LED Spot 4W, 6W or 8W? How to Choose Lumen, Wattage and Brightness by Room

LED Spot 4W, 6W or 8W? How to Choose Lumen, Wattage and Brightness by Room
24V LED Spot GuideBy TILLUME TeamUpdated April 2026Reading time 12 min
Choosing a 4W, 6W or 8W LED spot is not a wattage decision alone. The useful answer depends on room size, target lux, maximum lumen output, ceiling height, dimming and the control system. For TILLUME 24V LED spots, planning starts with the application and brightness requirement; only then does it become clear whether 6W, 8W or a Tunable White special case such as 4W+4W is the right fit.

Planning values at a glance

  • Plan LED spots by maximum lumen output, not by wattage alone.
  • Living rooms usually need about 100–200 lx for general lighting.
  • Kitchens and worktops often need about 300–500 lx or more.
  • A practical 24V power supply reserve is about 20% above the calculated LED load.
  • The TILLUME 81061M04 is a 4W+4W Tunable White special case, not a normal 8W spot.
Guide Series

The 24V LED spot guide series

Start here if you are planning a modular 24V lighting system. The following articles move from buying decisions, pink tint and color rendering to lumen planning, Tunable White, voltage drop, dimming and system integration with KNX, DALI and Loxone.

S1. 24V LED Spot Buying Guide 2026
Start here for the big-picture decisions: 24V constant voltage, DALI, KNX and modular lighting planning.
S1-01. Tunable White LED pink tint solution
Understand why some Tunable White LED spots show pink or magenta tint, and when TILLUME's 2400-4000K precision range is the better choice.
S1-02. CRI, Ra and R9 in LED Lighting Explained
Learn what CRI really means, why R9 matters and how color rendering affects wood, skin tones, food and interior materials.
S1-03. Current article: TILLUME LED Spot 4W vs 6W vs 8W
Choose the right lumen output and wattage for living rooms, kitchens, hallways, bedrooms and accent lighting.
S1-04. Tunable White LED Spot: CCT, Dual White and Dim to Warm
Understand CCT, Dual White, Dim to Warm and RGBW boundaries before planning Tunable White LED spots.
S1-05. Voltage Drop in 24V LED Spots
Why minimum input voltage, cable cross-section, cable length and internal constant-current regulation matter for stable brightness.
S1-06. 24V LED Spot Dimming: DALI, KNX, PWM and Loxone
Plan the main dimming paths for 24V spots: PWM, DALI DT6/DT8, KNX, Loxone and the clear boundary to RGBW.
S1-07. 24V LED Spot Modular System & Fixture Selection
Learn how to combine TILLUME 24V LED modules with fixture housings: modular system logic, design choices and installation checks.
S1-08. 24V LED Spot with MDT KNX Actuator
Understand how KNX actuator channels, MDT components and 24V constant-voltage LED loads fit together.
S1-09. 24V LED Spot with Lunatone DALI
Plan 24V LED spot groups with DALI or DALI-2 controllers, addresses, channels and power-supply sizing.
S1-10. 24V LED Spot with Loxone
See where Loxone controllers, dimmers and 24V LED spot modules make sense in a smart-home lighting plan.

1Selection logic: choose the application first, then 6W or 8W

For TILLUME 24V LED spots, the first question is not simply 4W, 6W or 8W. First decide whether the project uses dimmable Fixed CCT or Tunable White. Only then does the 6W vs. 8W decision become meaningful.

Plan for full output, then dim down: TILLUME 24V LED spots are used in smart-home systems with DALI, KNX, Loxone or PWM, so the planning value is maximum lumen output. The spot must be bright enough at full output; comfort and atmosphere are created later by dimming.

For Fixed CCT with dimming, planning is relatively direct: choose a colour temperature such as 2850K or 4000K, then dim brightness as needed. A 6W LED spot is often suitable for corridors, bedrooms, bathrooms and moderate general lighting. An 8W LED spot is useful for kitchens, dining areas, work surfaces, larger rooms, higher ceilings or higher target lux levels.

For Tunable White, wattage alone is not enough. Two colour channels are mixed, and the available brightness changes with colour temperature and controller logic. Define the colour temperature of the brightest scene first, then check the maximum lumen output at that point. Higher colour temperatures also tend to feel brighter than lower ones at the same measured lumen value.

A 4W+4W Tunable White spot such as the TILLUME Expert 81061M04 is a special case. It is explained later and should not be treated as a normal 4W room option or a conventional 8W spot.

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2Dimmable Fixed CCT or Tunable White?

If you want to... Start with
choose one fixed colour temperature and only dim brightness Fixed CCT with dimming + lumen/lux calculation
control colour temperature and brightness dynamically Tunable White + controller logic + available lumen by colour temperature

✦ Fixed CCT with dimming fits when:

  • the desired colour temperature is clear, for example 2850K warm white or 4000K neutral white;
  • the room mainly needs to become brighter or darker;
  • the system should remain efficient, predictable and simpler to wire;
  • corridors, bathrooms, general living areas or clear functional zones are planned.

△ Tunable White fits when:

  • the same room needs different scenes for morning, daytime and evening;
  • bedrooms, living rooms, dining areas or home offices need scene control;
  • KNX, DALI DT8, Loxone or another system should control brightness and colour temperature together;
  • the user wants to switch between warm relaxation light and more neutral functional light.
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3Why wattage alone is not enough

Watt describes electrical input power. Lumen describes visible light output. For room planning, lumen is closer to the real question: how bright will the room be?

Lighting design also works with layers: general lighting, accent lighting and supplementary or task lighting. TILLUME LED spots mainly provide broad general lighting. In real projects they are often combined with LED strips, cabinet lights or other supplementary lights to brighten worktops, niches, shelves or darker zones.

  • General lighting: overall room brightness, often from wide-beam ceiling spots.
  • Accent lighting: focused light for pictures, shelves or niches. Narrower optics are better for true accent lighting than broad 60° general-light spots.
  • Supplementary or task lighting: extra light where the general lighting is not enough, for example LED strips under kitchen wall cabinets, in shelves, on stairs or in indirect ceiling details.

Lumen alone is still not enough. The result also depends on target lux, room size, beam angle, spot spacing, surface colours, ceiling height, dimming scenes and, for Tunable White, the way the controller mixes the two colour channels.

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4Lumen, lux and room size: calculate correctly

Required lumen = room area in m² × target illuminance in lux
Number of spots = required lumen ÷ maximum lumen per spot

Use maximum lumen because the lighting system must be capable of reaching the target lux level at full output. In daily use, scenes can then be dimmed down.

Room / zone Practical target value Note
Corridor / entrance approx. 100–150 lx Orientation and safety, not work light.
Bedroom approx. 100–150 lx Often warm, dimmed and scene-based.
Living room approx. 100–200 lx general light Reading zones or work areas should be considered separately.
Bathroom general lighting approx. 200 lx Mirror zones often need more targeted light.
Kitchen / worktop approx. 300–500 lx or more Work surfaces require clearly higher illuminance.
Home office / desk approx. 300–500 lx Glare control and uniformity are important.

Example: a 12 m² living room with 150 lx general lighting needs about 1800 lm. With 600 lm per 6W spot, that means roughly three spots. In a bright room with white walls and a normal ceiling this can work well; with dark surfaces, a wooden ceiling or 3 m ceiling height, more spots, 8W spots or additional light layers may be needed.

Example: a 10 m² kitchen with 400 lx target value needs about 4000 lm. With 800 lm per 8W spot, that is about five spots. In practice, the worktop may still need under-cabinet lights, LED strips or carefully positioned spots. A good kitchen plan is usually layered: ceiling spots provide general lighting, while LED strips under wall cabinets or in niches add light directly to the work surface.

Efficiency-house context: In an efficiency-house project, lighting is usually planned as part of the overall comfort, control and energy concept rather than as an isolated subsidy item. Efficient lighting still matters: the system should provide enough lumen for the brightest scene, avoid unnecessary oversizing and use dimming or presence-based control where possible.
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56W or 8W by room

At the same target illuminance, 6W and 8W spots create different planning approaches. 8W spots need fewer light points and can create more depth and contrast. 6W spots usually need more light points, but create calmer and more uniform illumination. Both approaches are valid.

6W vs 8W in one sentence: Choose 6W when the room benefits from more evenly distributed light points; choose 8W when the room needs higher lux, fewer spots, higher ceilings or more brightness reserve.
Room / zone 6W approach 8W approach Note
Corridor / entrance More 6W spots for even orientation Fewer 8W spots possible Corridors usually benefit from uniform light.
Bedroom More 6W spots, even and dimmable Fewer 8W spots with more depth contrast Comfort is created by dimming and scenes.
Living room 6W as an even general-light base 8W for larger rooms or higher ceilings Combine spots for general lighting with LED strips for indirect supplementary light; narrower optics are better for true accents.
Bathroom More 6W spots for even brightness Fewer 8W spots Separate general light and mirror zone.
Kitchen More 6W spots to reduce worktop shadows Fewer 8W spots, but watch light islands Worktops need higher lux; LED strips or under-cabinet lights can be useful supplementary lighting.
Dining area More 6W spots for calm ambient light Fewer 8W spots with subtle depth Use dimming for mood.
Home office More 6W spots for glare-reduced uniformity Fewer 8W spots, but check glare Uniformity and glare limitation come first.
Accent zones Possible only to a limited degree through positioning Broad 60° spots are less ideal for accent light Current TILLUME spots are mainly 60° general-light spots; future 38° optics would be more suitable.
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6Special case 81061M04: why 4W+4W is not automatically a normal 8W spot

The TILLUME Expert 81061M04 is a special 4W+4W Tunable White spot with 2200–6500K. It should not be planned as a general 4W spot for small rooms, and not as a conventional 8W spot either.

Operating logic What happens? Planning interpretation
DALI DT8 / wattage balance / constant-power logic The controller typically keeps total power relatively constant when colour temperature changes. Plan closer to a 4W class: approx. 310 lm at 2200K and approx. 420 lm at 6500K.
MDT AKD-0424R with Max wattage output When mixing from 2200K towards 6500K, the second channel can be added more strongly. Around 3500–4000K, both channels can be close to full output; approx. 8W / 720 lm may be possible.
2200K or 6500K endpoints Mainly one channel is active. Do not expect 720 lm at the endpoints.

This behaviour must not be generalised to other TILLUME Tunable White spots. Other 6W+6W or 8W+8W models are not automatically designed for both channels to run at full power permanently.

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724V system planning: power supply, controller and reserve

For 24V LED spots, planning does not end with wattage per spot. The 24V power supply, controller channel, cable length and spot must fit together.

Total LED load = number of spots × wattage per spot
Recommended power supply size ≈ total LED load × 1.2

This is about 20% reserve. A blanket 50% reserve is usually not necessary in normal projects and can lead to oversized power supplies. A 24V-DC power supply should not be operated permanently above its rated output.

TILLUME 24V power supplies add two relevant advantages: adjustable output voltage to compensate realistic voltage drop in a correctly planned 24V installation, and internal design reserve at rated load. This does not mean the rated power may be exceeded permanently; it means the installation has more margin for realistic cable losses and rated-load operation.

Also check maximum output per LED controller channel, number of channels for Tunable White, PWM frequency and dimming behaviour, cable length, cable cross-section, room grouping and whether the Tunable White controller uses wattage balance, constant-power logic or a special mode such as MDT AKD-0424R Max wattage output.

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8Voltage drop and minimum input voltage

With longer 24V cable runs, the input voltage directly at the spot matters. Every cable causes voltage drop. If the voltage at the end of the line is too low, a poorly planned 24V system may become visibly dimmer.

TILLUME 24V LED spots include internal constant-current regulation. As long as the input voltage at the spot does not fall below the specified minimum value, the internal driver can keep the LED supplied stably. This makes the system more tolerant of realistic cable losses, but it does not replace correct planning of cable cross-section, cable length and power supply.

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9Expert or Master: brightness is not the only difference

Criterion Expert Series Master Series
Typical focus Efficient 24V LED spot modules for KNX/DALI/Loxone/PWM systems Higher light quality, more natural spectrum, better colour rendering
Power classes 6W and 8W; 81061M04 as a special 4W+4W case 6W and 8W
Luminous flux Depending on model approx. 360–800 lm; 81061M04 separately considered Depending on model approx. 410–800 lm
Colour rendering Fixed CCT mostly Ra >90; Expert Tunable White single channels mostly Ra >90, mixed mid-range temperatures can reach Ra >95 Fixed CCT partly Ra >97 / >98; Master Tunable White with both channels Ra >95
Best for General living areas, corridors, bathrooms, smart-home projects Kitchen, dining area, premium living spaces, wood, art and textiles

Master is not simply “brighter”. The stronger reason for Master is light quality: better colour rendering, a more continuous spectrum and more stable thermal behaviour, especially for wood, food, skin tones and textiles. You can browse TILLUME spot families in the 24V LED Spots Expert collection.

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10Common planning mistakes

  • Mistake 1: 8W is always better than 6W. 8W gives more reserve and needs fewer light points, but it can also create glare or light islands in small rooms. 6W with more light points can be calmer and more uniform.
  • Mistake 2: choose LED spots only by wattage. Watt is input power. Planning needs lumen, target lux, beam angle, room area and distribution.
  • Mistake 3: use living-room logic for the kitchen. Kitchens and worktops often need higher lux and extra task lighting such as LED strips or under-cabinet lights.
  • Mistake 4: 4W+4W automatically means a normal 8W spot. With 81061M04, usable output depends strongly on controller logic.
  • Mistake 5: size the power supply too tightly. A 24V power supply should not run at its limit permanently; around 20% reserve is a better practical rule.
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11Decision checklist

  • What room area and target lux level are planned?
  • Is the room designed with bright or dark surfaces?
  • How high is the ceiling?
  • Should the spot provide general light, zone light or accent light?
  • How many spots fit mechanically and visually into the ceiling?
  • Is Fixed CCT with dimming enough, or is Tunable White required?
  • How many lumen does the spot deliver at the desired colour temperature?
  • How much output can the controller channel provide?
  • How large should the 24V power supply be with about 20% reserve?
  • How long are the cables and what cable cross-section is used?
  • For 81061M04: is MDT AKD-0424R Max wattage output really being used?
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12FAQ

+How many LED spots do I need per room?
Start with room area × target lux and divide the result by the usable lumen output per spot. Then adjust for wall colour, ceiling height, spot spacing and the desired light effect.
+How many lumen do I need in a living room, bathroom or kitchen?
As a rough guide: living rooms approx. 100–200 lx general light, bathrooms around 200 lx general lighting, kitchens and worktops approx. 300–500 lx or more. These are practical orientation values, not a universal legal requirement for every private room.
+Are 6W LED spots enough for a living room?
Often yes, if the room is moderately sized, surfaces are bright and several spots are evenly distributed. For larger rooms, dark surfaces or higher ceilings, 8W spots can be useful because they need fewer light points and create more depth.
+When should I choose 8W LED spots?
8W is useful for kitchens, work surfaces, larger rooms, higher ceilings or higher lux targets. It should still be planned with dimming, spot spacing and glare control.
+Is more watt automatically brighter?
Not automatically. More watt can allow more light, but lumen, optics, CRI, colour temperature, thermal design and controller logic influence the actual brightness.
+What spacing between LED spots is sensible?
The right spacing depends on ceiling height, beam angle, room shape and target lux. With broad 60° spots, the goal is usually uniform general lighting.
+Should I choose dimmable Fixed CCT spots or Tunable White?
Fixed CCT with dimming fits when colour temperature and use are clear. Tunable White fits when the same room needs different scenes, times of day and moods.
+Is 4W+4W Tunable White the same as an 8W spot?
No. For TILLUME 81061M04, 4W+4W is a two-channel Tunable White structure. In normal DALI DT8 or wattage-balance logic it should be planned closer to a 4W class; approx. 720 lm is only possible with special modes such as MDT AKD-0424R Max wattage output in the mid mixing range.

Plan a complete 24V smart-lighting system

Choose LED spots, power supplies and DALI/KNX-compatible controllers as one system — not as isolated components.

View 24V power supplies →View DALI LED controllers
About TILLUME
TILLUME develops 24V LED spot modules, DALI LED controllers and 24V power supplies for modular luminaires and wired smart-home lighting systems.

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