Outdoor living is the point of Southwest Florida — lighting installed by licensed electricians makes it usable (and beautiful) after sunset, safely.
Get a Free Lighting EstimateHeat, humidity, salt air, and summer deluges kill bargain outdoor lighting in a season or two. Done right — weather-rated fixtures, proper transformers, protected circuits, connections that keep water out — it runs for years. That's the difference licensed installation makes.
Lanai ceiling fans are their own Florida institution — and outdoor-rated (wet/damp listed) is not optional out there. An electrician can put fans and lighting on the same visit; batch small outdoor jobs together and the trip charge math works in your favor.
A basic outdoor lighting package — transformer, timer, and 4–5 fixtures — typically starts around $1,800. A fuller design with 10–15 fixtures runs $3,000–$5,500, and additional fixtures run roughly $70–$130 each installed. Lanai and pool-cage circuits with GFCI protection are usually priced as part of the same visit.
A basic 4–5 fixture package with transformer and timer starts around $1,800. A fuller 10–15 fixture design typically runs $3,000–$5,500, with additional fixtures around $70–$130 each installed.
Yes — low-voltage systems run through a transformer that steps household voltage down, which is safer around buried cable, wet soil, and pool areas. It's the standard approach for path, uplighting, and accent fixtures.
Not typically — lanai and pool-cage fixtures need their own properly GFCI-protected circuit rated for the fixture load, separate from a low-voltage landscape lighting transformer. The electrician sorts out the right circuit plan at the estimate.
Takes 30 seconds. A licensed local electrician will contact you — free, no obligation.