Outdoor Lighting in Strood
Outdoor, garden and security lighting in Strood — installed safely to BS 7671 across Medway.
Outdoor lighting in Strood — 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 Strood sits within a 8-minute reach, so site visits and follow-up are quick.
What Outdoor Lighting actually is
Outdoor lighting splits into three loose categories: security lighting (PIR-controlled floodlights and bulkhead fittings, mostly 250-2,500 lumen LED, set to come on when motion’s detected), garden lighting (low-voltage 12 V or mains, used to light up planting, steps, paths, and seating areas), and architectural lighting (wall packs, soffit lights, pergola fittings — anything that’s about how the building looks after dark). Most Strood jobs end up combining at least two of those — a security floodlight on the drive plus low-voltage runs through the back garden, or a mains-fed bollard line down a path with a PIR-controlled wall pack at the side gate.
When you need Outdoor Lighting in Strood
The triggers we hear most from Strood clients: “we keep fumbling with a torch on the dark drive”, “the side gate’s a weak point and we want a light that comes on automatically”, “we’ve finished landscaping the back garden and now we want to light it”, and “the outbuilding’s getting wired up so we might as well do the lighting around it at the same time”. All four are sensible drivers, and all four often run into the same install: a single new outdoor circuit from the consumer unit, RCD-protected, with multiple fittings hung off it on SWA or armoured-equivalent cable.

Standards and what compliance looks like
The legal framework is BS 7671. The technical requirements that apply to outdoor work specifically: RCD protection (30 mA, on every outdoor circuit, every outdoor socket); cable selection (SWA for buried runs, outdoor-rated cable in conduit above ground); IP ratings on fittings (matched to where the fitting goes); and weatherproof glands and terminations on every outdoor junction. The current edition is the 18th Edition with Amendment 2 (2022). Outdoor work is covered across several BS 7671 sections rather than a single chapter — the relevant references are 411 (RCD protection), 522 (cable routing and selection), 522.8 (mechanical protection of buried cables), and 712 (PV and outdoor systems where applicable).
Fittings and where they go
The fittings most often spec’d on Strood outdoor jobs: PIR floodlights — 30 W LED is the standard size for domestic drives and side gates, putting out around 2,400 lumen at a 120- 150 degree spread. Cooler colour temperature (4,000-6,500 K) is standard for security; warmer (3,000 K) for ambient. Bulkhead fittings — IP65 LED bulkheads in either circular or rectangular form, used on porches, side passages, and where a floodlight would be overkill. Often combined with a built-in PIR or a separate sensor head. Bollards and spike lights — 5-10 W LED for path edges, steps, and planting borders. Mostly low-voltage; some mains-rated options for runs that need long throws. Wall packs and architectural fittings — recessed wall lights, soffit downlights, pergola lights — used where the lighting is decorative or for the building façade rather than security or wayfinding.

Why Strood property owners book CJA Electrical
The reasons Strood 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 Strood 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
First contact is usually an email or WhatsApp with a rough description of what’s wanted — “PIR floodlight on the drive plus garden lights through the back” — and ideally a couple of photos of the property. From that we’ll come back with a rough estimate range and book a site visit. Site visit takes 30-45 minutes. We walk the property, look at consumer unit headroom for an extra circuit, sight the cable routes, agree fitting positions, and confirm the spec. Quote follows within a working day. Install: usually a single visit for most domestic schemes, half a day to a full day on site. Larger jobs (extensive garden lighting, multiple circuits, outbuilding work) might run across two visits.
What affects the price
Outdoor lighting pricing has three components: the fittings, the cable and accessories, and the install labour. For most Strood 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
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.
How deep does outdoor cable need to be buried?
For SWA (steel-wired armoured) cable buried in soft ground, 450 mm is the standard depth — deep enough to survive normal gardening and shallow planting but shallow enough that the trench is manageable. Cable run through conduit can be shallower if the conduit itself is mechanically protected. Buried cable should be tape-marked above so future digging doesn’t catch it.
What IP rating do outdoor light fittings need?
IP44 minimum for fittings under cover (porches, soffits, rear of shed overhangs). IP65 for fittings exposed to direct rain — most garden floodlights, ground-level fittings, and unsheltered wall packs. IP67 for fittings at risk of submersion or hose-down. We spec to the application — there’s no benefit in paying for IP67 on a sheltered porch light.
Mains or low-voltage for garden lighting?
Both have their place. 12 V low-voltage runs are easier to extend and modify, and the cable is touch-safe — fine for ambient garden lighting through planting and along path edges. 230 V mains gives brighter output and longer runs without voltage drop — better for security floodlights and driveway lighting covering distance. Most Strood outdoor jobs end up using both, on separate circuits.
Can PIR floodlights be controlled from a phone?
Yes — modern smart-controlled PIR floodlights run via the same Wi-Fi platforms as smart bulbs (Hue, Smart Life, Tuya, etc.) and can be triggered, scheduled, or overridden from an app. We can spec smart fittings or wire conventional fittings into a smart relay where central control matters. For most domestic jobs the built-in PIR sensor and a manual override switch is enough.
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 Strood. 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.
Related services in Strood
- EICR in Strood
- Landlord EICR in Strood
- Emergency in Strood
- Alarms in Strood
- Emergency Lighting in Strood
- Commercial EICR in Strood
Outdoor Lighting in nearby towns
- Outdoor Lighting in Rochester — Medway
- Outdoor Lighting in Chatham — Medway
- Outdoor Lighting in Higham — Gravesham
- Outdoor Lighting in Gillingham — Medway
Frequently asked questions
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.
How deep does outdoor cable need to be buried?
For SWA (steel-wired armoured) cable buried in soft ground, 450 mm is the standard depth — deep enough to survive normal gardening and shallow planting but shallow enough that the trench is manageable. Cable run through conduit can be shallower if the conduit itself is mechanically protected. Buried cable should be tape-marked above so future digging doesn't catch it.
What IP rating do outdoor light fittings need?
IP44 minimum for fittings under cover (porches, soffits, rear of shed overhangs). IP65 for fittings exposed to direct rain — most garden floodlights, ground-level fittings, and unsheltered wall packs. IP67 for fittings at risk of submersion or hose-down. We spec to the application — there's no benefit in paying for IP67 on a sheltered porch light.
Mains or low-voltage for garden lighting?
Both have their place. 12 V low-voltage runs are easier to extend and modify, and the cable is touch-safe — fine for ambient garden lighting through planting and along path edges. 230 V mains gives brighter output and longer runs without voltage drop — better for security floodlights and driveway lighting covering distance. Most Strood outdoor jobs end up using both, on separate circuits.
Can PIR floodlights be controlled from a phone?
Yes — modern smart-controlled PIR floodlights run via the same Wi-Fi platforms as smart bulbs (Hue, Smart Life, Tuya, etc.) and can be triggered, scheduled, or overridden from an app. We can spec smart fittings or wire conventional fittings into a smart relay where central control matters. For most domestic jobs the built-in PIR sensor and a manual override switch is enough.
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 Strood. 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.
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