When homeowners plan a kitchen remodel, lighting is often treated as an afterthought—chosen late, rushed, or based on trends rather than function. In 2026, that approach no longer works.
Modern kitchens are multi-purpose spaces. They’re used for cooking, entertaining, remote work, and everyday living. Choosing the right lighting for your kitchen remodel directly affects how your space looks, functions, and feels—and whether it actually supports how you live.
At Ideal Tile Kitchen & Bath Design Center in Falls Church, we see one truth over and over: beautiful materials fall flat without the right lighting plan. This guide walks you through how to get it right.
Kitchen Lighting Basics: The Three Essential Layers
A well-designed kitchen never relies on a single light source. In 2026, professional kitchen lighting plans are built on three distinct layers.
1. Ambient Lighting (General Illumination)
Ambient lighting provides overall brightness so the kitchen feels open and safe.
Common ambient options include:
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Recessed ceiling lights
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Flush-mount or semi-flush fixtures
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LED panel lighting (for modern kitchens)
Best practice: Recessed lights should be spaced evenly and aligned with cabinetry—not randomly placed. Poor spacing creates shadows where you prep and cook.
2. Task Lighting (Function Comes First)
Task lighting illuminates work areas where precision matters:
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Countertops
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Sinks
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Ranges and cooktops
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Islands used for prep
The most effective task lighting in kitchens:
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Under-cabinet LED strips
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Directional recessed lights
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Pendants over islands (when properly sized)
Task lighting is non-negotiable in a remodel. Without it, even a bright kitchen feels frustrating to use.
3. Accent Lighting (Depth and Design)
Accent lighting adds dimension and highlights design features:
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Tile backsplashes
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Open shelving
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Glass-front cabinets
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Architectural details
In 2026 kitchens, accent lighting is subtle, integrated, and often indirect—never harsh or decorative just for the sake of it.
Step-by-Step: How to Choose the Right Lighting for Your Kitchen Remodel
Step 1: Start with the Kitchen Layout
Lighting must follow function. Before selecting fixtures, map:
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Appliance locations
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Prep zones
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Seating areas
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Walkways and entries
A galley kitchen requires a different lighting strategy than an open-concept kitchen with an island.
Step 2: Match Lighting to Kitchen Zones
Think in zones, not fixtures.
| Kitchen Zone | Lighting Type |
|---|---|
| Sink | Recessed + under-cabinet |
| Range | Dedicated recessed or hood lighting |
| Island | Pendants + recessed |
| Pantry | Recessed or motion-sensor LED |
| Dining nook | Dimmable pendant or chandelier |
This approach prevents over-lighting one area and under-lighting another.
Step 3: Balance Brightness and Comfort
More light is not better light.
In 2026, the focus is on:
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Even illumination
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Reduced glare
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Dimmable control
Overly bright kitchens feel clinical. Under-lit kitchens feel dated. The goal is adjustable lighting that adapts throughout the day.
Lighting Types That Define Kitchen Remodels in 2026
Recessed Lighting: Still Essential, But Smarter
Recessed lights remain the backbone of kitchen lighting, but placement matters more than ever.
What’s changed in 2026:
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Adjustable gimbal trims for directional control
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Smaller, cleaner profiles
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Higher CRI LEDs for accurate color rendering
Recessed lights should align with cabinet faces—not center of the room—to avoid casting shadows on countertops.
Pendant Lighting: Functional, Not Just Decorative
Pendant lights over islands remain popular, but scale and spacing are critical.
Designer rules of thumb:
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30–36 inches between countertop and pendant bottom
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Even spacing across the island length
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Simple silhouettes outperform overly ornate fixtures
Pendants should complement cabinetry and tile—not compete with them.
Under-Cabinet Lighting: The Most Important Upgrade
If you invest in only one lighting feature, make it under-cabinet lighting.
Benefits:
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Eliminates countertop shadows
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Enhances backsplash tile
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Improves safety and usability
In 2026, integrated LED strips with diffusers are standard. Puck lights are largely obsolete.
Toe-Kick & In-Cabinet Lighting: Quiet Luxury
These details elevate a kitchen without drawing attention to themselves:
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Toe-kick lighting for nighttime navigation
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Interior cabinet lighting for pantries and glass doors
They’re subtle, practical, and increasingly expected in high-end remodels.
Color Temperature, CRI, and Dimming: Where Most Remodels Go Wrong
Color Temperature (Kelvin)
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2700K–3000K: Warm, inviting (best for most kitchens)
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3500K: Neutral, modern
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4000K+: Clinical, often too harsh for homes
Mixing temperatures within one kitchen is a common mistake. Consistency matters.
CRI (Color Rendering Index)
High CRI lighting (90+) shows true colors in:
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Tile
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Countertops
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Cabinet finishes
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Food
Low CRI lighting can make premium materials look dull or off-color.
Dimming Is Not Optional
Every lighting layer should be dimmable. Period.
Dimming allows:
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Task-focused brightness when cooking
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Soft ambiance for evenings
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Energy savings
Smart Lighting & Energy Efficiency in 2026
Smart lighting is now mainstream, not experimental.
Popular features include:
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App-controlled scenes
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Voice integration
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Scheduling and occupancy sensors
From an efficiency standpoint:
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LEDs remain the standard
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ENERGY STAR-rated fixtures reduce long-term costs
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Smart controls further lower usage without sacrificing comfort
Common Kitchen Lighting Mistakes to Avoid
Avoid these costly missteps:
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Relying only on recessed lights
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Skipping under-cabinet lighting
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Choosing fixtures before finalizing layout
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Ignoring dimming capability
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Selecting trendy fixtures that date quickly
Lighting mistakes are expensive to fix after installation.
Pro Tips from Kitchen Designers
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Choose lighting after cabinetry and tile selections.
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Always test color temperature samples in your actual space.
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Invest more in lighting quality than fixture quantity.
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Think about nighttime use—not just daytime brightness.
Common Questions with us
Q1: How many recessed lights should a kitchen have?
It depends on layout and ceiling height, but most kitchens need one recessed light every 4–6 feet, aligned with work zones.
Q2: Are pendant lights enough for an island?
No. Pendants provide visual focus, but recessed or ambient lighting is still required for balance.
Q3: What is the best color temperature for kitchen lighting?
Most homeowners prefer 2700K–3000K for warmth without sacrificing clarity.
Q4: Is under-cabinet lighting worth the cost?
Absolutely. It improves function, safety, and aesthetics more than almost any other lighting upgrade.
Q5: Should kitchen lighting be on separate switches?
Yes. Each lighting layer should have independent controls for flexibility.
Ready to design a kitchen that looks as good at night as it does during the day?
Book a Design Consultation with Ideal Tile in Falls Church, and we’ll help you select lighting that complements your layout, tile, and lifestyle—without costly mistakes.