Pool lighting has undergone a complete transformation in the past decade. The incandescent pool light that burned out every couple of years and cost $100+ to replace has been replaced by LED systems that last 10–17 years, consume 75% less electricity, and produce full-color shows controllable from a smartphone. For pool service professionals, LED lighting is a recurring upsell opportunity and a service conversation that clients genuinely appreciate.
The energy savings alone make the upgrade financially rational over a 10-year horizon. A standard 500W incandescent pool light running 5 hours per night costs roughly $110/year in electricity. An equivalent LED replacement running the same hours costs $25–$35/year. The payback period on the LED upgrade is typically 3–5 years, after which the savings continue for a decade or more.
Beyond energy: a pool light that never needs bulb replacement is a meaningful quality-of-life improvement for both the homeowner and their service technician. No more emergency service calls to replace a burned-out bulb before a party.
| System | Colors | Wattage | Price (per fixture) | Automation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pentair IntelliBrite 5G | 5 + light shows | 40W | $350–$500 | IntelliTouch, EasyTouch |
| Hayward ColorLogic 4.0 | 7 + light shows | 40W | $300–$450 | OmniLogic, AquaConnect |
| Jandy WaterColors LED | 10 + light shows | 40W | $350–$500 | iAquaLink |
| Govee Submersible (above-ground) | Full RGB | 10W | $25–$60 | App only (Bluetooth) |
| Emaux LED Spotlight | Single color or RGB | 30W | $150–$250 | Switch or basic remote |
The IntelliBrite 5G is the standard LED system for Pentair automation ecosystems. It integrates seamlessly with IntelliTouch and EasyTouch controllers and offers 5 fixed colors plus several light shows. At 40W, it's equivalent in light output to a 500W incandescent. The niche-compatible design installs in existing light niches without modification in most pools. At $350–$500 for the fixture (before installation), it's the premium recommendation for existing Pentair customers.
ColorLogic 4.0 offers 7 fixed colors and multiple light show programs. Hayward has improved the control interface significantly — the modes cycle via the light switch (power on/off sequences) for non-automated installations, and integrate with OmniLogic for full app control. Installation cost varies by local electrician rates. At $300–$450, it's the standard recommendation for Hayward automation users.
For above-ground pool lighting, Govee's magnetic submersible LEDs offer full RGB color and app control at $25–$60 per unit. These are not UL-listed for in-ground pool niches and shouldn't be used in wired fixtures, but for above-ground pools where the lighting is supplemental and non-hardwired, they're a genuinely good product. Clients can buy multiple units and control them from the Govee app.
Always verify that replacement LED fixtures are rated for the specific pool application. Only install UL-listed underwater pool luminaires in hardwired light niches. Never place non-rated consumer submersible lights in a fixture niche connected to line voltage. Pool lighting is a shock hazard if installed incorrectly.
Fiber optic pool lighting was popular in the 1990s–2010s for its safety (illuminator is remote from water) and ability to create starfield effects. The illuminator boxes are the failure point — they burn out and are expensive to replace. In 2026, color LED technology has largely superseded fiber optic for new installations. Existing fiber optic systems that are functioning can continue to operate, but when they fail, replacing with LED is the practical recommendation.
Incandescent pool lights fail on a 2–3 year cycle. Every time you respond to a "light is out" service call, you have the opportunity to present the LED upgrade. The math is simple to show: $400 LED fixture installed vs $150 bulb now plus another $150 in 2–3 years plus another in 5 years = roughly break-even over 5–6 years, with ongoing energy savings beyond that. Frame it as an upgrade that saves money and eliminates the inconvenience of outages.
Track each pool's lighting type, last bulb replacement, and equipment status in SplashLens. Know which accounts are candidates for LED upgrades before you arrive. Free for pool service professionals.
Open SplashLens Free →Replacing a standard incandescent pool light with an LED retrofit costs $150–$350 for the LED module alone. A full LED fixture replacement (fixture + installation) runs $400–$800 per light. Premium color LED systems (Pentair IntelliBrite, Hayward ColorLogic) cost $700–$1,200+ installed per fixture.
LED pool lights are rated for 30,000–50,000 hours of operation compared to 1,000–4,000 hours for incandescent bulbs. In practical terms, an LED pool light running 8 hours per day should last 10–17 years before the LED array requires replacement.
LED retrofit bulbs in existing housings can sometimes be replaced without draining the pool or opening the housing, depending on the fixture design. Full fixture replacement requires draining the niche, disconnecting power, and should be done by a licensed electrician. Always turn off power at the breaker before touching any pool light.
Single-color LED lights (typically white or blue) produce one fixed color and are less expensive ($300–$500 installed). Color LED lights produce multiple colors and light shows, controlled by remote, phone app, or automation system. Color systems cost more ($700–$1,200+) but are the standard for new installations in 2026.
Hayward ColorLogic works with OmniLogic and AquaConnect systems. Pentair IntelliBrite integrates with IntelliTouch and EasyTouch. Jandy WaterColors works with iAquaLink. Cross-brand compatibility is limited — match your lighting brand to your existing automation system for full feature integration.