How to Install Outdoor Landscape Lighting

Learn how to install outdoor lighting—and increase the curb appeal of your home—with our step-by-step instructions for outdoor wiring.

solar garden lights
Project Overview
  • Working Time: 4 hours
  • Total Time: 4 hours
  • Skill Level: Advanced

Don't stop enjoying your yard when night falls. Outdoor lighting is easy to install, and it makes a huge difference in the landscape. Plus, there are many uses and types of outdoor lighting to choose from.

Use outdoor walkway lights to guide guests to and from your home. Solar lights are a great choice, and they can be placed nearly anywhere. As the name implies, solar lights gather energy from the sun and use it to power lights. That being said, their light is usually a little softer than traditional systems, and on cloudy days, they may not work at all.

A low-voltage system is a little more laborious but offers bright, reliable lighting. Lights are staked into the ground, connected via a cable, and then plugged into a wall outlet. The following guide shows you how to install a low-voltage system in your yard.

What You'll Need

Equipment / Tools

  • Measuring tape
  • Spade or shovel
  • Staple gun
  • Scissors
  • Wire Strippers

Materials

  • Agricultural lime
  • Dowels or stakes
  • Power cable
  • Garden lights and bulbs
  • Wire nuts
  • Electrician's tape
  • Power transformer
  • Timer

Instructions

  1. Make a Plan

    Create a lighting plan by examining the exterior of your home and finding a household outlet. Then, measure from the outlet to where you'd like your lights to end. You will need a power cable that's this length or longer.

    Editor's Tip: Be sure to follow the manufacturer's instructions with regard to the maximum wattage you can run from the power supply.

  2. Plan Cable Lines

    Following your landscape lighting plan, mark the cable locations in your yard with agricultural lime. This step allows you to plan the placement of the cable so it avoids natural barriers. Pinpoint the fixture locations with dowels or stakes.

  3. stapling cable with staple gun

    Lay Out the Cable

    It's safe to lay low-voltage cable directly on the ground, but it's more attractive if it is buried. If you decide to bury the cable, dig a narrow trench along the chalk line. Place the cable in the trench, leaving a 1-foot loop at the transformer and a loop at each fixture location. If cable stretches along the underside of a deck, for example, you can staple the cable in place, leaving loops for all connections. Take care not to puncture the cable when stapling it in place.

  4. cut cable with wire cutters

    Prep for Fixtures

    Cut through the cable to prepare for attaching a light fixture to the circuit. Study the cut end of the cable; you'll notice two separately insulated conductors. Cut or pull the cable apart so the two conductors can be stripped. Using a wire stripper, strip the insulation off the conductors to expose 3/4 inch of wire at the end. Note that you need to strip the cable that leads into the light fixture as well as the cable that leads away from the fixture. Strip the insulation off the fixture's wires to prepare to connect to the low-voltage wire. (Practice stripping the insulation so you can strip it cleanly without nicking the wires.)

  5. placing wire nut over connected wires

    Make Connections

    To make the wire connections that bring power to a light fixture, take one stripped conductor from the 12-volt cable leading into the light fixture and one stripped conductor from the 12-volt cable leading away from the light fixture. Hold the wires side by side, twist them together to ensure a good connection, and screw a wire nut over the wires. Make sure that no bare conductors are exposed and that all wires are locked in. Repeat this procedure with the remaining three wires.

  6. wrapping electrical tape around cable

    Weatherproof the Connection

    Since this lighting is outdoors, you need to consider the weather. For a weathertight connection, wrap electrical tape around the cable to seal the joint between wire nut and cable. Wrap the tape in several layers to ensure a safe seal.

  7. Wire Last Light

    The cable should end at a light fixture. When wiring the last light fixture, twist two pairs of wires together (one pair from the light fixture and one pair from the cable) rather than the three pairs needed for a light fixture wired in place along the circuit. Do not run the cable beyond the last light fixture. If you decide to add fixtures later, simply unwire the last connections and add a new cable.

    Editor's Tip: If your transformer will be located outside, make sure it is watertight. Do not plug the transformer into the outlet until all wiring connections are complete. Make sure the transformer is protected by a fuse or circuit breaker.

  8. connecting conductors to transformer

    Connect Conductors

    After wiring the fixtures in place, connect the cable's two conductors to the transformer. Wire one conductor to the wire marked 0, and wire the other conductor to a 12-, 13-, or 14- volt line. If you are bringing several cables into the transformer, always connect one conductor from each cable to the 0 line and wire the other conductor to a cable.

  9. Connect to a Timer

    After all wiring connections are made, plug the low-voltage outdoor lighting transformer into a timer (if you want your lights to come on and go off automatically at various times), and plug the timer into the outlet. Check all the system fixtures to make sure each is operating correctly. Adjust the direction of lights, if necessary. The location of a fixture can be easily adjusted without rewiring if there is enough extra cable near the fixture.

  10. Check Lights

    If a fixture does not light, check the bulb first. If the bulb is good, check the electrical connections. Dim bulbs are an indication that the bulb is not receiving enough electricity; make sure the length of the cable run does not exceed manufacturer's recommended length. If the entire system fails to light, check the circuit breaker on the transformer.

  11. burying cable in mulch

    Bury Excess Cable

    Once everything is in place, the fixtures are functioning, and the light is directed the way you want, you're done. Bury or staple down excess cable from loops. Wait for the sun to go down, and admire your hard work.

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