North York, Ontario
Pot Lights
in North York
Pot light upgrades are popular across North York's bungalow stock as homeowners modernize their interiors. Slim LED pot lights work especially well in the lower ceilings common in 1950s and 1960s homes. A typical North York bungalow gets 12 to 18 pot lights across the main floor and basement.

220+
Pot Lights jobs in North York
WHY CHOOSE US IN NORTH YORK
Local Electricians Who Know North York
North York's housing spans postwar bungalows in Don Mills and Bathurst Manor (1950s-60s), apartment towers along Yonge Street and Jane Street (1960s-70s), Willowdale subdivisions (1970s-80s), and condo towers from the 1990s to present. The bungalow stock has aluminum wiring and aging panels. The condo stock has limited panel capacity and growing EV charger demand. The rental tower stock has deferred maintenance.
Same-Day Service Across North York
55-minute average response time to any North York neighbourhood. We schedule North York jobs in dedicated blocks so you are not waiting on a contractor coming from across the GTA.
ESA Licensed and Insured
Every job is ESA permitted and inspected. We carry $5M liability insurance. Your home and your insurance policy stay protected - critical in North York where insurers are scrutinizing aluminum wiring and aging panels.
47 Five-Star Google Reviews
100% satisfaction guarantee. If the work is not right, we come back and fix it at no charge. Our 5.0 rating reflects the care we put into every North York job.
Aluminum Wiring Specialists
Don Mills and Bathurst Manor bungalows built in the 1960s have concentrated aluminum branch wiring. We have remediated hundreds of these connections using approved AlumiConn connectors and full copper rewires.
Neighbourhoods We Serve in North York
220+
Jobs in North York
Same-Day
Response time
47
5-star reviews
5+
Years serving GTA
THE SERVICE
Pot Lights — What's Included
What Are Pot Lights?
Pot lights - also called recessed lights or can lights - are light fixtures that sit flush inside your ceiling. Unlike pendant lights or chandeliers that hang down and collect dust, pot lights are completely recessed. You see the light, not the fixture. This creates a clean, modern look that opens up your space and makes ceilings feel taller. Modern pot lights use LED technology exclusively. LED pot lights produce bright, even illumination while using 75% less electricity than older halogen models. They last 25,000+ hours, which means roughly 15 years of daily use before you need to think about a replacement. Pot lights are the most requested electrical upgrade we do at Superior Power Electric - and for good reason.
Benefits of Pot Light Installation
The biggest advantage of pot lights is the clean, uncluttered ceiling. No bulky fixtures, no lampshades collecting dust, and no hanging pendants getting in the way. Your room instantly feels bigger and more modern. Pot lights also increase your home value. Real estate agents consistently list recessed lighting as a top upgrade that buyers notice during showings. A pot light installation in your kitchen or living room is one of the most visible improvements you can make before listing. Energy savings are real and immediate. LED pot lights draw 7-12 watts compared to 50-65 watts for halogen equivalents. For a 10-light installation, that saves roughly $100-$150 per year on your electricity bill. The fixtures themselves last so long that maintenance is essentially zero. Dimmer compatibility gives you full control over brightness. Set the lights to 100% for cooking and meal prep, then drop to 20% for dinner or movie night. Every LED pot light we install is dimmable and comes with a compatible dimmer switch.
Best Rooms for Pot Lights in Your Home
Kitchens are the number one room for pot lights in Brampton homes. Even lighting across countertops, islands, and prep areas makes cooking easier and safer. We typically install 6-8 pot lights in a standard kitchen, with tighter spacing over the island and sink where task lighting matters most. Living rooms benefit from layered lighting. Pot lights on a dimmer switch give you flexibility - bright for reading or board games, low for watching TV. We often pair recessed lights with one accent fixture for depth. Basements are transformed by pot lights. Most basements have low ceilings (7-8 feet), and recessed lighting avoids taking up any headroom. A dark, unfinished storage space becomes a livable family room, home office, or entertainment area with proper pot light placement. Bathrooms get a spa-like feel with pot lights placed over the vanity, shower, and tub area. For shower installations, we use wet-rated LED fixtures built to handle humidity and moisture. Hallways and entryways become welcoming with evenly spaced pot lights replacing outdated flush-mount ceiling fixtures. Even 3-4 pot lights down a hallway make a noticeable difference.
How Many Pot Lights Do You Need Per Room?
The general guideline is one pot light for every 25 square feet of room space. A 100-square-foot room needs about 4 pot lights. A 200-square-foot living room needs about 8. But this is a starting point - the actual number depends on ceiling height, wall color, natural light, and how you use the space. For spacing, the standard rule is to place pot lights at a distance equal to half the ceiling height. With 8-foot ceilings, that means 4 feet between each light and 2 feet from the nearest wall. With 9 or 10-foot ceilings, you space them slightly further apart. Here is a quick reference for common rooms in Brampton homes. Kitchen (100-150 sq ft): 6-8 pot lights. Living room (200-300 sq ft): 8-12 pot lights. Basement (400-600 sq ft): 12-20 pot lights. Bathroom (40-60 sq ft): 3-4 pot lights. Hallway: 1 pot light every 4-5 feet. We plan every layout before installation. You see the exact placement on paper and approve it before we cut a single hole in your ceiling.
LED vs Halogen Pot Lights
We install LED pot lights exclusively, and here is why. LEDs use 75% less energy than halogen, last 25,000+ hours (compared to 2,000 for halogen), and produce significantly less heat. Less heat means they are safer in insulated ceilings where IC-rated fixtures sit directly against insulation material. LED pot lights are available in a range of color temperatures. Warm white (2700K) gives a cozy, yellowish tone similar to traditional incandescent bulbs. Neutral white (3500K) is a balanced tone popular in kitchens. Daylight (5000K) is the brightest and whitest, ideal for task areas and garages. The upfront cost of LED fixtures is slightly higher than halogen, but the payback is fast. Between energy savings and the fact that you will not replace a burned-out LED bulb for over a decade, LED pot lights cost less to own over their lifetime.
Our Pot Light Installation Process
Every pot light project starts with a consultation. We measure your room, assess your ceiling type (drywall, drop ceiling, or vaulted), check your electrical panel capacity, and discuss your goals. Do you want bright task lighting? Warm ambient glow? A mix of both? We plan accordingly. Next comes layout planning. We map pot light positions based on ceiling height, room dimensions, furniture placement, and natural light sources. You review and approve the plan before any work begins. Installation day starts with drop cloths to protect your floors and furniture. We mark positions on the ceiling, cut clean openings with a hole saw, run new wiring from your electrical panel, and install IC-rated LED fixtures. Every connection is tested for safety and code compliance. We finish with trim selection and dimmer switch installation. You walk through the finished result, test the dimmer, and confirm everything looks right. We clean up completely - no drywall dust, no scrap wire, no mess left behind. If your project requires an ESA inspection (larger installations or new circuit work), we handle the permit application, schedule the inspection, and deliver your certificate of inspection.
Pot Light Installation Cost in Brampton
Pot light installation typically costs $150 to $250 per light, depending on your ceiling type and how accessible the wiring path is. A standard 6-light kitchen installation runs $900 to $1,500 total. A full basement with 12-16 pot lights ranges from $1,800 to $4,000. Factors that affect pricing include ceiling material (drywall is straightforward, plaster or concrete costs more), accessibility above the ceiling (open attic space vs. finished floor above), distance from your electrical panel, and whether you need a new dedicated circuit. We offer two ways to get exact pricing. Our $49 on-site assessment sends a licensed electrician to your home to inspect the ceiling, check panel capacity, and give you a written quote. The $49 fee is credited toward your project if you go ahead. If you prefer, send us photos and room dimensions for a free remote estimate. Financing is available through Financeit for larger projects. Apply online, get approved in minutes, and spread the cost into affordable monthly payments.
Why Choose Superior Power Electric for Pot Lights
We hold ESA/ECRA License #7014710. Every pot light installation meets or exceeds Ontario Electrical Safety Code standards. We are fully insured with $5 million in coverage. Shaun Pennant, the owner of Superior Power Electric, brings over 15 years of hands-on electrical trade experience. We have completed hundreds of pot light installations across Brampton, Mississauga, Vaughan, Caledon, Georgetown, and Oakville since 2020. Our 47 Google reviews at a 5.0-star rating speak for themselves. We show up on time, quote honestly, and leave your home cleaner than we found it. Check our project photos - you can see real pot light work we have done in Brampton and Mississauga homes. We serve Brampton, Mississauga, Vaughan, Caledon, Georgetown, Oakville, and the broader GTA. Same-day quotes are available. Call (647) 872-9954 or book your $49 assessment online.
Recent Pot Light Projects in the GTA
A homeowner in Brampton's Credit Valley neighbourhood wanted to replace the single chandelier in their kitchen with eight pot lights before listing the home. We planned a layout that kept the lights clear of ceiling joists, installed a compatible dimmer switch, and finished the job in four hours. The homeowner's real estate agent noted the kitchen looked significantly larger in listing photos. In Mississauga's Erin Mills area, a couple finishing their basement wanted pot lights throughout - a 650-square-foot open space. We installed 16 recessed LED fixtures in a uniform grid, ran a new dedicated circuit from the panel, and wired in a single dimmer. The basement went from dark storage to a bright family room in one day. A Brampton homeowner in the Sandringham area had a vaulted ceiling in their living room and wanted pot lights installed without damaging the ceiling. We used remodel-rated IC fixtures designed for accessible spaces and ran the wiring through the attic above, cutting clean openings from below. No drywall damage, no patching required. A townhouse owner in Brampton's Fletchers Creek area wanted pot lights added to four rooms: kitchen, dining room, master bedroom, and hallway. We staged the work by floor over two days, reusing existing circuits where load allowed, and completed 24 lights total with two dimmer zones.
How We Plan Pot Light Layouts Before We Cut a Single Hole
The most common mistake homeowners make with pot lights is not planning the layout before cutting. Lights placed too close to walls look awkward. Lights placed over kitchen cabinets instead of the countertops miss the point entirely. Uneven spacing is immediately obvious once the lights are on. Before any hole gets cut on your ceiling, we do a proper layout. We start with your room dimensions and ceiling height, then factor in furniture placement, natural light sources, and how you actually use the space. We mark every light position on paper (or tape it directly on the ceiling temporarily) and walk you through it room by room. You approve the layout before we pick up a hole saw. For kitchens, we position lights specifically over work surfaces - the countertops, island, and sink - not just evenly spaced across the ceiling. For living rooms on a dimmer, we consider how the shadows fall across the walls at different brightness levels. For basements with low ceilings, we account for head clearance near beams and HVAC ductwork. This planning step takes an extra 20 minutes per room, but it is what separates a professional pot light installation from a job that looks off and cannot be undone without patching drywall.
NORTH YORK ELECTRICAL REALITIES
What North York Homeowners Deal With
Every city has its own electrical quirks. Here's what we see most often in North York.
Aluminum Wiring in Don Mills and Bathurst Manor Bungalows
The 1950s and 1960s bungalows of Don Mills and Bathurst Manor were built with aluminum branch circuit wiring. Aluminum expands and contracts more than copper, causing loose connections at outlets and switches that can overheat and start fires. Insurance companies across North York are increasingly requiring remediation before issuing or renewing policies.
Federal Pioneer Panels in Willowdale
Willowdale homes built in the late 1970s and early 1980s frequently have Federal Pioneer Stab-Lok panels. These panels have a documented history of breakers failing to trip during overcurrent events. Insurance providers flag them during home sales and policy renewals. Proactive replacement before a fire or failed inspection is the right move.
EV Charger Demand in Dense Condo Towers
North York's Yonge and Sheppard condo corridors have thousands of units where residents want Level 2 EV chargers. Running a dedicated circuit from the electrical room to an underground parking spot requires condo board coordination, capacity assessment, and often a load management system. This is specialized work that most electricians do not handle regularly.
Deferred Maintenance in Jane-Finch Rental Housing
The rental towers and low-rise apartment buildings in the Jane-Finch corridor have some of the oldest electrical infrastructure in North York. Deferred maintenance over decades means wiring that has exceeded its design life, outdated panels, and unpermitted alterations. Landlords face insurance requirements and city standards that require licensed electrical work and proper documentation.
100-Amp Panels Overwhelmed by Modern Loads
A 100-amp panel installed in a 1960 North York bungalow was sized for a family running a few lights, a refrigerator, and a stove. Today's household runs central air conditioning, a dishwasher, multiple computers, a washer and dryer, and potentially an EV charger. The math does not work. Upgrading to 200 amps is not optional - it is a safety requirement.
Aging Knob-and-Tube in Pre-War Pockets
A small number of North York properties - particularly in the older parts of Lawrence Park and along Yonge Street near Lawrence Avenue - retain knob-and-tube wiring from the pre-war era. Insurance companies refuse to cover these homes without a full rewire and panel upgrade. We remove all active knob-and-tube and rewire with modern NMD90 copper.
FAQ
Pot Lights in North York - Common Questions
NEARBY CITIES
Pot Lights in Nearby GTA Cities
We serve North York and the surrounding area. Same ESA-licensed team, same quality.
MORE SERVICES IN NORTH YORK
Other Electrical Services We Offer in North York
Electrical emergencies in North York - sparking panels, burning smells, complete outages - get 24/7 response. We serve Don Mills, Willowdale, Bathurst Manor, and Jane-Finch. 55-minute average response, licensed ESA work, same-visit repairs in most cases.
North York's bungalow belt from Bathurst Manor to Don Mills has the highest concentration of aging 100-amp panels in the city. We upgrade to 200-amp with full ESA permitting, typically completing the job in one day. Federal Pioneer replacement in Willowdale is also a regular service. We coordinate Toronto Hydro disconnects for meter-base upgrades.
Aluminum wiring in Don Mills and Bathurst Manor homes is the top electrical safety concern in North York. We inspect every connection point - outlets, switches, junction boxes - and install approved AlumiConn connectors or complete a full copper rewire for homes where the condition warrants it. This work satisfies insurer requirements and prevents fires.
North York's mix of single-family homes and condo towers creates two distinct EV charger installation scenarios. For bungalows, a straightforward 50-amp circuit to the garage. For condo units on the Yonge or Sheppard corridors, a more complex installation involving the electrical room, load management, and condo board coordination. We handle both.
From a broken outlet in a Flemingdon Park apartment to a full kitchen renovation in a Bayview Village detached, we handle the full range of residential electrical work across North York. Same-day service available for most calls.
READY TO BOOK?
Pot Lights in North York - Booked Fast
$49 on-site assessment credited toward your project. ESA-licensed, fully insured. Same-day service available.