockets, lighting, supply?

Yes. Sheds, workshops, garden offices, and detached garages are common Higham jobs — usually a SWA submain from the house consumer unit out to a small board in the outbuilding, with the lighting and sockets fed from there. The submain itself, the outbuilding board, and the circuits inside are all installed to BS 7671 with a test certificate covering the new work.

Can you light up trees and planting without damaging them?

Yes — uplighters mounted on adjustable spike or surface bases sit at the base of the tree pointing up, with the cable running along the soil surface (or shallow-buried if it’s a permanent install). No fixings into the tree, no cable wrapped around the trunk. The fitting can be repositioned seasonally if planting changes.

What documentation comes with the work?

A BS 7671 minor works or installation certificate covering the new circuit, plus a brief schedule of what was installed and where. The certificate is what an EICR inspector, surveyor, or future buyer will look for as evidence the outdoor work was done by a qualified electrician.

Do outdoor circuits need RCD protection?

Yes — BS 7671 requires 30 mA RCD protection on every outdoor socket and on any circuit supplying outdoor equipment. In practice every outdoor lighting circuit goes through an RCD, either at the consumer unit or via a local RCBO on the circuit itself. Older installations without RCD protection need adding before any new outdoor work goes in.

Related services in Higham

Outdoor Lighting in nearby towns

Frequently asked questions

How bright should security floodlights be?

A 30 W LED floodlight (around 2,400 lumens) is enough for most domestic driveways and rear access in Higham. Brighter than that and you start dazzling visitors and annoying neighbours — there's no security gain from over-illumination. For wider coverage, two 30 W floodlights spaced apart give better light spread than a single 60 W on the same fitting position.

Will outdoor lighting affect my electricity bill noticeably?

LED outdoor lighting uses very little — a 30 W floodlight on for two hours an evening uses about 22 kWh a year, around £6 at current tariffs. Low-voltage garden lighting is even lower. Dusk-till-dawn fittings use more (running 8-10 hours a night) but still negligible at LED wattages.

Do you handle outbuilding electrics — sockets, lighting, supply?

Yes. Sheds, workshops, garden offices, and detached garages are common Higham jobs — usually a SWA submain from the house consumer unit out to a small board in the outbuilding, with the lighting and sockets fed from there. The submain itself, the outbuilding board, and the circuits inside are all installed to BS 7671 with a test certificate covering the new work.

Can you light up trees and planting without damaging them?

Yes — uplighters mounted on adjustable spike or surface bases sit at the base of the tree pointing up, with the cable running along the soil surface (or shallow-buried if it's a permanent install). No fixings into the tree, no cable wrapped around the trunk. The fitting can be repositioned seasonally if planting changes.

What documentation comes with the work?

A BS 7671 minor works or installation certificate covering the new circuit, plus a brief schedule of what was installed and where. The certificate is what an EICR inspector, surveyor, or future buyer will look for as evidence the outdoor work was done by a qualified electrician.

Do outdoor circuits need RCD protection?

Yes — BS 7671 requires 30 mA RCD protection on every outdoor socket and on any circuit supplying outdoor equipment. In practice every outdoor lighting circuit goes through an RCD, either at the consumer unit or via a local RCBO on the circuit itself. Older installations without RCD protection need adding before any new outdoor work goes in.

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