DLC V5.1 vs. V6.0 in 2026 — What the Standard Changes Mean for Your North American Commercial Lighting Rebate

Key Takeaways

  • DLC V6.0 raised Premium efficacy thresholds 16–21% above V5.1 — indoor linear jumped from 125 to 150 lm/W, high bay from 130 to 155 lm/W, and panel light from 120 to 145 lm/W.
  • V5.1 products lost rebate eligibility at end of 2024 — existing stock could be sold through June 2025, but by 2026 all V5.1-listed fixtures are effectively delisted from the QPL and no longer rebate-eligible.
  • Per-unit rebates held steady or increased slightly under V6.0 for qualifying products — NYSERDA, ComEd, and BC Hydro all raised their per-fixture incentives despite fewer products qualifying.
  • Re-certification costs $7,500–$15,000 and 8–12 weeks for existing V5.1 products that need chip upgrades and re-testing — a fraction of the cost of developing new V6.0 products from scratch.

I had a client call me last year, panicked. They'd shipped 2,000 LED troffers to a distributor in New York. The distributor called back: "These aren't on the DLC list anymore. We can't get the rebate for our customer." The client had certified their product under DLC V5.1 in 2020. Perfectly good fixture. 130 lm/W. But the DLC transitioned to V6.0, and their fixture went from "Premium qualified" to "unqualified" overnight.

If Your Fixture Was Certified Before 2024, You May Have a Problem

The scenario above isn't rare. DLC V6.0 raises the efficacy bar significantly. V5.1 Premium required 130 lm/W. V6.0 Premium requires 155 lm/W. For a typical LED troffer, that means you go from "any decent Samsung/Nichia chip will pass" to "you need top-bin chips + a high-efficiency driver." This guide breaks down exactly what changed, what it means for your rebate dollars, and how to get your products back on the QPL.

What DLC V6.0 Actually Changed

Change 1: Efficacy Thresholds

The single largest change from DLC V5.1 to V6.0 is the across-the-board increase in luminous efficacy requirements. Every major product category saw a double-digit percentage increase:

Category V5.1 Premium V6.0 Premium Gap
Indoor linear (e.g., troffers) 125 lm/W 150 lm/W +20%
High bay 130 lm/W 155 lm/W +19%
Panel light 120 lm/W 145 lm/W +21%
Outdoor area/roadway 125 lm/W 145 lm/W +16%

The jump is steepest for panel lights (+21%) and troffers (+20%). These are also the categories with the highest sales volumes in North America, which means tens of thousands of V5.1-certified products became ineligible overnight when V6.0 took effect.

Change 2: Color Quality Requirements

DLC V6.0 also tightened color quality standards significantly. Where V5.1 accepted basic CRI ≥ 80 with no R9 requirement, V6.0 demands higher fidelity across the board:

These color quality requirements add cost because achieving Ra ≥ 90 with meaningful R9 values typically requires premium phosphor formulations — the same LED chips that deliver 150+ lm/W at Ra 80 may drop to 130–135 lm/W at Ra 90. Manufacturers must optimize for both efficacy and color simultaneously.

Change 3: Networked Lighting Controls (NLC)

V6.0 introduces formal requirements for networked lighting controls that were entirely absent from V5.1. Products seeking V6.0 certification must now demonstrate:

This is a meaningful shift: lighting control is no longer an add-on — it's baked into the certification. For manufacturers who previously sold basic on/off fixtures, this adds component cost and engineering complexity that cannot be avoided in the V6.0 era.

Rebate Impact — Real Dollars

Despite the tighter thresholds, utility rebate programs have not abandoned DLC. In fact, per-unit rebates have held steady or increased slightly under V6.0, because utilities recognize the higher efficiency and control capabilities of V6.0-certified products. Here's what real programs are paying in 2026:

Utility V5.1 Rebate (2023) V6.0 Rebate (2026) Change
NYSERDA (New York) $25/2x4 troffer $30/2x4 troffer +$5
SoCal Edison $20/troffer $15/troffer -$5
ComEd (Chicago) $18/troffer $22/troffer +$4
BC Hydro (Canada) CAD $22/troffer CAD $25/troffer +$3

The trend is clear: fewer products qualify, but per-unit rebates hold steady or increase slightly. The strategic imperative for manufacturers is unambiguous — get V6.0 certified or lose access to rebate-driven sales entirely. For buyers and specifiers, verify every product against the live QPL at designlights.org before writing a purchase order.

How to Get V6.0 Certified

For New Products

Designing a product to meet V6.0 from scratch gives you the most control. The component stack that reliably clears V6.0 Premium thresholds:

For Existing V5.1 Products

If you have a V5.1-certified product that just misses V6.0 thresholds, a targeted upgrade can restore eligibility without a full redesign:

  1. Swap the LED chip to a newer generation. Moving from a 2020-vintage mid-power LED (e.g., Samsung LM301B) to a 2024-generation chip (LM301H EVO or Lumileds 5050HE) typically gains 8–12 lm/W at system level — enough to bridge the 15–20 lm/W gap in most categories.
  2. Increase drive current slightly. Many V5.1 products were driven conservatively. A 5–10% increase in drive current can push efficacy into V6.0 territory if the thermal design has headroom.
  3. Swap the driver if needed. If the existing driver is below 88% efficiency, upgrading to a ≥92% unit can recover 3–5 system lm/W — often the difference between passing and failing.
  4. Submit for LM-79 re-testing. Budget 8–12 weeks and $7,500–$15,000 total for chip swap, driver upgrade, and testing. The investment is modest compared to developing a new product from scratch ($40,000–$80,000).
Important: Products certified under V5.1 that have not been re-tested for V6.0 are no longer listed on the DLC QPL. They cannot be marketed as DLC Listed, and any rebate application referencing an expired V5.1 listing will be rejected. Check your entire product catalog against the current QPL at designlights.org.

Common Objections — Answered

My V5.1 product still works fine — can I keep selling it?

You can sell it, but it won't be eligible for rebates. Most specifiers write "DLC Premium listed" into their RFP as a mandatory requirement. Distributors actively verify QPL listings before accepting stock for rebate-eligible projects. If your product isn't on the V6.0 QPL, you'll be locked out of the North American commercial lighting market's highest-volume sales channel. Existing V5.1 products could be sold through June 2025 — that window has closed.

Does V6.0 apply to residential lighting?

No — DLC is commercial and industrial only. Residential lighting falls under ENERGY STAR. If you manufacture screw-base LED bulbs, residential downlights, or consumer-grade fixtures, DLC V6.0 does not apply to you. However, if you sell any product into commercial channels — offices, warehouses, retail, schools, hospitals — DLC certification is effectively mandatory for rebate eligibility.

What's the effective deadline for V6.0 compliance?

The phased timeline was: January 2024 — V6.0 mandatory for all new product listings. June 2025 — final sell-through date for existing V5.1 inventory. 2026 and beyond — only V6.0-listed products appear on the QPL. By 2026, distributors should have already warned you about rejections. If you haven't re-certified or developed new V6.0 products, you are already missing rebate-driven sales.

How much more does a V6.0 Premium fixture cost to manufacture vs V5.1?

The bill-of-materials (BOM) increase varies by category. For a typical 2x4 troffer: upgrading from a mid-tier LED chip to Samsung LM301H EVO adds ~$3–5 per fixture. Upgrading the driver from 88% to 92% efficiency adds ~$4–7. Higher-CRI phosphor formulations add ~$1–2. NLC-capable control gear adds ~$5–10 for basic DALI interface. Total BOM increase: $13–24 per fixture, or roughly 8–15% on a $150–200 BOM. Given that rebates often increase by $3–5 per fixture and energy savings deliver ongoing operational savings, the manufacturing premium is typically recovered in year one.

What happens if I don't re-certify — are there alternative markets?

You have options, but they're smaller. Non-North American markets (Southeast Asia, Middle East, Africa, Latin America) generally do not require DLC certification, though some projects reference it. The trade-off: these markets are more price-sensitive and competitive, with lower average selling prices. For manufacturers who built their business around DLC-rebate-eligible sales in the US and Canada, re-certification under V6.0 is almost always the higher-ROI path compared to pivoting to non-rebate markets.

Need DLC V6.0-certified LED fixtures for your next commercial project?

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