Billboards generate revenue only when people can see them. After dark, an unlit billboard is invisible inventory — you are paying for the structure, the land lease, and the ad space, but delivering zero impressions from sunset to sunrise. Grid-connected billboard lights solve this, but grid extension to a remote highway billboard can cost more than the sign itself.
We manufacture solar flood lights that are now installed on billboards in 30+ countries. This guide shares the engineering knowledge our team has accumulated: which fixtures match which billboard sizes, how to aim them, how to program the timer, and when solar makes financial sense over grid power.Why Billboards Are a Natural Fit for Solar Lighting
Most billboards share three characteristics that make solar lighting the logical choice:
Remote locations with no nearby grid. Highway billboards, rural route signs, and roadside unipoles are sited for driver visibility, not electrical convenience. The nearest power line may be hundreds of meters away. Trenching electrical cable across that distance costs $5-15 per meter — before you buy a single fixture. Predictable lighting schedules. Billboards do not need light 24 hours a day. Most municipal codes require illumination from sunset to midnight, or sunset to 2 AM. This 4-8 hour window aligns perfectly with what a properly sized solar battery delivers at full brightness. Unobstructed sky exposure. The same open sightlines that make a billboard visible to drivers also give solar panels unobstructed sun access. No trees, no buildings, no shading problems. This is the ideal solar harvesting environment. Zero ongoing electricity cost. A single grid-connected billboard light running 6 hours nightly consumes 50-150 kWh per month. At commercial electricity rates, that is $10-30 monthly per sign — a cost that never stops. Solar eliminates it permanently.
Billboard Types and Their Lighting Requirements
Not every billboard demands the same approach. The structural type determines mounting options, fixture count, and required illumination level.
Small Commercial Signs (2x3 m)
Roadside business signs, directional signs, real estate billboards. These are typically ground-level or low-mounted. Two compact solar flood lights with ground stakes provide adequate coverage. The small surface area means moderate lumen output is sufficient.
Medium Format Billboards (4x6 m)
Standard advertising panels along secondary roads. These require 3-4 fixtures mounted on a dedicated pole bracket below the sign face, angled upward at 30-45 degrees. Even illumination across the full 24 sqm surface demands careful fixture spacing.
Large Format Billboards (6x12 m)
Major highway advertising structures. The 72 sqm face area requires high-output fixtures — our split-type models with separate solar panels are essential here. The panel can be positioned for optimal sun exposure independent of the fixture mounting position.
Unipole Billboards (6x18 m)
The largest standard format, mounted on a single steel column along highways. These 108 sqm faces demand the highest output configurations with arm-mounted fixtures positioned above or below the sign. The structural column provides a natural mounting point for both fixtures and solar panels.
Fixture Selection: Matching Solar Flood Lights to Billboard Size
We manufacture two solar flood light series that cover the full range of billboard applications. Here is how our engineering team matches them:
BF-SFL-26 Series (Compact, All-in-One)Integrated solar panel, LiFePO4 battery, and LED module in a single housing. Light and time control via remote. Best for small to medium signs where installation simplicity matters.
- BF-SFL-26-20W: 10W / 1,900 lm
- BF-SFL-26-30W: 13W / 2,470 lm
- BF-SFL-26-40W: 18W / 3,420 lm
- BF-SFL-26-50W: 20W / 3,800 lm
- BF-SFL-26-60W: 25W / 4,750 lm
Separate solar panel connected via cable to the light head. LiFePO4 battery housed in the light unit. The split design allows independent positioning — mount the panel facing south while the light aims at the billboard face. Essential for large billboards where the optimal light position receives poor sun exposure.
- BF-SFL-27-70W: 30W / 5,700 lm
- BF-SFL-27-100W: 60W / 11,400 lm
- BF-SFL-27-150W: 80W / 15,200 lm
All models use 3.2V LiFePO4 batteries and produce 6,000 plus or minus 500K color temperature — a clean daylight white that renders billboard graphics accurately.
Configuration Table: Billboard Size to Fixture Specification
This is the configuration matrix our sales team uses when quoting billboard lighting projects. Lux values are measured at the sign face center under standard conditions.
| Billboard Size | Recommended Fixture | Qty | Mounting Method | Estimated Lux at Face |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small (2x3 m) | BF-SFL-26-40W 18W | 2 | Ground spike | 80-120 lux |
| Medium (4x6 m) | BF-SFL-26-60W 25W | 3-4 | Pole bracket | 60-100 lux |
| Large (6x12 m) | BF-SFL-27-70W 30W | 4-6 | Pole bracket | 50-80 lux |
| Unipole (6x18 m) | BF-SFL-27-100W 60W | 4 | Arm mount | 40-60 lux |
Installation: Angles, Spacing, and Mounting
Proper installation is the difference between a uniformly lit billboard and a sign with hot spots, dark patches, and wasted light spilling into the sky.
Aiming Angle: 30-45 Degrees Downward
For fixtures mounted above the billboard (arm mount on unipoles), aim the light head 30-45 degrees downward toward the sign face. This angle provides maximum surface coverage while minimizing light spillage above the sign.
For fixtures mounted below the billboard (ground or pole bracket), the same 30-45 degree rule applies — but angled upward. Position the fixture 2-4 meters from the base of the sign, depending on billboard height.
Fixture Spacing: Equal Distribution
Space fixtures evenly across the width of the billboard. For a 4-fixture configuration on a 12 m wide sign, position at 1.5 m, 4.5 m, 7.5 m, and 10.5 m from the left edge. This overlap pattern ensures no dark gaps between coverage zones.
Avoiding Light Spillage
Light that misses the billboard is wasted energy and may violate local light pollution ordinances. Three techniques:
- Use the narrowest effective beam angle. A 60-degree beam concentrated on the sign wastes less than a 120-degree flood washing the surrounding landscape.
- Install internal baffles or hoods if operating near residential areas. Simple sheet metal hoods on the fixture sides contain the beam.
- Verify aim at night during commissioning. Adjust fixtures after dark with the billboard visible — daytime aiming is guesswork.
Solar Panel Positioning (Split-Type Models)
For the BF-SFL-27 Series split-type series, mount the solar panel facing true south (northern hemisphere) or true north (southern hemisphere) at a tilt angle equal to your latitude. The panel does not need to be adjacent to the light — the connecting cable allows separation of up to 5 meters. On unipole structures, mount the panel on top of the sign frame where it receives zero shading.
Timer Programming: Maximize Battery Life
Solar billboard lights do not need to run all night. Programming the timer to match actual viewing hours extends battery life and increases system reliability during cloudy periods.
Recommended Timer Strategy
Sunset to midnight: This captures peak traffic hours when billboard impressions have the highest value. After midnight, traffic drops dramatically on most routes. Programming the lights to shut off at midnight (or 1 AM) preserves 40-50% of battery capacity, which serves as a reserve for cloudy days. Sunset to 2 AM: For billboards on 24-hour highways or in entertainment districts where late-night traffic is significant. This uses more battery but still provides a meaningful reserve compared to dusk-to-dawn operation. Dusk to dawn (not recommended for most billboards): Running lights for the full 10-12 hour night cycle drains the battery completely. This leaves zero reserve for consecutive cloudy days and accelerates battery cycle aging. Use this mode only in locations with exceptional solar conditions (desert climates, equatorial regions) where daily recharge is virtually guaranteed.Programming the BF-SFL-26 Series and BF-SFL-27 Series
Both series support light control and time control via remote:
- Light control mode: The light activates at dusk and deactivates at dawn automatically using the built-in photocell. Simple but uses maximum battery.
- Time control mode: Set specific ON hours after sunset (3H, 5H, 8H). For billboard applications, we recommend 5H or 6H — this covers sunset to approximately midnight in most seasons.
The LiFePO4 battery chemistry in both series is rated for 2,000+ charge cycles. Conservative timer programming directly extends the years before battery replacement is needed.

Cost Comparison: Solar vs. Grid for Billboard Lighting
This is where solar billboard lighting makes the strongest case. We will compare two scenarios for illuminating a standard 6x12 m highway billboard.
Scenario 1: Grid Extension
| Cost Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Grid extension (300 m trench at $15/m) | $4,500 |
| Electrical panel and metering | $500-800 |
| AC flood lights (4x 50W) | $80-120 |
| Licensed electrician | $300-500 |
| Monthly electricity (0.24 kWh x 6h x 30d x 4 units) | $12-18/month |
| Year 1 total | $5,524-6,136 |
| 5-Year total (including electricity) | $6,100-7,200 |
Scenario 2: Solar
| Cost Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| BF-SFL-27-70W 30W solar flood lights (6 units) | $1,200-2,400 |
| Mounting hardware | $100-200 |
| Installation labor (no electrician needed) | $100-200 |
| Monthly electricity | $0 |
| Year 1 total | $1,400-2,800 |
| 5-Year total | $1,400-2,800 |
Even when grid power is available nearby, the zero-electricity advantage compounds. A billboard operator with 50 signs saves $7,000-18,000 annually in electricity alone by switching to solar.
When Solar Billboard Lighting Is Not the Right Choice
Honest engineering means acknowledging limitations. Solar is not the optimal choice in every scenario:
Digital billboards: LED screen billboards consuming 500W+ cannot be powered by fixture-mounted solar panels. These require grid power or dedicated ground-mounted solar arrays with battery banks — a different category of installation entirely. Extremely low-sun locations: Sites above 60 degrees latitude with minimal winter daylight may not harvest enough solar energy for reliable winter operation. Supplementary fixtures or grid backup may be necessary during December-January. Heavily shaded sites: Urban billboards surrounded by taller buildings that shade the solar panel for most of the day are poor candidates. The split-type design mitigates this if even a small area above the sign receives direct sun. For these scenarios, our AC vs. solar flood light comparison helps determine the right approach.Design Checklist for Billboard Solar Lighting Projects
Before specifying a system, our engineering team works through this checklist with every customer:
- Billboard dimensions — length, width, and height above ground
- Mounting structure — unipole, V-type, wall-mounted, or ground-level
- Available mounting points — above sign, below sign, or ground level
- Solar access — any shading from structures, trees, or the sign itself
- Local latitude — determines solar panel tilt and daily energy harvest
- Required lighting hours — sunset-to-midnight vs. dusk-to-dawn
- Local regulations — maximum lux, light pollution ordinances, permit requirements
- Billboard face color — dark backgrounds need 20-30% more light
FAQ
How many solar flood lights do I need for a standard highway billboard?
For a standard 6x12 m billboard, our configuration uses 4-6 units of the BF-SFL-27-70W (30W / 5,700 lm) mounted on pole brackets below the sign face. This delivers 50-80 lux at the sign surface, meeting IES recommendations for billboard legibility. Larger 6x18 m unipoles require 4 units of the BF-SFL-27-100W (60W / 11,400 lm) on arm mounts.
Will solar billboard lights work during cloudy or rainy seasons?
Yes, with proper sizing. Our LiFePO4 batteries provide 2-3 days of autonomy at full brightness without any solar charging. Combined with a sunset-to-midnight timer strategy that conserves 40-50% of battery each night, the system reliably operates through 4-5 consecutive cloudy days. In monsoon climates, we recommend stepping up one fixture size to increase battery reserve.
What is the installation angle for billboard flood lights?
Aim fixtures at 30-45 degrees toward the billboard face, whether mounting above (angling down) or below (angling up). This angle maximizes surface coverage while containing the beam within the sign boundaries. Fine-tune the angle at night during commissioning — observe the light pattern on the sign and adjust until coverage is uniform with no dark patches.
How does solar billboard lighting compare to grid-powered lighting in cost?
For remote billboards requiring grid extension beyond 30 meters, solar costs 60-80% less over five years. A typical highway billboard needing 300 m of trenching costs $5,500-6,100 in year one for grid power versus $1,400-2,800 for solar. Solar also eliminates monthly electricity bills of $12-18 per billboard, which compounds significantly across a portfolio of signs.
Can I retrofit existing grid-powered billboards with solar lights?
Yes. Solar flood lights are self-contained and require no electrical infrastructure. Remove the existing AC fixtures, mount the solar units in the same positions, and the billboard is converted. The original electrical connection can remain as a backup. Many billboard operators convert during the natural maintenance cycle when existing AC fixtures reach end of life.
Do solar billboard lights meet local advertising illumination codes?
Our configurations deliver 40-120 lux at the sign face depending on billboard size and fixture count. Most municipal codes require 50+ lux for illuminated advertising signage, and the IES recommends similar levels. We provide lux calculation data for every project quote so you can verify compliance before purchase. For projects with strict code requirements, we recommend on-site lux measurement during commissioning to document compliance.