Outdoor & Landscape Lighting in Ben Bolt, TX
Hot semi-arid South Texas climate.
For outdoor & landscape lighting, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Ben Bolt.
Common reasons to call
- A yard, driveway, or walkway that feels too dark and unsafe to move around at night
- Wanting to show off a home's front, trees, palms, or a garden after dark
- Lights that stopped working after a storm, flooding, or years of salt air near the coast
- Adding security lighting around doors, gates, garages, or a business parking area
- Fixtures that look rusted, cloudy, or dim and need to be swapped out
- Getting a timer, photocell, or phone app set up so lights turn on and off on their own
- Lighting a patio, pool deck, outdoor kitchen, or deck for evening use
- A business wanting its sign, entrance, and lot lit so customers feel safe and can find the door
Typical work
- Installing new low-voltage landscape lights along paths, beds, and driveways
- Uplighting trees, palms, and the front of a house or building
- Setting up a transformer, timer, or photocell so lights run on a schedule
- Replacing burned-out bulbs and swapping old fixtures for LED
- Tracking down and fixing a broken wire, bad connection, or corroded fitting
- Cleaning, re-aiming, and tuning up an existing lighting system
- Adding deck, step, patio, and outdoor-kitchen lighting
- Wiring security or floodlights around doors, gates, and parking areas
Typical turnaround
Small repairs and bulb or fixture swaps often happen in a single visit. A standard yard install is usually one day. A large multi-zone design may take a few days depending on wiring runs and property size.
Materials and equipment
- Low-voltage LED path, well, and spot fixtures
- Low-voltage transformer (power pack)
- Direct-burial landscape wire and waterproof connectors
- Timers, photocells, and smart or app-based controllers
- Brass, copper, aluminum, or composite fixtures rated for wet coastal conditions
- Stainless or corrosion-resistant hardware and mounting stakes
- LED flood and security fixtures with motion sensors
- Junction boxes and weatherproof covers for any line-voltage connections
Job sizes
Minor
A quick visit to replace a few bulbs, swap one or two fixtures, reset a timer, or re-aim lights that drifted out of place.
Standard
A typical yard or entrance package: several path and spot lights, a transformer, and a timer or photocell set up and tuned across a front yard or business entrance.
Major
A full-property or multi-zone design lighting the front, back, trees, patio, pool deck, and driveway, with wiring runs, multiple transformers, and smart controls.
Replacement
Tearing out and rebuilding an old or storm-damaged system: new corrosion-rated fixtures, fresh wire, a new transformer, and updated controls across the whole property.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro walks the property with you after dark to see the real problem spots before quoting anything.
- ✓Quality installs use waterproof connectors and direct-burial wire so joints hold up in rain, sprinklers, and coastal moisture.
- ✓Brass, copper, and stainless hardware resist the salt-air corrosion that eats cheaper fixtures near the coast.
- ✓Careful pros hide wiring in beds and along edges and bury runs at a safe depth so mowers and shovels do not cut them.
- ✓For any line-voltage wiring, an honest pro brings in a licensed electrician instead of doing it off the books.
- ✓Aiming and shielding fixtures to reduce glare into windows, neighbors' yards, and drivers' eyes is part of a thoughtful install.
- ✓A good system is set up on a timer or photocell so it runs on its own without you flipping switches.
- ✓Pros usually offer to return and fine-tune the aim once new plants fill in, since a yard keeps growing after install.
Many lighting pros carry general liability insurance, manufacturer or LED product training, and voluntary landscape-lighting certifications; for any line-voltage work, look for a TDLR-licensed electrician on the job.
Common questions
What is the difference between low-voltage and line-voltage outdoor lighting?
Low-voltage landscape lighting runs on 12 volts through a small transformer, so it is safer to work around and easier to move or adjust. Line-voltage lighting runs on the same 120 volts as your house outlets and needs a licensed electrician for any new wiring. Most path, tree, and garden lighting is low-voltage.
Do I need an electrician for landscape lighting?
For most low-voltage work you do not. If the job needs a brand-new circuit, hardwired line-voltage fixtures, or a new power feed for the transformer, a licensed electrician should handle that part, and your city may want a permit. A good pro will tell you up front which parts, if any, need an electrician.
Why do outdoor lights fail faster near the coast?
Salt air near the Coastal Bend speeds up rust and corrosion on metal fixtures, screws, and wire connections. Moisture also works into cheap connectors. This is why brass, copper, stainless hardware, and sealed waterproof connectors tend to hold up better here than budget aluminum or plastic parts.
LED or halogen for outdoor lighting?
Most people choose LED now. LED bulbs use far less power, run cooler, and last much longer, which matters when a fixture is buried in a bed or up in a tree. Older halogen systems can usually be switched over to LED without replacing all the wiring.
How are the lights turned on and off?
Common options are a timer, a photocell that senses dusk and dawn, or a smart controller you run from a phone app. Many systems combine them, like a photocell to turn on at dark and a timer to shut off late at night. A pro can set the schedule so you never think about it.
Can outdoor lighting really help with security?
Good lighting removes dark hiding spots around doors, gates, garages, and parking areas, and it helps you and your neighbors see what is going on. Motion-sensor floods add a burst of light when something moves. It is one layer of security, not a full alarm system, but a well-lit property is easier to keep an eye on.
What should I ask a lighting pro before they start?
Ask what fixture material and warranty they use, whether the parts are rated for wet coastal conditions, if any part of the job needs a licensed electrician, how the lights will be controlled, and whether they will come back to adjust the aim after everything is planted and grown in.
How long do outdoor lighting systems last?
It depends on the parts and the environment. Quality brass or copper fixtures with LED bulbs and sealed connectors can last many years, even in salt air. Cheaper fixtures and connectors may only last a season or two. Bulbs, wire, and transformers can all be replaced piece by piece as they wear out.