Information for Retailers of Lighting Products
CFLs and LEDs are available in warm white.
Information for Retailers of Lighting Products
U.S. retailers who sell lighting products can use the information below to help their customers better understand energy-efficient lighting choices. New information will be added as it becomes available.
U.S. retailers are welcome to use parts of these materials in their retail displays. In those cases, please do so without the Department of Energy's name, since we will not be approving your version. If you would prefer a different version that fits your requirements for size or layout better, and you'd like to keep the Department's name, you are welcome to submit that revised layout for approval. Native artwork files can be made available upon request. Please also see Information for Media for additional imagery available to retailers, utilities, and others.
Placard
This placard shows how the U.S. Department of Energy is helping consumers to understand lumens, and the shift to lumens from traditional incandescent watts as the common measure of light bulb "brightness."
Lumens: the new way to shop for light (black)
Download high-resolution image: PDF 1.2 MB | EPS 2.7 MB
Lumens: the new way to shop for light (green)
Download high-resolution image: PDF 1.2 MB | EPS 5.3 MB
Presentation
This presentation provides helpful background information on the new legislation and the types of energy-efficient lighting available today.
Consumer Light Bulb Changes: Briefing and Resources for Media and Retailers
Images
All of these light bulbs—CFLs, LEDs, and energy-saving incandescents—meet the new energy standards that take effect from 2012–2014.
Download low-resolution image: JPG 860 KB
Download high-resolution image: JPG 840 KB | EPS 188 KB
All of these light bulbs—CFLs, LEDs, and energy-saving incandescents—meet the new energy standards that take effect from 2012–2014.
Download low-resolution image: JPG 1.1 MB
Download high-resolution image: JPG 1 MB | EPS 216 KB
All of these light bulbs—CFLs, LEDs, and energy-saving incandescents—meet the new energy standards that take effect from 2012–2014.
Download low-resolution image: JPG 72 KB
Download high-resolution image: PDF 3.1 MB | TIF 279 MB
Information on the new Lighting Facts label is available on the Federal Trade Commission website.
Learn More
- Learn about lighting choices to save you money
- Learn about the new lighting standards and how they affect you
- Find out how to shop for energy-efficient lighting
- Get answers to frequently asked questions
- Find information for media.