The Right Light, Right-Sized
for Every Room.
Choosing a fixture is easy. Choosing one that actually fits the room is the part most people get wrong. This guide walks you through the proportions, hanging heights, and ceiling-clearance rules our design team uses on every Docos project — so the piece you fall in love with online looks just as good once it's up.
Why size matters more than style
A beautiful fixture in the wrong scale is just an expensive mistake. Get the proportion right and even a modest pendant can hold a room together.
Most online lighting returns at Docos come down to one thing: the fixture arrived smaller — or larger — than the customer pictured. Product photos flatter every lamp, and rooms read differently to the eye than they do on a tape measure. The fix isn't more careful shopping; it's a handful of proportional rules used by interior designers for decades. Once you know them, sizing a fixture takes about ninety seconds.
The two formulas that solve 90% of cases
You only need to remember two. Everything else is a variation.
Formula 1 — Room Diameter Rule
For a ceiling-mounted chandelier or pendant in a general room (not over a table), add the room's length and width in feet. Convert that sum to inches — that's roughly the ideal fixture diameter.
Formula 2 — Surface Width Rule
When the fixture hangs over a table, island, or piece of furniture, ignore the room. The fixture's width should be roughly half to two-thirds the width of the surface below it.
You have a 72-inch-wide dining table.
Multiply 72 by 0.5 and 0.66 → ideal fixture width sits between 36 and 47 inches.
Dining room chandeliers
The dining fixture is the most-stared-at light in any home. Get this one right and guests notice the room — not the lamp.
| Table width | Fixture width | Hanging height above table |
|---|---|---|
| 48″ (4-seater) | 24″ – 32″ | 30″ – 34″ |
| 60″ (6-seater) | 30″ – 40″ | 32″ – 36″ |
| 72″ (6–8 seater) | 36″ – 47″ | 32″ – 36″ |
| 84″ (8-seater) | 42″ – 55″ | 34″ – 38″ |
| 96″+ (10-seater) | 48″ – 64″ (or linear) | 34″ – 38″ |
Designer tip: for long rectangular tables, pair two smaller pendants spaced evenly along the length instead of stretching a single fixture. Two 18″ pendants over a 96″ table reads more refined than one oversized chandelier.
Kitchen island pendants
Spacing, not size, is what trips most people up over an island.
For a kitchen island, the answer almost always involves more than one pendant. Use the surface width rule, then divide by the number of fixtures and add equal margins on both ends.
A 78-inch island, three pendants planned.
78 ÷ 3 = 26″ per pendant zone. Center each pendant in its zone — 13″ from the end, then 26″ apart, then 26″ apart, then 13″ from the other end.
Sightline check: if you're under six feet tall, 32″ above the counter often feels low. Test with a piece of cardboard taped to the ceiling at your planned height before drilling.
Living room ceiling fixtures
Living rooms reward layered light. The ceiling piece is the anchor — not the whole story.
Use the Room Diameter Rule as your starting point, then check the height. A central chandelier should clear seven feet from the floor at its lowest point — eight feet if it sits above a primary walkway. In conversation areas, hanging height matters less because nobody walks under it; you can drop the fixture lower for intimacy.
Small (≤140 sq ft)
- Fixture diameter
- 17″ – 22″
- Format
- Flush mount or semi-flush
- Clearance from floor
- 7′ minimum
Medium (140–250 sq ft)
- Fixture diameter
- 22″ – 30″
- Format
- Pendant or compact chandelier
- Clearance from floor
- 7′ minimum
Large (250–400 sq ft)
- Fixture diameter
- 30″ – 42″
- Format
- Statement chandelier
- Clearance from floor
- 7′6″ minimum
Great room (400+ sq ft)
- Fixture diameter
- 42″+ or two fixtures
- Format
- Linear / multi-tier
- Clearance from floor
- 8′ minimum
Bedroom & bedside pendants
Soft, low, and personal. The bedroom is where rules bend toward comfort.
The ceiling fixture in a bedroom can be smaller than the Room Diameter Rule suggests — bedrooms benefit from a calmer scale. Pull the diameter down by 4–6 inches from the formula's result. Bedside pendants are a swap for traditional table lamps: they free the nightstand and add architectural rhythm.
| Application | Recommended size | Height detail |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling fixture, primary bedroom | 20″ – 28″ diameter | 7′ clearance |
| Bedside pendant, single | 6″ – 10″ shade | 20–26″ above mattress |
| Bedside pendant, paired | 8″ – 12″ shade | Symmetrical to nightstand |
| Plug-in cord pendant | Cord length 60″+ | Run cord along headboard wall |
No ceiling rewiring? No problem. Plug-in pendants from our Plug-In Pendant collection swap in like a table lamp. Many renters use them as bedside fixtures without ever touching the electrical box.
Foyer & staircase chandeliers
Two-storey foyers and stairwells are where statement lighting earns its keep.
For a standard single-storey entryway, the Room Diameter Rule still applies. For a two-storey foyer or stairwell, the rules shift: the bottom of the fixture should align with the center of the second-floor window if there is one, or float at the height of the second-floor landing.
A two-storey foyer: align the fixture's lowest point with the center of the second-floor window; keep at least 8′ above the entry floor.
Bathroom & vanity sconces
Wall sconces flanking a mirror cast the most flattering light in any room — that's not a sales pitch, it's just physics.
Overhead vanity lighting throws shadows under the eyes and chin. Sconces mounted on either side of the mirror, at face height, illuminate the face evenly. The standard placement: shade centers at 64–66 inches from the finished floor, separated by 28–36 inches.
| Application | Sconce size | Mounting height |
|---|---|---|
| Flanking a bathroom mirror | 5″ – 7″ shade Ø | 64–66″ AFF, 28–36″ apart |
| Above the mirror (alternative) | 22″ – 30″ wide bar | 75–80″ AFF |
| Hallway accent | 5″ – 9″ shade Ø | 60–66″ AFF, every 8–10′ |
| Bedside (instead of pendant) | 6″ – 10″ extension | 40–48″ AFF |
Bathroom safety: any fixture installed within 36″ of a shower or tub must be rated for damp or wet locations. Check the product specs page before buying — not every wall sconce qualifies.
Adjusting for ceiling height
A formula is a starting point. Your ceiling is the final word.
The rule of thumb for clearance: bottom of fixture must sit at least seven feet above the floor in any walkable area, eight feet over primary thoroughfares. From there, add roughly three inches of fixture drop for every foot of ceiling height above eight feet.
| Ceiling height | Recommended fixture type | Total drop (canopy to bottom) |
|---|---|---|
| 8′ | Flush / semi-flush only | ≤12″ |
| 9′ | Compact pendant or chandelier | 18–24″ |
| 10′ | Standard chandelier | 24–30″ |
| 12′ | Statement fixture or two-tier | 36–42″ |
| 14′+ | Cascade, multi-tier, or linear | 48–72″ |
Bulb color temperature & brightness
The fixture sets the mood. The bulb sets the actual temperature of the room.
Color temperature is measured in Kelvin (K). Lower numbers are warmer (yellower), higher numbers are cooler (bluer). For residential use, almost everything you want sits between 2700K and 3500K. Daylight bulbs at 5000K and above belong in garages and operating rooms — not bedrooms.
| Room | Recommended Kelvin | Recommended lumens |
|---|---|---|
| Living room | 2700K (warm white) | 1,500 – 3,000 lm total |
| Dining room | 2700K – 3000K | 3,000 – 6,000 lm total |
| Bedroom | 2700K | 1,500 – 4,000 lm total |
| Kitchen | 3000K – 3500K (neutral) | 5,000 – 10,000 lm total |
| Bathroom vanity | 3000K | 1,700 – 4,000 lm total |
| Home office | 3500K | 3,000 – 6,000 lm total |
Dimmer first, then bulb. A dimmable circuit with 2700K LEDs gives you almost every mood you need. Don't buy three sets of bulbs — buy one set and a dimmer switch.
Installation basics
A short checklist before the electrician arrives — or before you do it yourself.
- Power off. Flip the breaker. Confirm with a non-contact voltage tester. Don't trust the wall switch.
- Inspect the junction box. Heavier chandeliers (over 25 lb) require a fan-rated or specifically rated ceiling box. Standard plastic boxes often don't qualify.
- Match wires correctly. Black-to-black, white-to-white, ground to ground or to the green grounding screw on the bracket.
- Cap with wire nuts and wrap each connection in electrical tape. Tuck wires neatly into the box.
- Secure the canopy to the bracket — confirm there's no gap between canopy and ceiling.
- Restore power and test. Test the switch and dimmer (if applicable) before fully tightening the canopy.
When to call a licensed electrician: any fixture over 50 lb, any installation requiring a new junction box, or any time you're unsure about the existing wiring. The cost of a one-hour service call is always less than a fire-damage claim.
For step-by-step product-specific instructions, every Docos fixture ships with a digital install guide. You can also download our general installation reference or contact our team for a walkthrough.
Common questions
Quick answers to the sizing questions our support team hears most often.
How do I size a chandelier for my dining table?
Take the table's width in inches and multiply by 0.5 and 0.66. That range — half to two-thirds the table width — is your ideal chandelier diameter. For a 72-inch table, that means a fixture between 36 and 47 inches wide. Hang the bottom of the shade 32–36 inches above the tabletop.
How low should a pendant hang above a kitchen island?
30 to 36 inches between the countertop and the bottom of the shade. With a standard 36-inch counter, that puts the bottom of the shade between 66 and 72 inches off the floor — high enough to keep sightlines open across the room and low enough to actually light the workspace.
Can I install a chandelier in a room with 8-foot ceilings?
Yes, with a compact piece. Choose a fixture with a total drop of 12 inches or less, and confirm the bottom of the shade clears 7 feet from the floor in any walkable area. Most semi-flush mounts and low-profile pendants in our catalog work for 8-foot ceilings — look for the "Total height" measurement in the product specs.
What if my dining room is rectangular instead of square?
Switch from a round chandelier to a linear suspension or two matching pendants spaced evenly along the length of the table. A round chandelier sized for the table width will look stranded over a long, narrow table; a linear piece follows the geometry.
Do Docos fixtures work with sloped or vaulted ceilings?
Most pendants and chandeliers in our catalog ship with a swivel canopy that handles slopes up to 30 degrees. For steeper angles, send a photo and the approximate ceiling angle to info@docos.us — we'll confirm compatibility or recommend an extension kit before you order.
What bulb color temperature is best for home lighting?
2700K to 3000K (warm white) for living areas, dining rooms, and bedrooms. 3000K to 3500K (neutral white) for kitchens and home offices where task accuracy matters. Anything 5000K or above creates a cold, clinical feel that fights against most residential interiors.
Not sure what fits your room?
Send us a photo of your space with rough dimensions and our design team will recommend three fixtures that fit your scale, ceiling height, and style — usually within one business day.
Docos · 1583 Sulphur Spring Rd. Ste 113, Baltimore, MD 21227 · info@docos.us