At a Glance: The Core Difference
LED (Light Emitting Diode) is solid-state lighting converting 40-60% of electricity into light. Modern LEDs achieve 120-200+ lm/W, 50,000+ hour lifespans, and CRI up to 98. Available in 2700K-6500K, dimmable with compatible drivers, and mercury-free. The dominant technology for new installations worldwide.
Halogen is incandescent technology with a tungsten filament in halogen gas. Efficacy is only 10-20 lm/W — 90% of energy becomes heat. Lifespan: 2,000-4,000 hours. CRI is a perfect 100 with 2700-3000K warm light. Banned in EU (2018) and US (2023) for general-purpose bulbs. Still used in specialty applications (ovens, automotive, stage lighting).
Key Differences Table
| Parameter |
3000K Warm White |
4000K Neutral White |
Winner |
| Efficacy | 120-200 lm/W | 10-20 lm/W | LED (8-15× better) |
| Lifespan | 50,000-70,000 hrs | 2,000-4,000 hrs | LED (15-25× longer) |
| CRI | 80-98 (Ra) | 100 (perfect) | Halogen (narrow margin) |
| CCT Options | 2700K-6500K | 2700-3000K only | LED (much wider) |
| Heat Output | Minimal (5-10W per 800 lm) | Very high (45W per 800 lm) | LED |
| Dimming | Smooth with compatible driver | Native smooth dimming | Tie (LED needs match) |
| Annual Energy (800 lm, 8h/day) | $3-5 | $35-45 | LED (~90% savings) |
| Environmental | No mercury, 1× waste | No mercury, 10× waste | LED |
| Regulatory Status | Compliant worldwide | Banned EU 2018, US 2023 | LED |
Pros & Cons
✅ LED — Pros
- 85-90% energy savings vs halogen — pays back in 6-12 months
- 50,000+ hour lifespan — install once, forget for 15-25 years
- Wide CCT range (2700K-6500K) for any application
- Minimal heat reduces AC load — significant in commercial spaces
- No UV/IR emission — safe for artwork, fabrics, and food display
- Dimmable with proper driver selection
❌ LED — Cons
- CRI 95+ LED costs more than basic CRI 80
- Requires compatible dimmer (not all legacy dimmers work with LED)
- Higher upfront cost per bulb ($3-15 vs $1-5)
- Some cheap LEDs flicker or have poor power factor
✅ Halogen — Pros
- Perfect CRI 100 — best possible color rendering
- Native smooth dimming with any standard dimmer
- Lowest upfront cost — $1-5 per bulb
- Instant full brightness, no warm-up period
- Warm, familiar 2700-3000K light quality
❌ Halogen — Cons
- 90% energy wasted as heat — extremely inefficient
- 2,000-4,000 hour lifespan — frequent replacement needed
- Banned for general-purpose in EU and US
- Only 2700-3000K — no neutral/cool white option
- High heat increases AC costs and fire risk
- 10× more bulbs in landfill over equivalent LED lifespan
Room-by-Room Recommendation
LED
🏢 Commercial & Industrial
99% of cases. Energy savings pay back in 6-12 months. The only rational choice.
LED
🏠 Residential General
Best for most home lighting. High-CRI 2700-3000K LEDs match halogen warmth perfectly.
Either
🎨 Art Galleries (Budget)
Halogen CRI 100 is the gold standard but LED CRI 95+ is now close enough for most.
Halogen
🔥 High-Heat (Ovens)
Halogen survives extreme heat. LED electronics fail above 50-60°C ambient temperature.
LED
🛍️ Retail Display
No UV/IR means no fading. Lower heat means lower AC costs. Win-win for retailers.
🎯 Final Verdict: LED Wins in 95% of Applications
For all new installations and retrofits in 2026, LED is the clear choice. The only remaining halogen advantages — perfect CRI 100 and native dimming — are niche requirements that LED is rapidly closing on (CRI 98+ now available). Halogen's 90% energy waste, short life, and regulatory phase-out make it economically and environmentally obsolete for general lighting.
Exceptions where halogen still makes sense: (1) High-heat environments (oven lights, kilns) where LED electronics cannot survive, (2) applications where CRI 100 is non-negotiable and LED 98+ is insufficient (rare, typically specialized color-critical work), (3) legacy fixtures where LED retrofit is mechanically impossible and fixture replacement is cost-prohibitive.
ROI Summary: A single 50W halogen replaced by a 7W LED saves ~$155 over its lifetime (energy + replacement bulbs). For a hotel with 500 bulbs, that's $77,500 in savings. The upfront cost premium for LED is recovered in 6-12 months of operation.
📋 Final Recommendation
For 80% of B2B importers, the answer depends on the end user: If your customers are hotel chains, restaurants, or residential developers — specify 3000K CRI 90+. If they're office fit-out contractors, retail chains, or healthcare facilities — specify 4000K CRI 80+ (90+ for premium). For mixed-use developments, offer both CCT options in your product line — or recommend tunable white for adaptable spaces. When in doubt, 4000K is the safer default for commercial projects — it satisfies the broadest range of lighting standards (EN 12464-1, ASHRAE 90.1, Title 24).
Frequently Asked Questions
Is LED really 90% more efficient than halogen?
Yes. A 50W halogen producing ~700 lumens (14 lm/W) is replaced by a 5-7W LED producing the same 700 lumens (100-140 lm/W) — that's 85-90% less electricity. Over 20,000 hours: halogen costs ~$120 in electricity + ~$50 in 10 replacement bulbs = $170 total; LED costs ~$15 in electricity + $5-15 for the bulb = $20-30 total. Lifetime savings: ~$140-150 per fixture.
How close is LED CRI to halogen's perfect CRI 100?
Premium LED now achieves CRI 95-98 — visually nearly indistinguishable from halogen CRI 100 for most people. The gap is in deep reds (R9): halogen achieves R9 95-100 naturally; premium LED achieves R9 80-95. For critical color applications, specify LED with CRI ≥ 95 and R9 ≥ 90. For 99% of applications, CRI 90+ LED is excellent.
Can I directly replace halogen bulbs with LED without changing anything?
Mostly yes. LED retrofit bulbs exist for virtually all halogen bases (GU10, MR16, G4, G9, R7s). Key checks: (1) MR16 12V halogens may need LED-compatible transformers (magnetic transformers often cause flicker), (2) dimmable halogen circuits need LED-compatible dimmers AND dimmable LED bulbs — the dimmer is usually the problem, not the bulb, (3) enclosed fixtures need LED bulbs rated for enclosed use.
Why was halogen banned?
Halogen converts only 10% of electricity to light — 90% is heat. The EU banned most halogen bulbs in 2018 (Ecodesign Directive); the US DOE efficiency standards effectively banned them in 2023. Special-purpose halogens (oven lamps, automotive, theatrical/stage) remain available. The bans are part of the global transition to LED, which uses 85-90% less energy.
What should I do with existing halogen installations?
Plan a phased LED retrofit: (1) Start with the most-used fixtures (8+ hours/day) — these have the fastest payback, (2) replace bulbs as they burn out with LED equivalents — no need to throw away working halogens, (3) for dimmable circuits, upgrade dimmer switches first, then LED bulbs, (4) budget for the entire conversion over 12-24 months. The energy savings from the first batch of conversions will help fund the remaining ones.
🔍 Compare CCT-Optimized LED Products
Filter by color temperature, CRI, application, and certifications to find the right fixture for your project.