Outdoor Landscape Lighting Services in South Carolina

Outdoor landscape lighting transforms residential and commercial properties across South Carolina by extending usable outdoor hours, reinforcing architectural features, and improving perimeter security. This page covers the primary lighting system types, installation mechanics, applicable code frameworks in South Carolina, and the decision criteria that separate DIY-appropriate projects from those requiring licensed electrical work. Understanding these distinctions helps property owners coordinate effectively with contractors and avoid code violations that carry real financial consequences.

Definition and scope

Outdoor landscape lighting refers to any fixed or semi-permanent electrical or solar-powered luminaire system installed on a property's exterior to illuminate pathways, plant beds, trees, water features, facades, or perimeter zones. The category spans low-voltage systems operating at 12 volts DC, line-voltage systems at 120 volts AC, and solar standalone units that require no grid connection.

In South Carolina, electrical installations are regulated under the South Carolina Building Codes Council, which adopts versions of the National Electrical Code (NEC) (NFPA 70) as the controlling standard. The current edition is the 2023 NEC, effective January 1, 2023; jurisdictions in South Carolina should be verified with the local AHJ for the adopted cycle. Line-voltage landscape lighting — anything operating at 120V or above — requires permits and must be installed by a licensed electrical contractor in South Carolina under S.C. Code Ann. § 40-11. Low-voltage systems below 30 volts occupy a different regulatory band; the NEC classifies them as Class 2 circuits, which carry relaxed wiring method requirements but are not fully exempt from inspection in all municipalities.

Scope of this page: Coverage applies to landscape lighting projects located within South Carolina's 46 counties. Regulations cited reflect South Carolina state law and the NEC as locally adopted. This page does not address interior lighting, temporary event lighting governed by separate permitting tracks, or federally managed properties such as national parks and military installations where different authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) rules apply. Projects in North Carolina, Georgia, or other adjacent states are outside this page's scope.

How it works

A functional landscape lighting system consists of four primary components: a power source, a transformer or driver, the wire distribution network, and the luminaires themselves.

Low-voltage systems (12V DC)
1. A plug-in or hardwired transformer converts 120V household current to 12V output.
2. Multi-conductor 12/2 or 14/2 landscape wire runs from the transformer through the planting beds.
3. Fixtures tap into the wire using quick-connect or twist-on connectors.
4. A photocell or timer built into the transformer controls on/off cycles automatically.

Line-voltage systems (120V AC)
1. A licensed electrician runs GFCI-protected underground feeder cable (Type UF-B) to outdoor junction points at a minimum burial depth of 12 inches under rigid conduit or 24 inches for direct burial, per NEC Article 300.5 (2023 edition).
2. Weatherproof junction boxes provide connection points.
3. Luminaires rated for wet or damp locations (UL 1598 or equivalent) connect at those boxes.
4. All outdoor receptacles and fixtures on 120V circuits require GFCI protection under NEC 210.8(A).

Solar standalone units eliminate grid dependency entirely. A photovoltaic cell charges an integrated lithium or NiMH battery pack during daylight; an automatic dusk sensor triggers discharge at night. Lumen output typically ranges from 10 to 80 lumens per fixture — substantially below hardwired alternatives, which commonly deliver 200 to 800 lumens per fixture depending on application.

The contrast between low-voltage hardwired and solar systems is practically significant: low-voltage hardwired systems deliver consistent illumination regardless of cloud cover and can be precisely aimed and dimmed, while solar units cost less to install but are subject to output degradation in South Carolina's intermittently overcast coastal and Piedmont weather patterns. For properties where reliability matters — security lighting, commercial entrances detailed in South Carolina commercial landscaping services — hardwired systems are the standard specification.

Common scenarios

South Carolina landscapes share characteristics that drive specific lighting applications:

Decision boundaries

The central decision in any landscape lighting project is determining which tier of installation authority applies.

Scenario Voltage Permit Required Licensed Electrician Required
Solar stake lights N/A No No
Low-voltage (12V) transformer + wire 12V DC Generally no No (SC homeowner exception)
Low-voltage with new 120V outlet 120V supply circuit Yes Yes
Line-voltage in-ground fixtures 120V AC Yes Yes
Pool/fountain submersible lighting 120V AC Yes Yes (pool specialty license)

Beyond the electrical question, lighting design intersects with South Carolina landscape design principles around light layering — ambient, accent, and task categories — and with South Carolina sustainable landscaping practices around energy efficiency. LED sources now represent the dominant technology in new installations; a standard 4-watt landscape LED produces equivalent output to a 20-watt halogen MR16 while reducing energy draw by 80 percent (U.S. Department of Energy, Solid-State Lighting).

Contractor selection for permitted work should include verification of active licensure through the South Carolina Contractor's Licensing Board and confirmation that the contractor holds either a General or Specialty Electrical license. The broader framework for evaluating landscaping contractors in the state is detailed at South Carolina landscaping contractor selection. Property owners beginning a landscaping project that includes lighting should also consult the conceptual overview of South Carolina landscaping services and the main South Carolina lawn care authority index to understand how lighting fits within integrated project planning.

References

📜 3 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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