Quick Answer

Outdoor lighting installation in Melbourne costs $150–$600 per light point installed by a licensed electrician. A simple garden path light on a low-voltage transformer runs $80–$200 per light (DIY-friendly). Hardwired LED downlights or feature lights cost $150–$400 per point installed. A full front/back yard lighting package (8–12 lights) typically runs $1,500–$4,000.

Installing a hardwired LED downlight in an exterior soffit — all mains-voltage outdoor lighting in Victoria must be installed by a licensed electricia
Installing a hardwired LED downlight in an exterior soffit — all mains-voltage outdoor lighting in Victoria must be installed by a licensed electrician and must be rated IP44 or higher for weather resistance.

Outdoor Lighting Installation Costs in Melbourne

Good outdoor lighting does three things for a Melbourne home: it improves security, lifts street appeal, and makes alfresco areas usable after dark. In newer estates like Clyde North, Officer and Cranbourne East, outdoor lighting is increasingly a standard expectation — and in older suburbs like Frankston and Carrum Downs, it’s an easy upgrade that adds real value.

Type-by-Type Cost Breakdown

Lighting Type Cost per Light (Installed) DIY Possible?
Low-voltage garden path lights (12V transformer) $50–$150 Yes — plug-in transformer
Solar garden lights (no wiring) $20–$80 Yes — spike into ground
Hardwired LED garden path/spike lights (240V) $150–$280 No — electrician required
Exterior LED downlights (soffit/ceiling) $150–$350 No — electrician required
Flood/security lights (sensor) $180–$400 No — electrician required
Deck or pergola string/festoon lights (plug-in) $80–$250 (DIY) Yes — GPO powered
Hardwired deck or pergola feature lights $200–$500 No — electrician required
Driveway marker/pillar lights $200–$450 No — electrician required
Pro tip: Smart outdoor lighting (Philips Hue Outdoor, Govee) now works on standard 12V transformer setups and lets you control your garden lights via an app or voice assistant without any electrician work. Great for path lighting and garden feature lights in SE Melbourne suburbs.

Full Package Estimates

Package What’s Included Typical Cost
Basic front entry 2 wall lights + 1 sensor flood $600–$1,200
Front garden path lighting 6 low-voltage path lights + transformer $400–$900 (DIY: $150–$300)
Alfresco/pergola package 4 ceiling lights + 2 wall lights + fans $1,200–$2,500
Full front + rear package 12+ lights, sensor flood, path lights $2,500–$5,000
Pool area lighting In-pool + surround, IP68 rated $2,000–$6,000
Path lighting on a Melbourne front entry — low-voltage LED path lights on a plug-in transformer are the most cost-effective upgrade for home security
Path lighting on a Melbourne front entry — low-voltage LED path lights on a plug-in transformer are the most cost-effective upgrade for home security and curb appeal, and don’t require any electrician work.

What Affects Outdoor Lighting Costs?

1. Mains vs Low-Voltage vs Solar

The biggest cost driver is whether you need hardwired 240V work (electrician required, $150–$500/light) or low-voltage/solar (DIY possible, $30–$150/light). For path and garden feature lighting, low-voltage is almost always the right choice. For security floodlights, soffit downlights, and pergola feature lighting, 240V hardwired is needed.

2. Cable Run Length

A downlight installed in a soffit directly above a pre-existing circuit adds around $150–$250. If the nearest circuit is 15m away and requires trenching across a lawn or drilling through walls, the cost per light rises to $300–$500. In double-brick homes in older Frankston and Noble Park suburbs, running cables through walls can be particularly time-consuming.

3. IP Rating Requirements

Outdoor lights must meet minimum IP ratings. Victoria requires IP44 for covered outdoor areas and IP55+ for exposed areas (rain). Pool lighting needs IP68. Always verify the IP rating of any light before purchasing — non-rated lights fitted outdoors are both illegal and a safety risk.

Safety warning: Outdoor lights in exposed, wet, or pool areas must meet Australian Standard AS/NZS 3000 minimum IP ratings. Fitting a light rated for indoors in an outdoor exposed location is illegal and a serious electrocution risk. All hardwired outdoor lighting must be installed by a licensed electrician.

DIY Outdoor Lighting Options

You don’t need an electrician for every outdoor lighting upgrade. These options are fully DIY:

  • Solar garden lights: Spike directly into garden beds. No wiring. From $20 at most hardware stores.
  • Low-voltage path lights: 12V transformer plugs into a standard GPO. Lights connect with push-in connectors. Brands like Lumascape and Garden Lights NZ sell quality kits.
  • Plug-in festoon or string lights: Plug into a weatherproof outdoor GPO. Perfect for pergolas and alfresco areas.
  • Battery-powered sensor lights: Mount anywhere with screws — no wiring. Good for side gates and sheds.
Checking IP ratings on low-voltage garden lights before installation — outdoor lights must be rated to at least IP44 for covered areas and IP55 for ar
Checking IP ratings on low-voltage garden lights before installation — outdoor lights must be rated to at least IP44 for covered areas and IP55 for areas exposed to direct rain, with IP68 required for any pool or water feature lighting.

Top 10 Tips and Gotchas

  1. Plan your zones first: Group lights on separate circuits or transformer zones so you can control front garden, backyard, and alfresco independently.
  2. LED-only for outdoors: Halogen outdoor lights are outdated — LED uses 70–80% less power and lasts 5–10× longer. Replace any remaining halogen path or flood lights.
  3. Choose warm white (2700K–3000K) for garden: Cool white (5000K+) looks harsh in garden settings. Warm white creates a more welcoming ambience for SE Melbourne outdoor entertaining.
  4. Don’t over-light: One strong floodlight washing out an entire backyard looks cheap. Use layered lighting — ambient (string lights), task (path lights), and accent (uplights for trees/features).
  5. Sensor floodlights deter break-ins: Motion-activated LED floodlights are proven deterrents. Install one on the rear of the house and one covering the driveway.
  6. Check transformer capacity: Low-voltage transformers have a watt limit. A 100W transformer running 10 × 8W lights is at capacity — add a second transformer rather than overloading.
  7. Bury low-voltage cables correctly: Landscape cables should be buried 150mm deep in PVC conduit, even at 12V. Lawnmowers and garden forks find buried cables.
  8. Smart timers pay for themselves: A $40 timer plug on your low-voltage transformer means lights come on at sunset and off at midnight — no wasted electricity.
  9. Avoid cheap solar on south-facing fences: Solar lights need direct sunlight to charge. South-facing fences in Melbourne rarely get enough sun for reliable solar operation.
  10. Pool lighting is specialist work: Pool lighting in Victoria must comply with AS/NZS 3000 and be installed by a licensed electrician with pool electrical experience. Don’t DIY.

Local Melbourne Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need an electrician for outdoor lighting in Melbourne?

Only for hardwired 240V lights. Solar lights, plug-in festoon lights, and 12V low-voltage transformer-powered path lights are all DIY-legal. Any light connecting directly to 240V mains — downlights, hardwired floods, hardwired wall lights — must be installed by a licensed electrician in Victoria.

How much do solar garden lights cost in Melbourne?

Decent solar garden lights cost $20–$80 each — brands like Morryde and Eglo at Bunnings or Mitre 10 perform well in Melbourne’s climate. Cheap $5 solar spikes from discount shops rarely last more than one summer. Spend at least $25–$30 per light for reliable performance.

What IP rating do outdoor lights need in Melbourne?

IP44 minimum for covered areas (under a pergola or eave). IP55+ for exposed areas (open to rain). IP68 for pool or water feature lighting. Always check the light’s IP rating before buying — fitting non-rated lights outdoors is illegal under Australian wiring standards.

How many path lights do I need for a front garden?

Space path lights 1.5–2m apart for a Melbourne standard 8m front garden path — that’s typically 4–6 lights. Don’t overdo it: the goal is guiding footsteps, not runway lighting. Alternate sides of the path for a more natural look.

Can I put festoon lights on my pergola?

Yes — plug-in festoon lights connected to a weatherproof outdoor GPO are fully DIY. Make sure the GPO is rated for outdoor use (IP44+) and the light cable is rated for outdoor use. Use a timer plug to automate the lights so you’re not paying for overnight electricity.

Final Thoughts

Start with low-voltage path lights and solar accent lighting — these are DIY-friendly, cheap, and immediately lift your home’s night-time kerb appeal. For security and alfresco entertaining, budget for a licensed electrician to install sensor floodlights and hardwired pergola downlights. A well-planned outdoor lighting scheme costs $1,500–$3,000 and transforms how a Melbourne home looks and feels after dark.

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