LED vs Incandescent for Holiday, Permanent and Landscape Lighting: Cost, Color, and Longevity

Choosing the right bulbs for Western New York winters, holidays, and curb appeal

Across Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee, outdoor lighting works hard. Long winter nights, big holiday displays, and year‑round landscape and permanent lighting all add up. Staring at shelves of LED and incandescent options, the question isn’t “what’s cheapest today?” It’s:

Which technology gives you the look you want, at a cost and lifespan that actually make sense in our climate—for holiday, permanent, and landscape lighting?

To simplify the choice, we use our BRIGHT Choice Framework: Budget, Reliability, Impact, Glow, Horizon. It helps you compare LED and incandescent across cost, color, and longevity for:


So you’re not guessing with every purchase.


At Hearth and Halo, we design and install outdoor, permanent, and holiday lighting throughout Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee counties. We see daily which products survive our winters, which ones quietly drive up bills, and which ones give you the most satisfying, long‑term results.


Key Takeaways

  • Use the BRIGHT Choice Framework—Budget, Reliability, Impact, Glow, Horizon—to compare LED vs incandescent for each lighting type.
  • In Western New York’s long winters, LED almost always wins for large or nightly use on cost to run and longevity.
  • Modern LEDs can deliver warm, classic color that rivals incandescent, especially outdoors.
  • Holiday, permanent, and landscape lighting each benefit differently from LED: lower wattage for outlets, less maintenance on rooflines, and more efficient nightly path lighting.
  • A simple decision checklist can help you plan upgrades across Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee without wasting money on short‑lived choices.


What You’ll Learn

  • How LED vs incandescent compare on total seasonal cost for big holiday displays in our region.
  • What to prioritize for permanent lighting on rooflines and soffits where maintenance is hard.
  • Why landscape/path lighting is one of the best places to commit fully to LED.
  • How color temperature and quality affect the “feel” of your home at night.
  • Where incandescent still has a small, intentional role, and where it’s holding you back.
  • How to build a phased, LED‑forward plan for your property in Buffalo, Niagara, or Genesee.


Big Picture: Holiday, Permanent, and Landscape Use

Think of your lighting in three categories:

1) Holiday Lighting

  • Rooflines, eaves, peaks
  • Mini lights in trees and shrubs
  • Pathway and yard decor
  • Heavy use over several weeks, often lots of bulbs plugged into the same outlets

2) Permanent Lighting

  • Roofline/soffit systems
  • Accent lighting on architectural features
  • Often color‑changing or scene‑based, used year‑round

3) Landscape/Low‑Voltage Lighting

  • Path and step lights
  • Uplights on trees and facades
  • Nightly, long‑hour operation for safety and curb appeal


Across Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee, our long dark season means all three categories can rack up hours of use. That’s where LED vs incandescent becomes a serious budget and maintenance question—not just a style choice.


We routinely see this pattern: a homeowner in Amherst, Lockport, or Batavia starts with a few incandescent strings or fixtures. Over the years, they expand displays and add more lights. Bills climb. Bulbs fail mid‑season. Outlets run hot or trip. When we convert those same systems to thoughtfully chosen LEDs, the look improves, failures drop, and operating costs shrink.


The BRIGHT Choice Framework

We use BRIGHT to compare LED vs incandescent for each type of lighting:

  • B – Budget: Upfront cost vs long‑term power and replacement
  • R – Reliability: How often things fail in our weather
  • I – Impact: Brightness, coverage, and visual effect per watt
  • G – Glow: Color temperature and quality of the light
  • H – Horizon: How long it will last and how much you’ll touch it


1. Budget: Upfront vs Ongoing

  • LED: Higher upfront price per bulb/fixture, much lower energy use and far fewer replacements.
  • Incandescent: Cheap to buy, expensive to run, especially for large holiday displays and nightly landscape systems.

Over just a few seasons in Western New York, the total cost usually flips in favor of LED—especially for:

  • Long roofline holiday runs
  • Permanent soffit and trim lighting
  • Landscape systems running 4–8 hours nightly


2. Reliability in Buffalo, Niagara & Genesee Weather

Outdoor lights here face:

  • Freeze‑thaw cycles
  • Wind, snow, and ice
  • Moisture and road salt in some locations

High‑quality LED products:

  • Tend to fail less often
  • Handle temperature swings better
  • Stay brighter and more consistent over time

Incandescent:

  • Burn out faster
  • Are more fragile mechanically
  • Lead to more mid‑winter ladder trips in Tonawanda, Niagara Falls, or Le Roy


3. Impact: Brightness and Coverage

  • LED: More light per watt, better directionality, easier to control for permanent and landscape lighting.
  • Incandescent: Naturally soft, but needs more power and often more fixtures for the same effect.

For:

  • Holiday rooflines: LEDs let you run longer lines and more decor from the same outlet.
  • Permanent and landscape: LEDs give you precision and coverage without overloading circuits or transformers.


4. Glow: Color & Mood

Many people in our area love the classic warm glow of incandescent holiday lights.

Today’s better LEDs:

  • Offer warm white tones that closely mimic incandescent outdoors
  • Provide tunable color for permanent systems (for holidays or team colors)
  • Avoid the harsh, blue‑white look of older LED products—if you choose carefully


The choice is no longer “LED = cold, incandescent = warm.” It’s “which LED product gives you the warmth or color you want?”


5. Horizon: Longevity & Maintenance

Ask: How often do you really want to be up a ladder in December in Buffalo, Niagara, or Genesee?

  • High, hard‑to‑reach locations (peaks, tall trees, soffits): strongly favor LED
  • Systems you rely on nightly (paths, steps, driveways): strongly favor LED
  • Occasional, easy‑reach decorative accents: incandescent can still be used intentionally if you truly prefer that glow


LED vs Incandescent by Lighting Type

Holiday Lighting (Roofline, Minis, Pathway Decor)

Best Overall Choice: LED

Why:

  • Lower wattage keeps you from overloading outlets and circuits, especially when you’re adding:
  • Long roofline runs
  • Mini lights in trees and shrubs
  • Pathway holiday stakes and other decor
  • Fewer failures in the cold
  • Many color and style options, including warm white that feels “classic”

Incandescent can still be used for:

  • Small, specific accent areas where you truly want old‑school filament glow
  • Very limited runs, if outlet capacity and wattage are not concerns


But across most of Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee homes, large incandescent displays are hard to justify on cost and maintenance alone.


Permanent Roofline / Soffit / Architectural Lighting

Best Overall Choice: LED—by a wide margin

Permanent systems should be:

  • Long‑lasting
  • Low‑maintenance
  • Flexible (scenes for holidays, events, or everyday white)

LED advantages:

  • Very long lifespan
  • Low power draw for year‑round use
  • Color‑tunable and dimmable for different looks
  • Safer on circuits because of lower wattage


Incandescent is rarely a good option for permanent exterior installs in our region—it demands too much power and replacement, especially in spots that are difficult or unsafe to access frequently.


Landscape / Low‑Voltage Path & Uplighting

Best Overall Choice: LED

Landscape systems run night after night across Western New York:

  • Path and step lighting for safety
  • Uplighting for trees, facades, and focal points
  • Often controlled by timers or smart systems

LED benefits:

  • Much less load on low‑voltage transformers
  • Longer fixture life, fewer service calls
  • Better color consistency across fixtures
  • Strong performance in cold temperatures


Incandescent landscape fixtures are now a niche choice and generally not practical in Buffalo, Niagara, or Genesee for long‑term use.


Common Pitfalls & How to Avoid Them

1)Choosing by Shelf Price Only

  • Cheap incandescent strings look attractive at checkout.
  • Over a few seasons of heavy holiday or nightly use, you’ll usually pay more in power and replacements than if you’d gone LED.

2) Assuming All LEDs Are Too “Blue.”

  • Early LEDs gave many people in Western New York a bad impression.
  • Modern warm‑white and “soft white” LEDs can be very inviting—outdoors, they’re hard to distinguish from incandescent.

3) Mixing Too Many Technologies and Colors

  • A mix of old incandescents and various LED whites can make a home in Amherst, Niagara Falls, or Batavia look patchy.
  • Planning a cohesive color temperature strategy (e.g., all warm white) is just as important as choosing the LED itself.

4) Using Incandescent in Hard‑to‑Reach Permanent Spots

  • Every burnout means a ladder run in questionable weather.
  • High soffits and peaks should almost always be LED.

5) Underestimating Holiday Energy Use

  • Large incandescent displays can add a noticeable spike to winter bills.
  • LEDs let you expand your display without multiplying your costs or outlet load.


Our Approach in Buffalo, Niagara & Genesee

When we design lighting across the region, we apply the BRIGHT Choice Framework to your specific property:

1) Budget

  • We map upfront vs multi‑year costs for holiday, permanent, and landscape systems, showing where LED pays back fastest.

2) Reliability

  • We consider snow, wind, ice, and temperature swings specific to your location—whether you’re near the lake in Hamburg, along the river in Niagara, or farther inland in Genesee.

3) Impact

  • We design for the effect you want first (elegant, festive, subtle, bold), then choose LED or limited incandescent use to deliver that look efficiently.

4) Glow

  • We tune color temperature: warm white for cozy neighborhood streets, dynamic color for permanent systems on game days, and consistent tones across landscape and holiday lights.

5) Horizon

  • We plan for how your lighting will grow or change over 5–10 years: more decor, new landscape features, or adding permanent accents later.


Decision Checklist For Homeowners in Buffalo, Niagara & Genesee

Use this to organize your next steps:

  •  I know which lighting is biggest at my home: holiday, permanent, or landscape.
  •  I’ve thought about total seasonal cost (power + replacements), not just shelf price.
  •  I want hard‑to‑reach or always‑on systems (roofline, soffits, paths) to be as maintenance‑free as possible.
  •  I care about consistent color across my lighting—no random mix of cool and warm whites.
  •  I understand that for large displays or nightly use, LED is usually the smarter choice in our climate.
  •  If I keep incandescent, it will be for small, easy‑access accents with a specific nostalgic purpose.
  •  I’d like a phased plan to move more of my property to LED over the next few seasons.


If you want help walking through this for your home in Buffalo, Niagara, or Genesee, we can audit what you have, estimate operating costs, and design an LED‑forward plan that respects your budget and style.


Conclusion & Next Steps

In Western New York—across Buffalo, Niagara, and Genesee—the LED vs incandescent choice for holiday, permanent, and landscape lighting is really about:

  • How you want your home to feel
  • How much are you willing to spend over time
  • How often do you want to climb a ladder in winter


Using the BRIGHT Choice Framework—Budget, Reliability, Impact, Glow, Horizon—you can see clearly where LED gives you the biggest gains, and where (if anywhere) incandescent is worth keeping as a small, intentional accent.


When you align your lighting strategy with our climate and your priorities, you get:

  • Lower bills
  • Less maintenance
  • Better, more consistent nighttime curb appeal


If you’d like to plan an LED‑first holiday, permanent, or landscape lighting upgrade for your property in Buffalo, Niagara, or Genesee, we can help you map out a practical, phased path that makes sense for the way you actually live.

Contact Us Today!

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